• ikidd@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    And yet the people bitching about the cost will be the first ones to lose their minds when there’s a potential safety issue because corners were cut.

    Or are we to assume that all these low-cost reactors are safe as houses because being not-anglo makes them inherently better for some reason?

    • regul@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Spain and South Korea build high rail infrastructure for one tenth the cost of the US.

      Do you think they are cutting corners in construction?

      The cost of construction in the anglosphere doesn’t come from “too much safety”. It comes from a culture of consultants and managers and legalized graft.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Oh, yes. Spain, the home of “complete lack of corruption”.

        Give your head a shake. Corruption is everywhere, but in NA they have to pay closer to full cost for skilled trades and have very close eye kept on the results being safe and to spec.

        • regul@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          I’m pretty well acquainted with the situation. I’d recommend this research on the subject that are mainly applicable to building transit, but I expect the same observations are generally true in other megaprojects: https://transitcosts.com/

          From the executive summary:

          In our New York case, we show examples of redundancy in blue-collar labor, as did others (Rosenthal 2017; Munfah and Nicholas 2020); we also found overstaffing of white-collar labor in New York and Boston (by 40-60% in Boston), due to general inefficiency as well as interagency conflict, while little of the difference (at most a quarter) comes from differences in pay.

          Projects in the anglosphere are overstaffed for both design and construction, and there’s little evidence to show that there are better outcomes. Costs in Sweden are 20% those of the US, and yet you’d be hard-pressed to claim that Swedish workers are undercompensated or produce shoddy work.

          As for “to spec”, the SF Central Subway, which opened 5 years after it was planned to and cost 3x as much as initially forecast, had delays because the contractor attempted to get away with using sub-standard steel. In order to save time and open sooner, the city kept some of the sub-standard rails in use in lower-traffic areas.