Energy policy in a changing social order (open access)

Energy policy in a changing social order

The background of conventional energy management and use relative to public policy is sketched. Events which threaten to overtake our lingering social, economic, and political impressions relative to energy are examined. How current social trends may be taking us in unfamiliar energy policy directions, particularly involving the more-advanced and alternative energy options now under consideration, are investigated. It is argued that the emerging social consensus, which will ultimately define national energy policy, increasingly favors a transition from conventional to renewable energy sources. 41 references.
Date: November 1, 1979
Creator: Schaller, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor Program. Volume V. Environmental Statement (open access)

Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor Program. Volume V. Environmental Statement

None
Date: December 1, 1974
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
INDEXES TO 708 UNCLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS ON CIVIL DEFENSE. (open access)

INDEXES TO 708 UNCLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS ON CIVIL DEFENSE.

None
Date: January 1, 1970
Creator: Gailar, J.S.; Baldry, W.H. & Klein, A.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Community conflict in the nuclear power issue (open access)

Community conflict in the nuclear power issue

This is the first of a two part discussion the purpose of which is to demonstrate that a frankly structural, or network, approach to the analysis of community decision-making allows an observer to anticipate and manage community response to specific policies. Here I am concerned with anticipating community response. In part two (Burt, 1978), I am concerned with conflict resolution strategies. The specific policy used as illustration is siting nuclear power facilities. Published accounts of siting nuclear facilities are used to identify basic social parameters of the nuclear power issue as a community conflict. Changes in the form and content of relations in the network among opponents and proponents of a facility are described. Subsequently, the description is used to specify a causal model of the manner in which conflict escalation is promoted or inhibited by the characteristics and leadership structure of a community in which a nuclear facility is proposed. Hypotheses are derived predicting what types of communities can be expected to become embroiled in conflict and the process that conflict escalation will follow.
Date: May 1, 1978
Creator: Burt, R.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geopressured-geothermal resource development on public free school lands (open access)

Geopressured-geothermal resource development on public free school lands

The study's findings and recommendations are based upon analysis of the following: financial and economic feasibility of geopressured-geothermal resource development; possible ecological, social, and economic impacts of resource development on PFSL; and legal issues associated with resource development. The results of the analysis are summarized and are discussed in detail in a series of four technical papers which accompany this volume. Existing rules of the General Land Office (GLO), the School Land Board (SLB), and the Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) were reviewed in light of the above analysis and were discussed with the agencies. The study's recommendations resulted from this analytical and review process; they are discussed. The preliminary draft rules and regulations to govern resource development on PFSL are presented in Appendix A; the accompanying forms and model lease are found in Appendix B.
Date: July 1, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the workshop on world oil supply-demand analysis (open access)

Proceedings of the workshop on world oil supply-demand analysis

Twelve papers and four panel discussions are included. A separate abstract was prepared for each paper. The panel discussions were on: technical and physical policy elements affecting world oil supply and demand; financial, tax, and tariff issues in world oil supply and demand; the world economy as influenced by world oil prices and availability; the use of models and analysis in the policy process. (DLC)
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: Hoffman, K.C. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of solar energy to the supply of industrial process hot water: preliminary design and performance report. Volume I. Technical report. Aerotherm report TR-76-219. [For can washing at Campbell Soup Plant in Sacramento] (open access)

Application of solar energy to the supply of industrial process hot water: preliminary design and performance report. Volume I. Technical report. Aerotherm report TR-76-219. [For can washing at Campbell Soup Plant in Sacramento]

The design and performance of a solar hot water system for can washing at the Campbell Soup Plant in Sacramento, California, are presented. The collector field is located on the roof of the finished products warehouse of the Campbell Soup Sacramento plant. Water is supplied from a 3.8 cm (1/sup 1///sub 2/ in.) supply line which is located directly below an existing roof access hatch. A supply pipe will be brought up through that hatch. The water flow will then be split into two manifold lines which supply the dual rows of flat plate collectors. The preheated water from the flat plates is then passed into six sets of parallel connected concentrators. Each set consist of eight 1.83 x 3.05 m (6 x 10 foot) modules connected in series. The water from these units is gathered in a 3.8 cm (1/sup 1///sub 2/ in.) insulated pipe which transports it to the storage tank. This pipe will be attached to an existing pipe run until it reaches the can washing building. From there the pipe will follow the can washing building around to the storage tank. The storage tank is a 75,200 1 (20,000 gal) steel tank which is coated internally …
Date: October 14, 1976
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resolving community conflict in the nuclear power issue: a report and annotated bibliography (open access)

Resolving community conflict in the nuclear power issue: a report and annotated bibliography

