No-one would disagree (would they?) that burying waste from today's nuclear power stations leaves a very big set of social, economic and environmental problems for many generations to come. Since sustainability is about dealing with risks and costs now and not passing problems to future generations it therefore follows that burying nuclear waste is inherently unsustainable. The following question alone demonstrates this: with waste that can be active for thousands of yrs how can it be possible to guarantee that the
institutions needed would be stable beyond periods which have so far proved to be whole
lifetimes of civilisations?
Despite the logic above the UK plans to build more nuclear power stations (if the huge economic cost obstacles can be overcome) and the '...search for an underground storage
site for high-level nuclear waste is likely to go ahead in Cumbria after a poll
showed residents are in favour.
In Copeland, the local authority area encapsulating Sellafield [pictured], 68% of people
backed entering formal talks with government on hosting the repository.
Across Cumbria as a whole, 53% are in favour and 33% opposed...'
(full report here).
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