The EU has decided that burning natural gas and atomic power plants are "transitional" green energies. This is nonsense.
Take gas first. Natural gas drilling is anything but a green activity. with large amounts of gas escaping into the atmosphere. Methane is a worse greenhouse gas than CO2. Vast sums are also required to build and maintain the infrastructure of gas pipelines and storage facilities. Cost estimates vary, but it requires about $3.5 million to build one mile of pipeline. To put this in perspective, for $3.5 million one could erect a 2-3 megawatt windmill. A one hundred mile gas pipeline would cost as much as windmills with c. 250 megawtt capacity. And if one factors in the cost of gas exploration, drilling, storage, and all the rest of the expenses, building gas infrastructure is a stupid investment. Calling it transitional means that the plan is to spend all that money and then shut the system down in one generation. But that would not really happen. Once a massive infrastructure is built, it acquires technological momentum, and it is difficult to shut down.
But gas is a winner compared to nuclear power. The big problem with it lies in the waste, which is a very long term deferred cost imposed on generations to come. The EU tasks individual national governments with the costs of nuclear waste, but this is a very large and expensive can to kick down the road to the future. An American example may be helpful here. The US has generated a lot of nuclear waste, and most states and localities fiercely resist becoming the depositories. I devote chapter eight of Conflicted American Landscapes to the mining and refining of uranium, its transformation into plutonium, and the vast amount of waste generated at every step of the process.
Consider the effects of mining. In the words of the US Environmental Protection Agency: “From 1944 to 1986, nearly 30 million tons of uranium ore were extracted from Navajo lands under leases with the Navajo Nation. Many Navajo people worked the mines, often living and raising families in close proximity to the mines and mills.” This left, “a legacy of uranium contamination” at more than 500 abandoned mines, “as well as homes and drinking water sources with elevated levels of radiation. Potential health effects include lung cancer from inhalation of radioactive particles, as well as bone cancer and impaired kidney function from exposure to radionuclides in drinking water.” Thousands of uranium mine workers and their families developed cancer and whole communities were devastated.