Comment Re:Shenanigans (Score 2) 70
You're assuming two things: a) that they exist, and b) that they require maintenance. Modern process design reduces manual switches and dials to be simple electronic sensors read remotely. Modern equipment is insanely reliable, and a steam raising facility is an incredibly simple process to get right from a reliability point of view. And for random faults, well that's what redundancy in design is for.
These aren't new problems by the way. We have been building things and been putting them in worse conditions for many years. Take for example from oil and gas well head control systems. They are located on the seabed in deep water. We're not just talking a sensor or two, no we're talking the entire system, sensors, valves, hydraulic motors, control system, multiple UPSes, packaged neatly and dumped a mile under the ocean surface. It's a lot of fun to design, and even more fun to see someone approach the first time, thing such as mean time to repair suddenly dominate reliability calculations when you need to schedule a submersible to go collect your safety system module at 1.5km depth. Yes I have done that, with a system that is identical to ones used in nuclear reactors (except when we design them in nuclear reactors we get a 1E certificate and slap a zero on the end of the purchase order for that piece of paper).
As for remotely accessing things being shenanigans, we've been doing that for many years already as well. All that "access" you are talking about is access during construction and design, not during operation. Fun fact I worked opposite a completely unmanned air separation facility. Not only remotely operated, but remotely operated from a completely different continent. The plant was in Australia and the control room in Indonesia. At my company we also have completely unmanned facilities in the ocean. (Again, MTTR and equipment reliability which is my bread and butter, gets interesting when we consider maintenance teams not being on site and having to provision a boat or helicopter to go fix something).
This just isn't new. Also no one here is talking about anything "big". In fact that is the biggest problem here. Not the remote operated bit, or the maintenance bit, but rather that these atom-bros are yet once again pushing tiny SMRs which don't exist yet. Forget pipes, crews, or any of that, they are talking about a reactor, steam, and rotating equipment package that is less than 1m across and about 8-10m high generating fuck all electricity. That's the big problem, not the maintenance, but the fact that this kind of tiny stuff remains in fantasy land and on concepts drawn on napkins.