Key role for nuclear energy in global biodiversity conservation
Abstract
Modern society uses massive
amounts of energy. Usage rises as population and affluence increase, and
energy production and use often have an impact on biodiversity or
natural areas. To avoid a business-as-usual dependence on coal, oil, and
gas over the coming decades, society must map out a future energy mix
that incorporates alternative sources. This exercise can lead to
radically different opinions on what a sustainable energy portfolio
might entail, so an objective assessment of the relative costs and
benefits of different energy sources is required. We evaluated the land
use, emissions, climate, and cost implications of 3 published but
divergent storylines for future energy production, none of which was
optimal for all environmental and economic indicators. Using
multicriteria decision-making analysis, we ranked 7 major
electricity-generation sources (coal, gas, nuclear, biomass, hydro,
wind, and solar) based on costs and benefits and tested the sensitivity
of the rankings to biases stemming from contrasting philosophical
ideals. Irrespective of weightings, nuclear and wind energy had the
highest benefit-to-cost ratio. Although the environmental movement has
historically rejected the nuclear energy option, new-generation reactor
technologies that fully recycle waste and incorporate passive safety
systems might resolve their concerns and ought to be more widely
understood. Because there is no perfect energy source however,
conservation professionals ultimately need to take an evidence-based
approach to consider carefully the integrated effects of energy mixes on
biodiversity conservation. Trade-offs and compromises are inevitable
and require advocating energy mixes that minimize net environmental
damage. Society cannot afford to risk wholesale failure to address
energy-related biodiversity impacts because of preconceived notions and
ideals.
Un Papel Clave para la Energía Nuclear en la Conservación de la Biodiversidad Global
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cobi.12433/abstract;jsessionid=1E68DB4B85ACB18B4B345F9FA33FD10D.f03t04
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