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The Slouching South Texas Nuclear Project
By Kennedy Maize The alleged U.S. “nuclear renaissance” has been slowing creeping toward the horizon of reality for over five years. Developers have filed plans at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The Department of Energy has dangled $18.5 billion in loan guarantees for new nukes, although so far it’s just financial foreplay. The nuclear industry […]
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More on Peer Review and Climategate
By Kennedy Maize Some additional damaging brush strokes on “Climategate,” these related to statistical analysis and peer review. When the story of the climate emails surfaced, and the apologists insisted that there was nothing behind the alleged doctoring of evidence, I first thought about the NAS review of the Mann “hockey stick” representation. It was […]
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The Plug-in Dead-end
By Kennedy Maize Plug-in hybrid electric cars? Phooey. They don’t make economic sense. They don’t represent “green” technology. But they do help the electric utility industry, which has been pushing them hard for a decade, as a way to get some load and revenue from power that otherwise would be dumped. Now, my curmudgeonly view […]
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Energy roundup
By Kennedy Maize Having just returned from three weeks of vacation, where I paid no attention to power issues, here are some items I’ve discovered since my return. I hope my take will spark some conversations. First, “Climategate.” This flap of major proportions, threatening to unravel the alleged scientific consensus behind global warming, blew up […]
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Will the Smart Grid Compromise Privacy?
By Kennedy Maize WASHINGTON, Nov. 19, 2009 — This blog has highlighted my concerns about the security of the smart grid for many months. Now, there’s a new potential problem with the smart grid: privacy. Washington Post technology security writer Brian Krebs, in a recent posting, notes that “privacy experts are warning that the so-called […]
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Kick the Can on Energy Policy: Bravo
By Kennedy Maize WASHINGTON, Nov. 16, 2009 — Call it “kick the can.” The Obama administration, according to the New York Times, has persuaded (does than mean big-footed?) the rest of the world attending the upcoming Copenhagen climate change confab to adopt a policy duck. It walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and […]
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Yucca Mountain is Dead and Gone
By Kennedy Maize I come not to praise Yucca Mountain as a final repository for spent nuclear fuel, but to bury it. The lid on the Yucca coffin has long been in place, but now the Obama administration is nailing it down, according to a report in The Energy Daily. That’s good news. The newsletter […]
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Smart Grid Grants May be Stupid
By Kennedy Maize President Obama in late October announced that the Department of Energy would award $3.4 billion in grants to allegedly “smart grid” technologies. As I parse the awards, my reaction is that they are fundamentally stupid. Most of the money – to be matched by the private sector (those matches presumably are tax deductible […]
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Is ANWR drilling key to climate legislation?
By Kennedy Maize Washington, OCTOBER 21, 2009 — With prospects for a new international agreement on climate change (Kyoto II) in Copenhagen in December faltering, environmentalists in the U.S. may be facing a Hobson’s choice with the climate-energy legislation now before the U.S. Congress. The choice may be to agree to drilling for oil and […]
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Nuke Notes: New names for the NRC and another, lame poll on public support for nuclear power
By Kennedy Maize Washington, OCTOBER 23, 2009 — The Obama administration is moving to get the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission fully staffed, naming two Democrats, MIT nuclear scientist George Apostolakis and former Clinton administration Department of Energy nuclear chief Bill Magwood, to the commission That fills two vacancies on the five-member commission. At the same […]