A graduate student in nuclear engineering at UW-Madison, Brian Kiedrowski, has solved the nuclear waste disposal problem -- something the nuclear industry and the federal government have failed at for 50 years.  Can a Nobel Prize be far behind?

In a letter to the editor in the campus Badger Herald, Kiedrowski says:

Used fuel from all U.S. reactors over 40 years could fit in Camp Randall up to the goal posts. It is solid, compact and insoluble, not a green ooze that can leak.
Well, what are we waiting for? Well, I guess it would be hard to play football if the stadium was filled to the goalposts, so I'm thinking we look for an alternative site. Is the old Field House big enough?

Or maybe we could each take a small chunk of the solid, harmless stuff and store it in our homes or garages, if the volume's that small.

Kiedrowski doesn't mention that this stuff is highly radioactive, so deadly that the Environmental Protection Agency says it should be kept out of the environment and away from humans for hundreds of thousands if not a million years. (15,000 years ago, Wisconsin was covered by glaciers.)

You'll learn all sorts of other interesting "facts" at the Badger Herald website, which also ran a pro-nuclear column by another nuclear engineering student.

Such as: There is no man-made global warming. Or, "given the small amount of waste, it's conceivable that we could shoot it out into space on a collision course with a star." Or, "There is no such thing as nuclear waste." France has solved the problem. Etc etc.

Unfortunately, there is such a thing as nuclear waste and more is accumulating every day.

France? A few safety issues, like:part of France’s “recycling” strategy includes dumping radioactive waste in the ocean; independent medical studies have shown higher rates of leukemia in young people who live near the reprocessing center; and radioactive uranium solution accidentally leaked into the ground last summer, leading the French government to make two rivers off limits for human activity. So France is not exactly a model.

A new nuclear reactor costs $10-billion and takes 10 years to build, and the government expects half of them to default on their loans. That's why the nuclear industry is asking right now for a $50-billion taxpayer subsidy in the form of loan guarantees.

So maybe Kiedrowski needs to go back to the drawing board before collecting that Nobel. There remain a few small things to be worked out.

This is not just an academic question, by the way. There is a major push on in Wisconsin to relax the standards, in place since 1983, that have prevented new nuclear reactors from being built here.

UPDATE: Meanwhile, a Missouri utility, citing economic reasons, has scrapped plans for what was to be the first in the new generation of nuclear reactors in the US. The utility wanted to be allowed to charge its customers for financing costs before the plant was finished, the NY Times reports.

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I find it funny that XOff, with no engineering degree or background, wants everyone to believe he knows this topic better than a UW nuclear engineering grad student that has studied it in excruciating detail. XOff demonstrates this by using selective facts, half-truths, and exaggeration to try to make his case. The comments from the student paper that he mentions are selective to his stance and several are taken completely out of context. Read them yourself and see. He doesn't mention that nearly all the comments on the site are in favor of nuclear power and many seem to be made by folks who are more educated about this than he is. Some actually discuss real solutions that have scientific merit (imagine that). Yes, nuclear waste is dangerous. Everyone at UW-Madison knows this, which is probably why Kiedrowski didn't mention it. What most don't know is how little of it we actually produce, which is what he does talk about. Listening to XOff, you'd think we were pumping out billions of tons of this stuff and are running out of places to put it. Not true. Yes, nuclear power costs money. To argue against it from a purely economical standpoint is ridiculous. With that logic, people should not buy hybrid vehicles because they're more expensive than conventional ones. However, people who do buy these cars see the value in putting fewer greenhouse gases in the air and less money in the hands of the oil companies and their terrorist masters and know that the extra cost is worth it. Similar deal with nuclear power; if you want something better than the norm, it's going to come at a price. As for what fossil fuels are costing us, well, I'm sure XOff can cite the cost of the Iraq War off the top of his head. And that's only a portion of the total; it doesn't include human lives lost, widespread pollution, health risks, and a multitude of other factors associated with coal and oil. Yes, France had a nuclear leak last year and two rivers were made off-limits to fishing and watersports. What XOff does not mention is that the two rivers were opened to human activity again a only a couple weeks later after it was determined there was no threat. He also does not mention that the 'higher' rates of leukemia translate to three per 100,000 persons, which a French medical authority cited as close to the expected rate. These also occurred near a reprocessing plant, which sees far more nuclear waste traffic than a regular power plant. The US does not have reprocessing facilities, thanks to Carter giving in to the nuclear fear mongers back in the 70's. And Jim, you're a bit shaky on your facts as well. While mining and enriching uranium aren't the easiest tasks in the world, we've been doing it for a while and have enough nuclear fuel in the US to last us for years. We'll almost certainly have fusion power before we run out. And as far as engineering graduates having no practical experience, you obviously haven't set foot in an engineering school in a while. Many of the mechanical engineering students at UW-Madison design and build cars, trucks, and airplanes before graduating. As for the nuclear engineering students, they learn how to operate the campus reactor, and are taught by world-class professors that are pioneers in their field. Nuclear power isn't perfect. But if you're interested in getting off fossil fuels, replacing them with a reasonably clean energy source, and still keeping the country powered, I challenge you to find something better.
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