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1 Notre Dame J. on Emerging Tech. i (2020)

handle is hein.journals/ndjet1 and id is 1 raw text is: 







FOREWORD


   Breaking free of our collective addiction to fossil fuels is of paramount
importance, not only because greenhouse gas emissions are pushing the
planet to the brink of climate catastrophe, but also because fossil-fuel based
energy sources deployed in rural areas of low- and middle-income countries
transfer local cash out of the region. Further development of fossil fuel re-
sources works to ensure that the huge energy wealth inequity present in the
world prevails.

   Amongst  the United Nations' goals for global sustainable development
is Goal #7: Affordable and Clean Energy. This goal focuses specifically on
ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for
all. Yet today one billion people have no electricity and two billion rely on
open fires for cooking and heating. Many more people have only enough
electricity to light one or two bulbs for a few hours a day and perhaps charge
a cell phone, but nothing more. Communities impacted by unreliable and
intermittent supplies of electricity in insufficient quantities are held back
in attaining other United Nations sustainability goals including no poverty,
zero hunger, good health and well-being, and clean water and sanitation.
This is no small problem, as electrification of rural areas of low- and middle-
income  countries where poverty, hunger and disease are disproportion-
ately present without vastly increasing fossil fuel consumption and green-
house gas emissions is one of the greatest challenges of this century.

   Heat energy is produced in Earth by radioactive decay of unstable ele-
ments, and populations in areas with high geothermal gradients like Ice-
land can tap into this supply of plentiful sustainable energy. Vast amounts
of energy are tied up in unstable atomic nuclei and this energy can be liber-
ated and harnessed by nuclear reactions in which mass is converted to en-
ergy according to Einstein's theory of special relativity. The tremendous
amounts  of liberated heat can be used to do useful work, including gener-
ating easily transported and stored electricity, or in propulsion systems.
There is sufficient fuel for these reactors to be viewed as sustainable for
thousands of years. To do this currently, massive and expensive facilities
must be constructed, and are mostly out of reach for low- and middle-in-
come  countries. It is essential that high-income countries continue to de-
velop nuclear power as an alternative to fossil fuels, as many experts argue
this is the only way to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions on a
time-scale that will perhaps change the severity of climate change. Devel-
opment  of small modular nuclear reactors that are cheaper to produce in
larger numbers   and  deployable where   needed  is also an  essential


©2020 by Peter C. Burns


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