 One of the big ideas in my presentation is that this is an area of surprising cooperation with China. The United States, the we in the sentence, has trouble cooperating with China in space, but we've had surprising level of cooperation in the civil nuclear power area. China has enormous plans for the development of civil nuclear power. This is a plant in Zhejiang. China has up to date about 14 reactors, power reactors underway, a remarkable safety record. But China is going to expand enormously in the future, and as this chart shows, it'll go from somewhere about 14, 15 reactors now to perhaps 160 reactors by 2040. This isn't going to be however big China's nuclear program is, not the silver bullet for global warming. Almost under any imaginable scenario, China's going to be combusting probably twice as much coal approximately in 2040 as it is now. China, if it's going to build out this program, is going to have to put these plants somewhere. As concentrated as this map shows along the coast, but they're going to have to move in inland. And the bottom line is there is no convenient place in China to put a nuclear power plant. This is a population density map. The current plants are sighted along the darker red area, but they're going to move eventually inland. And these are areas of tremendous population. They're also water constraints and so forth. You have the not in my backyard kind of phenomenon. Already we can see in Taiwan with three operative plants and a fourth underway. Massive demonstrations for Taiwan ongoing. China's National Development and Resource Commission has already issued guidelines for risk assessment studies before plants are located. Other risks are of course geologic. This is a seismic map, basically the darker the color, the bigger the risk. Where China's going to have to put these plants has substantial seismic risk and tsunami risk, although less in China along the coast. Another issue is where do you put the waste? I asked the Chinese, I've done a lot of interviewing on this. I asked the Chinese, where are you going to put this? The answer was out west. And of course that was in some sense the American answer as well. This is an Nevada storage site. China essentially has the same methodology. If you ask, well, what's out west in China? All the dots are essentially minority ethnic. It's a concentration of the minority and ethnic population in China. This is going to create some local difficulties, political and otherwise. And also their brothers across the Central Asian borders will have their concerns as well. There's also the safety concern Fukushima was mentioned earlier. It had a massive impact on popular thinking I think in China. Selling out of masks and iodine concern right now in China about the leakage of radioactive material from Fukushima. So lots of security concerns. As a result of that the government here has acted with prudence and responsibility. It did temporarily the construction of new plants. But what you can see in this chart also is that the proposals for continued numbers of plants are going up even though construction has temporarily been halted at least on new plants. Another result of the Fukushima problem was you can see pre Fukushima, China relatively speaking didn't have many inspectors per reactor. The United States is in the middle with a lot. China boosted it substantially but it's still below what I would think are good standards. China has a problem in the policy making system. It's been trying to pass an atomic energy law since the 1980s and hasn't succeeded. Part of it has to do with this chart. The red boxes are what I'd call pro nuclear growth bureaucracies. The green ones environment and health. And basically the environment and health boxes in the chart are weaker than the pro growth ones. Another whole issue is where is China going to find uranium? China is on a hunt for it in Namibia, Kazakhstan developing relations with Australia. The U.S. has some concerns about that but there's a global trade some of which is subterranean in uranium. That's a security problem. Then you get to the security problem and you have the post 9-11 hardening of plants. I think China would itself say that it isn't as far along on that as it should be. And you also have the question of export of plants. China sees the development of nuclear power plants as an export opportunity and is exporting to Pakistan and has its eyes on Latin America as well. So the proliferation issue is also involved. So the long and the short of it really is there's going to be a tug-of-war in China between the forces that see the dangers of this versus the built-in stronger bureaucracies that I think see the benefits commercial and otherwise.