Energy debates matter because physics doesn’t care about tone. If the system doesn’t deliver reliable power, everything else collapses first.
Posts by Dinara Ermakova
Fusion rockets are sci-fi for now, agreed, but fission already delivers massive energy density on Earth. The real question is how we power civilization reliably at scale today.
Energy dominance framing isn’t wrong, but lumping nuclear with fossil fuels misses the point. Nuclear cuts emissions while strengthening energy security, which is exactly why it keeps coming back into policy conversations.
Nuclear’s issues are engineering and governance problems, and they’re solvable. CO₂ isn’t optional anymore, firm clean power is. Wind, solar, and nuclear all play different roles.
This is the part that often gets ignored. When demand actually shows up, nuclear delivers at scale. Percentages like this are why grids rely on it during real stress.
There’s no Planet B, which is precisely why rejecting the cleanest large-scale energy source is irrational. Climate urgency argues for nuclear.
Kazakhstan scaling nuclear makes strategic sense. Large geography, growing demand, and grid stability all point to firm power. SMRs are a practical way to add capacity without overbuilding transmission.
This is exactly why nuclear keeps re-entering security discussions. When geopolitics spikes, reliable domestic power stops being “energy policy” and becomes national resilience. Intermittency doesn’t deter missiles.
Interesting work. Neutrino-based reconstruction is a powerful reminder that nuclear science keeps advancing quietly while public debate stays stuck in the past.
That analogy is exactly right. Seizing assets and then offering to sell them back “cheap” is coercion. Energy security only exists with sovereignty.
The situation is unsettled because the plant is occupied. Zaporizhzhia worked safely for decades under Ukrainian operators. The instability is geopolitical.
Calling a military seizure “supplying energy at low prices” doesn’t make it legitimate. Taking infrastructure by force and reselling its output is extortion. That framing should be rejected outright.
This is pure fantasy mixed with fear of physics. Nuclear power is one of the most tightly controlled, statistically safest energy systems ever built. Hand-waving doesn’t change engineering reality.
This is what happens when energy security meets real prices. Once imports become volatile and expensive, countries rediscover the value of domestic, firm nuclear power. Europe is relearning this the hard way.
Exactly. EVs are storage and load balancing. They can help grids operate better, but they don’t replace the need for firm power like nuclear.
Fusion announcements make headlines, fission powers grids. AI data centers need proven, scalable electricity now. That’s why real deployments are happening around nuclear today.
Hemp is a materials question, not an energy one. Solar-powered manufacturing still needs reliable electricity when the sun isn’t shining, that’s where nuclear comes in. This is systems working together.
Scotland already depends on nuclear power whether it hosts plants or not. Saying “we don’t want it” while importing it from elsewhere just shifts risk and cost. Energy systems don’t run on symbolism.
GB Energy was never designed to replace firm generation, it was meant to complement it. Wind-heavy systems still need stable baseload, and Sizewell C is about system reliability. Jobs alone don’t keep the lights on.
Nuclear safety standards don’t change at the border. Scotland already imports nuclear power from England while rejecting the jobs, tax base, and control that come with hosting it. That’s outsourcing responsibility.
Rolling back climate rules while boosting fossil fuels and nuclear is not the same thing. One locks in volatility and emissions, the other delivers clean firm power. Lumping them together misses the system reality.
That’s the paradox. Everyone agrees nuclear is needed, but permitting and timelines are still designed for a world that didn’t need power urgently. Demand won’t wait for process reform.
Calling theft “generosity” doesn’t change the facts. Occupied infrastructure is leverage created by force, and energy blackmail is still blackmail.
No one is putting reactors on street corners. The real point is concentrated, reliable power near demand, because AI doesn’t run on vibes or extension cords.
Wylfa’s closure is a perfect example of short-term politics creating long-term vulnerability. Losing firm nuclear capacity doesn’t get replaced by wind alone, it gets replaced by imports and higher prices.
No one is asking for winners to be picked. Markets fail when firm power is excluded by policy and distortion. Nuclear competes just fine when reliability, scale, and grid stability are priced honestly.
That alignment is exactly why nuclear keeps resurfacing in strategic partnerships. Energy security, industrial capacity, and long-term power are now geopolitical assets.
Regulatory agencies exist to serve the public. Undermining independent oversight in nuclear doesn’t make anyone safer, it just weakens trust in systems that already work.
Fusion is exciting science, but it’s not an energy plan for this decade. Fission already works, scales, and runs grids today. Waiting for fusion is just another way of delaying deployment.
Scotland exporting power while paying peak prices shows the flaw in energy-only thinking. Variable generation without firm capacity just shifts costs to consumers.