An opposing voice (the only one I could find)
http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_a ... ption.html
I'm interested to hear some input from other people on the conflicting claims being made here.
Don't believe the spin on thorium being a ‘greener’ nuclear option
[snip]
China did announce this year that it intended to develop a thorium MSR, but nuclear radiologist Peter Karamoskos, of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), says the world shouldn’t hold its breath.
‘Without exception, [thorium reactors] have never been commercially viable, nor do any of the intended new designs even remotely seem to be viable. Like all nuclear power production they rely on extensive taxpayer subsidies; the only difference is that with thorium and other breeder reactors these are of an order of magnitude greater, which is why no government has ever continued their funding.’
China’s development will persist until it experiences the ongoing major technical hurdles the rest of the nuclear club have discovered, he says.
I do not believe this is true. Thorium salt reactors have already been built, and work.
But even were its commercial viability established, given 2010’s soaring greenhouse gas levels, thorium is one magic bullet that is years off target. Those who support renewables say they will have come so far in cost and efficiency terms by the time the technology is perfected and upscaled that thorium reactors will already be uneconomic. Indeed, if renewables had a fraction of nuclear’s current subsidies they could already be light years ahead. 


This is not true. There are severe limitations to all of the existing renewables. Sure, it is not a magic bullet that will change all the other "peak everything" problems, but it
is a magic bullet regarding the specific problem of generating electricity.
Extra radioactive waste
All other issues aside, thorium is still nuclear energy, say environmentalists, its reactors disgorging the same toxic byproducts and fissile waste with the same millennial half-lives. Oliver Tickell, author of Kyoto2, says the fission materials produced from thorium are of a different spectrum to those from uranium-235, but ‘include many dangerous-to-health alpha and beta emitters’.
Tickell says thorium reactors would not reduce the volume of waste from uranium reactors. ‘It will create a whole new volume of radioactive waste, on top of the waste from uranium reactors. Looked at in these terms, it’s a way of multiplying the volume of radioactive waste humanity can create several times over.’
This contradicts everything else I've read about thorium.
I'm very interested to hear what others have to say, but I think we have here a case of being anti-nuclear for the hell of it, without considering it properly. Unless I've got something badly wrong, I think ecologists should back this, not oppose it.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)