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Introducing the Nuclear-Water Nexus
KTH, Skolan för arkitektur och samhällsbyggnad (ABE), Filosofi och historia, Historiska studier av teknik, vetenskap och miljö.ORCID-id: 0000-0001-9687-1940
2025 (engelsk)Inngår i: The Nuclear-Water Nexus / [ed] Per Högselius & Siegfried Evens, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press , 2025, s. 1-19Kapittel i bok, del av antologi (Fagfellevurdert)
Abstract [en]

Splitting atoms is a water-intensive business. To operate efficiently and safely, a standard nuclear reactor needs around 50 cubic meters (13,000 gallons) of water per second—equivalent to the flow of a mid-sized river or large irrigation canal. In The Nuclear-Water Nexus, Per Högselius and Siegfried Evens bring together 25 authors from 12 countries to explore the resulting entanglements between society, technology, and nature, to show how nuclear energy’s dependence on water has shaped the atomic age in decisive ways.

Water has been the key factor in forging a global nuclear geography, as the water needs of nuclear facilities require them to be located near the sea, major rivers, canals, or lakes. As an unintended consequence of such locations, nuclear facilities have become vulnerable to droughts, floods, erosion, and climate change—with much higher stakes than most other energy installations. Consequently, the “wet” geography of nuclear energy translates into threats to the wet environment, in the form of both radioactive contamination and thermal pollution. Water has, over the years, generated social conflicts—and cooperation—between nuclear energy and other water-intensive activities, such as agriculture, fisheries, navigation, military activities, hydropower production, drinking water supply, landscaping, leisure and tourism—and even fossil fuel extraction. This book examines these processes through a set of in-depth case studies.

sted, utgiver, år, opplag, sider
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press , 2025. s. 1-19
HSV kategori
Identifikatorer
URN: urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-369375DOI: 10.7551/mitpress/15572.003.0005Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-105012235678OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kth-369375DiVA, id: diva2:1994414
Forskningsfinansiär
EU, European Research Council, 771928
Merknad

QC 20250925

Tilgjengelig fra: 2025-09-02 Laget: 2025-09-02 Sist oppdatert: 2025-09-25bibliografisk kontrollert

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