This report is a scholarly discussion of the escalation and possible resolution of community conflict in the nuclear power issue. The concern is at all times with the social factors in this conflict; technical problems in nuclear power are only considered to the extent that such problems are raised in conflict over nuclear power. Social science research on conflict is only reviewed to the extent that it bears on community conflict over nuclear power. Chapter 1 describes the nature of community conflict escalation in the nuclear power issue: stages of escalation, typical individuals and groups involved, typical issues raised, typical manners in which participants become involved, and the basic social parameters of conflict escalation. Chapter 2 outlines the community level determinants of conflict escalation in the nuclear power issue: How is a community in which conflict over a nuclear facility is most likely different from a community in which such conflict is least likely. Chapter 3 is a detailed consideration of alternative methods of containing and resolving conflict. Chapter 4 summarizes principles for dealing with community conflict in the nuclear power issue. Finally, Chapter 5 is an annotated bibliography of the literature reviewed in the report. 840 references.
Date: February 1, 1978
Creator: Burt, R.S.; Fischer, M.; Corbett, T.; Garrett, K. & Lundgren, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental survey of the reprocessing and waste management portions of the LWR fuel cycle: a task force report (open access)

Environmental survey of the reprocessing and waste management portions of the LWR fuel cycle: a task force report

This Supplement deals with the reprocessing and waste management portions of the nuclear fuel cycle for uranium-fueled reactors. The scope of the report is limited to the illumination of fuel reprocessing and waste management activities, and examination of the environmental impacts caused by these activities on a per-reactor basis. The approach is to select one realistic reprocessing and waste management system and to treat it in enough depth to illuminate the issues involved, the technology available, and the relationships of these to the nuclear fuel cycle in general and its environmental impacts.
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Bishop, W. P. & Miraglia, F. J., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final environmental statement, Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor Program. Volume 2 (open access)

Final environmental statement, Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor Program. Volume 2

Included are copies of fifty-six comment letters on the Proposed Final Environmental Statement together with the ERDA replies to these letters. The letters were received from Federal, State, and local agencies, environmental and public interest groups, members of the academic and industrial communities, and individual citizens. (DG)
Date: December 1, 1975
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission: Volume 1, 1939/1946. The New World. (open access)

History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission: Volume 1, 1939/1946. The New World.

First volume outlining the history of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), covering 1939-1946 and focusing largely on the development of the first atomic bomb. Index starts on page 725.
Date: 1972
Creator: Hewlett, Richard G. & Anderson, Oscar E., Jr.
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of solar energy to the supply of industrial process hot water. Aerotherm final report, 77-235. [Can washing in Campbell Soup plant] (open access)

Application of solar energy to the supply of industrial process hot water. Aerotherm final report, 77-235. [Can washing in Campbell Soup plant]

The objectives of the Solar Industrial Process Hot Water Program are to design, test, and evaluate the application of solar energy to the generation and supply of industrial process hot water, and to provide an assessment of the economic and resource benefits to be gained. Other objectives are to stimulate and give impetus to the use of solar energy for supplying significant amounts of industrial process heat requirements. The plant selected for the design of a solar industrial process hot water system was the Campbell Soup facility in Sacramento, California. The total hot water demand for this plant varies between 500 and 800 gpm during regular production shifts, and hits a peak of over 1,000 gpm for approximately one hour during the cleanup shift. Most of the hot water is heated in the boiler room by a combination of waste heat recovery and low pressure (5 psi) steam-water heat exchangers. The hot water emerges from the boiler room at a temperature between 160/sup 0/F and 180/sup 0/F and is transported to the various process areas. Booster heaters in the process areas then use low pressure (5 psi) or medium pressure (20 psi) steam to raise the temperature of the water …
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Coal Utilization Assessment: a preliminary assessment of coal utilizaton in the South. [Southern USA to 2020; forecasting] (open access)

National Coal Utilization Assessment: a preliminary assessment of coal utilizaton in the South. [Southern USA to 2020; forecasting]

Some of the major problems and issues related to coal development and use in the South are identified and assessed assuming a base-case energy scenario for the next 45 years. This scenario assumes a midrange of coal use and a relatively high rate of nuclear use over the forecast period. The potential impacts from coal development and use are significant, particularly in the 1990-2020 time period. Practically all available sites suitable for power plant development in the assessment will be utilized by 2020. Overall, sulfur dioxide will be well below the annual primary standard; however, several local hot-spot areas were identified. In addition, sulfate concentrations will be increased significantly, particularly over Virginia, West Virginia, and northern Kentucky. Coal mining is expected to affect 6 of the 12 major ecological regions. Coal mining will lead to increased average suspended sediment concentrations in some river basins, and special measures will be required to control acid discharges from active mines in pyritic regions. The increased mining of coal and subsequent sulfur dioxide increases from its combustion may also give rise to a land-use confrontation with food and fiber production. Potential health effects from exposure to sulfur dioxide and sulfates are expected to increase …
Date: January 1, 1978
Creator: Berry, L. B.; Bjornstad, D. J. & Boercker, F. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library