Feb 25, 2019 - World's Biggest Nutella Factory In France Shuts Down After Quality Defect

TradeBriefs Newsletter
View online   Advertise
              from TradeBriefs FMCG Weekly






TradeBriefs Editorial From the Editor's Desk

Nuclear goes retro- with a much greener outlook
Returning to designs abandoned in the 1970s, start-ups are developing a new kind of reactor that promises to be much safer and cleaner than current ones.
Troels Schönfeldt can trace his path to becoming a nuclear energy entrepreneur back to 2009, when he and other young physicists at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen started getting together for an occasional "beer and nuclear" meetup.
The beer was an India pale ale that they brewed themselves in an old, junk-filled lab space in the institute's basement. The "nuclear" part was usually a bull session about their options for fighting two of humanity's biggest problems: global poverty and climate change. "If you want poor countries to become richer," says Schönfeldt, "you need a cheap and abundant power source." But if you want to avoid spewing out enough extra carbon dioxide to fry the planet, you need to provide that power without using coal and gas.
It seemed clear to Schönfeldt and the others that the standard alternatives simply wouldn't be sufficient. Wind and solar power by themselves couldn't offer nearly enough energy, not with billions of poor people trying to join the global middle class. Yet conventional nuclear reactors - which could meet the need, in principle - were massively expensive, potentially dangerous and anathema to much of the public. And if anyone needed a reminder of why, the catastrophic meltdown at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi plant came along to provide it in March 2011.
On the other hand, says Schönfeldt, the worldwide nuclear engineering community was beginning to get fired up about unconventional reactor designs - technologies that had been sidelined 40 or 50 years before, but that might have a lot fewer problems than existing reactors. And the beer-and-nuclear group found that one such design, the molten salt reactor, had a simplicity, elegance and, well, weirdness that especially appealed.

Continued here

Read TradeBriefs every day, to understand the future!

Advertisers of the day
Cambridge Senior Management: Cambridge Senior Management Programme (SMP) | June 2019 | Accepting Applications
Wharton Business Analytics Team: Wharton's Business Analytics Program (Online)

Our advertisers help fund the daily operations of TradeBriefs. We request you to accept our promotional emails.


India, Australia aim to seal trade pact by 2022

India Business News: NEW DELHI: India and Australia will conclude the negotiations on a Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA) by the end of 2022 and reach an.




Today's TradeBriefs Cartoon

Advt: Work for the best employer - Yourself
reseller
Advantages - Best B2B audience in India, no hard-selling or up-front costs involved, access to our content repository and air-tight agreements with instant gratification.


Karnataka can sign MoU with e-commerce firms to promote its agro-products: CM

"There are a variety of products such as coffee, spices, maize, oilseeds etc in the State which has 10 agro-climatic zones. These products may also be..


$5-trillion economy needs greenfield investments

Such investments depend on a more stable policy and regulatory framework than the streamlining of procedures and digitisation of paperwork


With EPS Growth And More, Amber Enterprises India (NSE:AMBER) Is Interesting

Like a puppy chasing its tail, some new investors often chase 'the next big thing', even if that means buying 'story...


TradeBriefs Publications are read by over 10,00,000 Industry Executives
About Us  |  Advertise Privacy Policy    

You are receiving this mail because of your subscription with TradeBriefs.
Our mailing address is GF 25/39, West Patel Nagar, New Delhi 110008, India