The fact is thorium or uranium, the govt wont buy it cause they want to stay in power, or get in power.
No Australian gov will go for nuclear power, because we have too much coal. Disregard the fact that if we're not using it ourselves we'll have more to export, it's simply a cry about costing potential jobs in that sector. Same reason why we dig up iron and coal, send them both overseas, and buy back steel. For some reason, Aus has an attitude against manufacturing - "we're a primary producer - we ride on the sheep's back!". But I digress...
Westinghouse have been building SMRs for a while, they're a conventional light-water reactor, but quite small and compact. South Africa had quite an interesting/promising design in the Pebble-bed reactor, but the government there basically shut down the research into it, which is a shame.
I can't remember who, but someone had a concept for a salt reactor that was not much bigger than a phone booth. The theory was that while electricity is common in the first world, there's no infrastructure for it in developing countries. So a little reactor that didn't make much power was what you needed - easy to fly in somewhere and bury, and provided enough power for a village to run lights/fridges. Not much else, but when you don't have either of those things, that's quite an achievement.
But I'm one of these weird people who don't mind Uranium-based reactors. If anything, what happened at Fukushima made me even more convinced they're quite safe. </my reputation>
while I agree.. I can see this thread going bush real quick
+1.
Thanks!
Matto