So we shouldn't bioremediate radioactive or heavy metals contaminated sites then?
The point being, there are biological processes that address toxic waste.
Further, there are waste issues with pretty much all human uses of energy and resources, including "green" technologies. It's impossible to have green tech w/out rare earths, and impossible to have rare earth end products w/out creating radioactive waste.
I'm not pro nuclear, but FWiW:
There are bioremedition techniques used to treat contaminated sites, just as there are similar techniques for toxic metals contamination.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioremediation_of_radioactive_...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266676572...
The radioactive material doesn’t go away, it’s either diluted until safe or concentrated until you can bury it somewhere safe.
So we shouldn't bioremediate radioactive or heavy metals contaminated sites then?
The point being, there are biological processes that address toxic waste.
Further, there are waste issues with pretty much all human uses of energy and resources, including "green" technologies. It's impossible to have green tech w/out rare earths, and impossible to have rare earth end products w/out creating radioactive waste.
* https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/05/business/china-rare-earth...
* https://hamiltonlocke.com.au/unlocking-clean-energy-the-cruc...
The sane approach is to address external costs from the get go, not assert that there are none.
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