Comment by pfdietz

5 days ago

That's a bad idea. Subduction zones move very slowly, and material would come back up in "mud volcanoes", especially with the added heat input of the waste.

Nonsense. The sea floor in those areas is soft muck, 20,000 ft or more deep.

The waste, likely packaged in torpedo shaped structures made of corrosion proof, high density, high strength materials, would arrive at somewhere around 150 MPH. Being extremely dense and heavy, they would penetrate deeply into the sea bottom, estimated at 35-55 meters deep. There’s no chance they’d somehow be forced back to the surface. Even if they were, being sealed they would be harmless.

Even if by some miracle one broke open at the sea floor, the nuclear material is dense and wouldn’t disperse. There’s very little life to affect down there regardless.

For a thorough analysis (which shows how useful the frontier models are getting at this kind of thing), see https://x.com/i/grok/share/276607c72b5e4f639527935cbc614fa0