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The Nuclear-Water Nexus

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Nuclear-Water Nexus

Contributors:

By (Author) Per Hogselius
By (author) Siegfried Evens

ISBN:

9780262552288

Publisher:

MIT Press Ltd

Imprint:

MIT Press

Publication Date:

5th August 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

363.7394

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

416

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

An edited collection that takes a deep dive into the complex interactions between nuclear energy and water. An edited collection that takes a deep dive into the complex interactions between nuclear energy and water. 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 H gselius 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. Contributors- Elisabetta Bini, Kate Brown, Peter Burt, Joanna L. Dyl, Siegfried Evens, Carlos Gonzalvo, Elizabeth Hameeteman, Per H gselius, Sonali Huria, Roman Khandozhko, Achim Kluppelberg, Maximilian P. Lau, Sabine Loewe-Hannatzsch, Anael Marrec, Victor McFarland, Jan-Henrik Meyer, Sarah E. Robey, Diego Sesma-Martin, S. Duygu Sever, Kumar Sundaram, Jonathon Turnbull, Thomas Turnbull, Mar Rubio-Varas, Agn s Villette, Heather Williams

Author Bio

Per H gselius is Professor of History of Technology at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. His English-language publications include the award-winning Red Gas, Europe's Infrastructure Transition (coauthored with Arne Kaijser and Erik van der Vleuten), and Energy and Geopolitics. He led the ERC-funded project NUCLEARWATERS. Siegfried Evens is a historian specialized in the history of technology, risk, and disaster. He obtained his PhD at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, in 2024. His thesis was part of the ERC-funded NUCLEARWATERS project and studied the regulation of water and steam technologies in nuclear power plants. He is currently a FWO Junior Postdoctoral Fellow at KU Leuven.

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