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The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s

University of Pittsburgh physicist Cohen provides accessible, scientifically sound risk analyses of the energy options that he believes must be exercised in the next 10 years. This update of his work on public energy policy stands opposed to the stack of recent greenhouse effect-oriented titles by p...

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Autor principal: Cohen, Bernard L
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Plenum Press 1990
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2263614
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author Cohen, Bernard L
author_facet Cohen, Bernard L
author_sort Cohen, Bernard L
collection CERN
description University of Pittsburgh physicist Cohen provides accessible, scientifically sound risk analyses of the energy options that he believes must be exercised in the next 10 years. This update of his work on public energy policy stands opposed to the stack of recent greenhouse effect-oriented titles by proposing more nuclear power plants (including fuel reprocessing plants) as statistically the safest, most environmentally sound solution. Cohen advances the debate on energy policy for all sides by first quantifying the human health costs of coal- and oil-generated electricity, and by debunking solar technology's deus ex machina role. In this context, Cohen looks at issues surrounding nuclear power since Three Mile Island, such as the "unsolved problem" of nuclear waste disposal and the "China Syndrome." Media people especially are urged to re-examine "nuclear hysteria" (no one ever writes about " deadly natural gas," Cohen notes), and even anti-nuclear activists will find the study's appendices and notes a sourcebook for the coming round of public policy issues likely to emerge as a result of the Mideast crisis. Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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spelling cern-22636142021-04-21T19:14:23Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2263614engCohen, Bernard LThe nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90sEngineeringUniversity of Pittsburgh physicist Cohen provides accessible, scientifically sound risk analyses of the energy options that he believes must be exercised in the next 10 years. This update of his work on public energy policy stands opposed to the stack of recent greenhouse effect-oriented titles by proposing more nuclear power plants (including fuel reprocessing plants) as statistically the safest, most environmentally sound solution. Cohen advances the debate on energy policy for all sides by first quantifying the human health costs of coal- and oil-generated electricity, and by debunking solar technology's deus ex machina role. In this context, Cohen looks at issues surrounding nuclear power since Three Mile Island, such as the "unsolved problem" of nuclear waste disposal and the "China Syndrome." Media people especially are urged to re-examine "nuclear hysteria" (no one ever writes about " deadly natural gas," Cohen notes), and even anti-nuclear activists will find the study's appendices and notes a sourcebook for the coming round of public policy issues likely to emerge as a result of the Mideast crisis. Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.Plenum Pressoai:cds.cern.ch:22636141990
spellingShingle Engineering
Cohen, Bernard L
The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
title The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
title_full The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
title_fullStr The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
title_full_unstemmed The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
title_short The nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
title_sort nuclear energy option: an alternative for the 90s
topic Engineering
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2263614
work_keys_str_mv AT cohenbernardl thenuclearenergyoptionanalternativeforthe90s
AT cohenbernardl nuclearenergyoptionanalternativeforthe90s