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posted by janrinok on Tuesday February 14 2017, @09:34AM   Printer-friendly
from the it's-not-what-you-know... dept.

A large majority of geeks are enamored with nuclear power -- it's very cool technology after all. The problem of course, is that a nuclear power plant is a complex piece of machinery and successfully building one to operate safely is a delicate task, a lesson Toshiba learned the hard way:

Those troubled projects in the American South are now threatening the Japanese icon's foundations. The value of Toshiba shares has been cut in half over the last six weeks, wiping out more than $7 billion in market value.

It appears a huge part of the problem stems from reliance on a pipe supplier. James Bernhard Jr. bought a pipe fabrication business ("Shaw") for $50k in a bankruptcy deal and then used his awesome dealmaking ability to parlay that into becoming Toshiba's plumber. Of course, in the modern world being a great businessman means sucking money down like a frat boy at a keg, and Bernhard went on to sell Shaw for $3.3 billion even while screwing up all the pipes (from TFA linked above):

After Westinghouse hired Shaw to handle construction in 2008, it wasn't long before the company's work came under scrutiny. By early 2012, NRC inspectors found steel in the foundation of one reactor had been installed improperly. A 300-ton reactor vessel nearly fell off a rail car. The wrong welds were used on nuclear modules and had to be redone. Shaw "clearly lacked experience in the nuclear power industry and was not prepared for the rigor and attention to detail required,'' Bill Jacobs, who had been selected as the state's monitor for the project, told the Georgia Public Service Commission in late 2012.

So there you have it. The reason some geeks (me for example) oppose nuclear power has nothing to do with the technology, and absolutely everything to do with the morons who run it. Businessmen being in charge of this technology means it will never achieve its potential and that it will always be dangerous, because by the time something goes wrong, they'll be spending their billions on hookers and blow in some remote private tropical island paradise, far far away from any consequences of any kind.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by tibman on Tuesday February 14 2017, @03:00PM

    by tibman (134) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday February 14 2017, @03:00PM (#466961)

    The outsourcing thing has always been interesting to me. If our crew can do the job for X and outsourced can do it for X/2 then either the outsource is paid less, delivers less (quality), or is more efficient. None of those are good reasons to outsource. If their process is better then don't outsource to them. Learn their process and improve ours. If they are delivering less quality then obviously we don't want the outsource. If their team is paid less it could be a several things. Lower cost of living is acceptable and is actually a valid reason to outsource. If they are paid less because they are less experienced then we shouldn't outsource.

    It's interesting to me because business sees things differently. Cheaper is better even if it means firing the local team and not waiting for them to learn a better process. Cheaper is better, even if quality slips. Cheaper is better even if it is providing experience to potential competitors and gutting our experienced team.

    Personal investment in your company is a thing too. A contractor doesn't give a crap about your company. Local employees might care though.

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