Frischauf, Norbert; Fuetterer, Michael A.; McGarry, Darren; Baldauf, Gert; Kratky, Julius
Curran Associates, Inc., 57 Morehouse Lane, Red Hook, NY 12571 (United States); Korean Nuclear Society, Nutopia Building, Jangdae-dong, 794, Yuseongdaero, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-308 (Korea, Republic of)2014
Curran Associates, Inc., 57 Morehouse Lane, Red Hook, NY 12571 (United States); Korean Nuclear Society, Nutopia Building, Jangdae-dong, 794, Yuseongdaero, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-308 (Korea, Republic of)2014
AbstractAbstract
[en] ARCHER, the current European R and D project on Advanced High-Temperature Reactors for Cogeneration of Heat and Electricity is expanding the HTR technology to support demonstration of nuclear cogeneration as an alternative to fossil fuel use in industry. Nuclear cogeneration is identified as a high-potential contribution to European energy policy and ARCHER is performed in line with European energy strategies and policy tools. The project consortium comprises of representatives of conventional and nuclear industry, utilities, technical support organisations, R and D institutes and universities. ARCHER is integrated internationally via the Generation IV International Forum and through collaboration within the project with international partners from the US, China, Japan, and the Republic of Korea; as well as through cooperation with the IAEA. As ARCHER deals with a nuclear technology that may become an important infrastructure asset in the future, the consortium decided to leap forward in its communication by addressing the general public with a telecast, similar to the documentary on CERN and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), produced in 2009 by the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation ORF, available as Video-on-Demand at http://magazine.orf.at/alpha/programm/2009/091102_urknallmaschine.htm. During 45 minutes, the ARCHER telecast provides background information on the principles of nuclear power generation and will analyse without bias the pros and cons of Nuclear Cogeneration and High-Temperature Reactor technology. This paper presents the lessons learned in devising the documentary, discussing the dos and don'ts both from a scientists and journalists perspective and provides an insight into journalistic thinking and recommendations for communicating emotionally challenging topics like nuclear energy in a constructive manner. In the light of the Fukushima accident, every nuclear project is easily confronted with a sceptic general public - trustworthy communication is therefore more than ever critical. (authors)
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2014; 9 p; Curran Associates Inc.; Red Hook, NY (United States); ICAPP'13: 2013 International Congress on Advances in Nuclear Power Plants; Jeju Island (Korea, Republic of); 14-18 Apr 2013; 28. KIF/KNS annual conference; Jeju Island (Korea, Republic of); 14-18 Apr 2013; ISBN 978-1-63266-038-1; ; Country of input: France; 11 refs.; Available from Curran Associates, Inc., 57 Morehouse Lane, Red Hook, NY 12571 (US)
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Book
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Conference
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Frischauf, Norbert; Fuetterer, Michael A.; Scheuermann, Walter; Baldauf, Gert; Kratky, Julius
American Nuclear Society - ANS, 555 North Kensington Avenue, La Grange Park, IL 60526 (United States)2014
American Nuclear Society - ANS, 555 North Kensington Avenue, La Grange Park, IL 60526 (United States)2014
AbstractAbstract
[en] ARCHER, the current European R and D project on Advanced High-Temperature Reactors for Cogeneration of Heat and Electricity is developing HTR technology to support demonstration of nuclear cogeneration as an alternative to fossil fuel use in industry. Nuclear cogeneration is identified as a high-potential contribution to European energy security and ARCHER is performed in line with European energy strategies and policy tools. The project consortium comprises of conventional and nuclear industry, utilities, technical support organisations, R and D institutes and universities. ARCHER is integrated internationally via the Generation IV International Forum and through collaboration with international partners, as well as through cooperation with the IAEA. As ARCHER deals with a nuclear technology that may become an important infrastructure asset in the future, the consortium decided to leap forward in its communication by addressing the general public with a telecast, similar to the documentary on CERN and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), produced in 2009 by the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation ORF, available as Video-on-Demand at http://magazine.orf.at/alpha/programm/2009/091102_urknallmaschine.htm. During 45 minutes, the ARCHER telecast provides background information on the principles of nuclear power generation and will analyse without any bias the pros and cons of Nuclear Cogeneration and High-Temperature Reactor technology. Now that the film shootings for the telecast are halfway through, it is time to reflect on the lessons learned in devising the documentary, the dos and don'ts both from a scientist's and journalist's perspective and as such to provide an insight into journalistic thinking and recommendations for communicating emotionally challenging topics like nuclear energy in a constructive manner. In the light of Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima, finding a way to ensure trustworthy communication vis-a-vis the general public is a clear MUST for the nuclear sector. (authors)
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Source
2014; 10 p; American Nuclear Society - ANS; La Grange Park, IL (United States); ICAPP 2014: International Congress on Advances in Nuclear Power Plants; Charlotte, NC (United States); 6-9 Apr 2014; ISBN 978-0-89448-776-7; ; Country of input: France; 17 refs.; Available on CD-ROM from American Nuclear Society - ANS, 555 North Kensington Avenue, La Grange Park, IL 60526 (US)
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Book
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Conference
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INIS IssueINIS Issue