ABSTRACT

Who Needs Nuclear Power challenges conventional thinking about the role of civil nuclear power in a rapidly changing energy context, where new energy carriers are penetrating markets around the world.

Against the backdrop of a global energy transition and the defining issue of Climate Change, Chris Anastasi assesses new nuclear build in a fast-moving sector in which new technologies and practices are rapidly emerging. He considers various countries at different stages of nuclear industry development, and  discusses  their political, legal and technical institutions that provide the framework for both existing nuclear facilities and new build, as well as a country’s technical capability. He also highlights the critical issue of nuclear safety culture, exploring how organisations go about instilling it and maintaining it in their operations and encouraging it in their supply chains; the critical role played by independent regulators and international institutions in ensuring the integrity of the industry is also highlighted.

This book provides a balanced and holistic view of nuclear power for both an expert and non-expert audience, and a realistic assessment of the potential for this technology over the critical period to 2050 and beyond.

part 1|84 pages

Can civil nuclear power be a ‘disruptive’ technology in the 21st century?

chapter 1|20 pages

A changing context for civil nuclear power

chapter 2|13 pages

Strengths of the nuclear option

chapter 3|19 pages

Weaknesses of the nuclear option

chapter 4|17 pages

The importance of nuclear safety culture

chapter 5|12 pages

An energy transition in the 21st century

part 2|60 pages

Will civil nuclear power be a ‘disruptive’ technology in the 21st century?

chapter 6|15 pages

Nuclear power in a global context

chapter 7|18 pages

Developments in selected countries

chapter 9|11 pages

Nuclear power in the 21st century