Yesterday I went to ChatGPT to try to get down to the first-principles cost of a reactor, and as a result I've moderated my opinion somewhat.
My original position was that nuclear is *cheap* because getting rocks to get hot is easy, if you're permitted to buy said rocks. And the only reason it's not ubiquitous is regulation and bullshit.
GPT's claim is that there are two true first principles problems:
1. Neutron economy as cores are scaled down.
2. Moving heat away from the core as cores are scaled up.
This makes enough sense to me, and I will reform my position the the following: "Nuclear should be relatively cheap, but there are engineering problems to solve, and they are not solved because of regulation and bullshit".
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> 800 for coal
Okay I'll take your number, 2000 was GPT's estimate and it sounds like you know this for a fact.
> meanwhile the chart goes from about 1000 to 8000 in 25 years
The point is that nothing's supposed to get MORE expensive with time, so it means the US got lost in the weeds of over-regulation and loss of will.
There's another chart I can't find with reactors from different countries, and you see that China today is pushing the bottom of those 1970s numbers. Picrel is the same story.
Now if $1700 is the cost of a PWR, and China has a molten salt thorium breeder (they have an experimental one and plans to build a 100MW small production unit), then we should expect that getting rid of the whole pressure vessel and all of the crap that comes with it will at least halve the cost, if not quarter it. So there should come a time when coal becomes uncompetitive - and then at that point, economies of scale will drive the cost down probably another 50% again and coal will be very dead.