The Shidao Bay plant in eastern Shandong province is powered by two high-temperature reactors cooled by gas rather than pressurised water, according to state news agency Xinhua

Think of how many renewables they could have made for all the monies wasted on this.

  • Not that much actually, unlike most of the world China actually has been scaling up renewables at a significant rate. The only problem is that they’ve been adding new coal plants aswell, and it might be hard to justify shutting down brand new plants, but there is actually a argument to be made that solar production is increasing as fast as economically feasible.

    Nuclear is not bottleneckd in the same fields, and does have some significant advantages for supplementing renewables, namely in reliability, transmission efficiency, footprint, and raw resource requirements.

      • Ya, the primary problem it’s had is that while profitable, it’s not nearly as profitable as solar and wind. That’s fine if your goal is a stable source of energy to form the bedrock of western society, but not so much if it’s just to make as much profit as possible as quickly as possible.