[Date Prev][Date Next]
[Chronological]
[Thread]
[Archive Top]
RE: [cdn-nucl-l] Walrus CANDU
Don't know. Not from me. Data fusion problems, I
suspect.
Bill
At 01:47 PM 13/09/2006, Jaro wrote:
I would like to know, for one
thing, how Webster came up with the idea that the cost overruns during
building of Darlington are linked to the wearing out of its
components.
- By the time they were
completed in 1993, the four reactors built at Darlington, east of
Toronto, had jumped in cost from a projected $2.5 billion to $14.4
billion. While some of the cost overruns could be blamed on political
interference, the candus were also plagued by severe technical problems
largely related to their complex pressure systems, which were wearing
out far earlier than expected.
Soooo.... does that mean that the price tag of the car
I bought six years ago will change retroactively, depending on how fast
it wears out ???
Jaro
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- -----Original Message-----
- From: cdn-nucl-l-admin@mailman1.cis.McMaster.CA
[
mailto:cdn-nucl-l-admin@mailman1.cis.McMaster.CA]On Behalf Of
Bill Garland
- Sent: Tuesday, September 05, 2006 7:54 AM
- To: Nuclear
- Subject: Re: [cdn-nucl-l] Walrus CANDU
- The author and I had a few sessions together as he was
researching for that article. He is a few years out of school (ie
young compared to me) and seems to have an open mind. Nice
fellow. We chatted extensively about technical issues, and the
history and politics of CANDU. None of what we chatted about was in
the article but I think the chats helped him understand the issues in a
more balanced perspective. Perhaps he would have written the same
article without the chats. It reminds me of the conversations I had
with a reporter from Hamilton 12 years ago when the McMaster reactor has
issues. It seems that working with reporters to help them
understand the issues - as opposed to just telling them answers - is the
empowering way to go. Clair Ripley and David Mosey found the same
thing, as I recall. I am a big fan of helping others to think as
opposed to telling them what to think.
- This is off your point, Randal, hope you don't mind.
- Bill
- At 12:30 AM 05/09/2006, Randal Leavitt wrote:
- "The Walrus" - my favourite Magazine, and it's Canadian
too.
- In "The Walrus", September 2006 Volume 3 Issue 7
- Will CANDU Do?
- by Paul Webster
- The article ends with this statement:
- "If the competition wins out, a question will remain: should the
CANDU
- be romanticized like the Avro Arrow as a technological triumph
that
- should never have been abandoned, or pilloried as the most
expensive
- mistake in the nation's history?"
- I have been writing about this question for a couple of years now,
and
- still don't know the answer. If Ontario abandons the CANDU then
30,000
- jobs go down the tubes, but we perhaps get more standardized in
our
- electricity generation technology. If we keep the jobs, do we
also get
- an albatross hung around our necks? It is a fiendishly
difficult
- decision. I would like to see the Canadian technology continue,
and I
- also liked the Arrow, but the wind seems to be blowing the other
way.
- The Paul Webster article is worth reading. I got all the way
through it
- without exploding. It portrays the Canadian CANDU dilemma in
fairly
- clear terms.
Bill Garland, Executive Director of
UNENE and Professor, Dept. of Engineering Physics, Bldg. NRB 117,
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, CANADA L8S 4L7, Tel:
(905)525-9140 x24925 Fax: (905)528-4339 Email: garlandw@mcmaster.ca
Web:<
www.nuceng.ca>
<
http://canteach.candu.org>
<www.unene.ca>