this post was submitted on 16 May 2025
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Belgium has dropped nuclear phaseout plans adopted over two decades ago. Previously, it had delayed the phaseout for 10 years over the energy uncertainty triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Belgium's parliament on Thursday voted to drop the country's planned nuclear phaseout.

In 2003, Belgium passed a law for the gradual phaseout of nuclear energy. The law stipulated that nuclear power plants were to be closed by 2025 at the latest, while prohibiting the construction of new reactors.

In 2022, Belgium delayed the phaseout by 10 years, with plans to run one reactor in each of its two plants as a backup due to energy uncertainty triggered by Russia's war in Ukraine.

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[–] stickly@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

What do people mean by "less efficient" in these conversations? Energy generated is energy generated, the number one efficiency we should talk about is using less of it. Past that you're just choosing to optimize for cost, ecological impact, carbon footprint, etc...

[–] Duke_Nukem_1990@feddit.org -1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

So by that logic we should build energy sources that need the smallest input to get running. That's not nuclear, hence the "less efficient".

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 4 points 3 weeks ago

Again, efficiency is not the same thing as scalability. You're optimizing for investment cost (maybe build time? I can't tell). If we planned/regulated our usage better that's irrelevant because power usage is predictable.

People won't need more tomorrow than today unless they make a drastic change. If electricity isn't cheap and elastic by default, they just won't buy that high watt GPU or electric car. Bitcoin isn't such an important social good that it needs instant access to a continent's worth of power, but it gobbled it up because nobody stopped it.

And even if you do need account for something unpredictable, you can still adjust with other sources. That doesn't mean they need to be the foundation of your whole grid.