Rare Earths: Plentiful, Important, Difficult to Exploit

Rare earth elements are not rare. Economically exploiting them for commercial purposes is difficult. And some of the 17 rare earth minerals are increasingly important in a world that is increasingly electro-centric. Windmills, electric vehicles, lighting, smart phones, televisions, advanced computing, advanced nuclear power plants, and many other end uses depend on rare earths. Science… More Rare Earths: Plentiful, Important, Difficult to Exploit

Could Eskom Problems Cause South African Blackout?

Is South Africa’s electric grid on the narrow edge of a total collapse? According to South African business website MyBroadband, “The United States Government has advised its stakeholders in South Africa to start thinking about disaster management plans for a total collapse of Eskom’s power grid.” The website reports that the U.S. State Department’s Overseas… More Could Eskom Problems Cause South African Blackout?

Energy Dept. Puts Up $700M Loan for Lithium Mine

Seeking to push greater market penetration of electric vehicles, the Biden administration’s Department of Energy has offered a conditional loan of up to $700 million for a new lithium and boron mine in western Nevada, hoping to produce enough lithium to supply batteries for around 370,000 EVs annually. The Rhyolite Ridge project in Esmeralda County,… More Energy Dept. Puts Up $700M Loan for Lithium Mine

Hass Energy Institute: Blame It All on California

The Jan. 4 New York Times had a headline and article that have caused considerable consternation among energy analysts and economists: Why Are Energy Prices So High? Some Experts Blame Deregulation. The teaser below the head read: “California and the 34 other states that have deregulated all or parts of their electricity system tend to… More Hass Energy Institute: Blame It All on California

MARAD Looks to Fate for Atom-Powered NS Savannah

She was a dream ship, not just a steam ship. But the dream turned bad. The U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) has issued a notice seeking public comment on “disposition” of the NS Savannah, the nation’s first and only nuclear-powered merchant ship, a product of the Eisenhower administration’s 1955 commitment to its “Atoms for Peace” program,… More MARAD Looks to Fate for Atom-Powered NS Savannah

Holtec Wants to Turn Coal Plants into Nukes

Riffing on the great American philosopher Lawrence “Yogi” Berra, it’s déjà vu all over again, but backwards. Holtec International, perhaps the most ambitious nuclear-oriented company ever, says it can use its aspirational small nuclear reactor, SMR-160, to repurpose coal-fired power plants. The Holtec SMR design is for a 160-MW pressurized light-water reactor, still in the… More Holtec Wants to Turn Coal Plants into Nukes

Should UAMPS Scuttle NuScale Nukes for Cheaper Geothermal?

Could the municipal utility members of Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems (UAMPS) that have committed to the NuScale small nuclear reactor project save significant money by dumping the unproven nuclear technology and sign up for available and new geothermal-generated electricity from local investor-owned utility, NV Energy? That’s the case made in a recent paper from… More Should UAMPS Scuttle NuScale Nukes for Cheaper Geothermal?

Space-based Solar: Fusion from the Source?

Is there a better way to employ fusion to make clean, green electricity for the Earth than giant machines, incredibly difficult temperatures to manage, neutron fluxes to dodge and shield? Researchers at the California Institute of Technology are reviving an old, heretofore implausible, concept: go into space and capture the Sun’s fusion energy directly with… More Space-based Solar: Fusion from the Source?