Tuesday, March 15, 2011

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The eternal debate: yes or no to nuclear energy debate already


It rekindles the eternal debate: yes or no to nuclear energy
Release Date: 15/03/2011

Country / Region : Japan - International
It enables

low-cost electricity, and is the only alternative to the lack of oil. But it poses a risk for toxic emissions. The nuclear threat has been to Japan and the world on alert revived the debate about whether to produce and use nuclear energy is beneficial or harmful.

In Argentina there are two operating nuclear plants (one in Córdoba) and a third is under construction. There occurs seven percent of the total energy consumed, and various reactors used in medicine, among other applications.
Among the benefits are identified are: it is an economical way of producing electricity is by far the only alternative to the lack of oil, produces little air pollution compared with carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels like coal , the nuclear waste is low volume and uranium-producing countries are politically more stable than those that extract oil.
At the other extreme, nuclear power has, and continues to be many problems. Its use is a risk that produces artificial radiation. The emissions are a danger to humans and results mutation in living organisms if it exceeds acceptable levels.
addition, extraction and transportation of uranium to generate electricity in nuclear power plants pollute the atmosphere. There is also risk of nuclear accident, with irreparable consequences. Natural phenomena are one of the main reasons.
wastes are highly radioactive and takes hundreds or thousands of years to lose its radioactivity, and, among other risks, is that of some countries to use nuclear energy for weapons.
6.2% of the energy consumed
in Argentina. The nuclear energy generated in the national territory in 2008 accounted for 6.2 percent Argentine electricity supply.

in Latin America. In the case of Mexico, was four percent and 3.1 percent in Brazil.
in Japan. The 54 reactors operating in Japan catered for 24.9 percent of the electricity used by the Nipponese in 2008.
In the United States. The percentage was 19.7.
in France. It has the highest reliance on nuclear energy. In 2008, French plants covered the 76.2 percent of demand.
Mollon 35,000 dollars in losses
preliminary calculations. Is the figure that insurance companies should pay Japan for the damage caused by the disaster.

AIR Worldwide. This Boston company specializing in models for disaster said insured property losses could be located between 15 000 and 35 billion dollars, but did not include the effects of a tsunami.
100 billion dollars. The figure is estimated that the Japanese government should pay for the replacement infrastructure damaged by the tsunami.
donated $ 12.3 million
Wall Street banks. The Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America announced donations of several million dollars to help the victims of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan and to assist with recovery efforts in China.

About . Goldman Sachs donated $ 6.1 million for the reconstruction of the west coast, JPMorgan Chase will donate five million dollars and the Bank of America will donate 1.22 million.
How. Most of them intended to NGOs like the Red Cross, among others.
184,000 million
Record. Japan's central bank yesterday injected unprecedented amount of 184 billion dollars in financial markets and took other measures to protect the weak national economy.

Nikkei. The index, which references 225 stock, contracted 6.2% in its first day of business since the earthquake on Friday.
Trust. The Bank of Japan expected to keep credit financial groups and meet increased demand for resources which provides for post-earthquake. Also keep its key interest rate near zero.
More Information:


-
DNA - radiation arrived in Tokyo and will fight to prevent a catastrophe

- EFE - The government minimizes Japan radiation leak from the reactor 4 ...

- Yahoo News - France talks about the extremely high risk ...

- EFE - The IAEA confirmed a new outbreak and the emanation of ...

- BBC - Japan: how much radiation is dangerous?

- Telegraph - The future of nuclear energy, a debate

- Europa Press - Brussels describes the accident in Fukushima ...

- Yahoo News - Fukushima nuclear power plant reached level 6 ...

- BBC Japan: new fire in Fukushima plant

- BBC - The uncertain future of the nuclear industry

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