why do people suddenly fear nuclear power plants?

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Evil Tim

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DRSH1989 said:
I love nuclear power plants... especially the ones with the juicy melting cores that go BOOM, exploding suddenly for no apparent reason :D.
This post comes to you live from Simcity 4.
 

mew4ever23

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Evil Tim said:
I agree, the fact that they're ONLY having containment issues after an earthquake of that magnitude and the following tsunami is a testament to how they were built.
 

funguy2121

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Wilson Driesens said:
Because they are hippies who fear an alternative energy that might actually work, and they listen to horror stories about things like Chernobyl and Three-Mile Island, ignoring that fact that neither of those are possible with a well-designed, safely implemented reactor. Things like a nuclear plant going critical is only possible if the plant was designed by a drunken idiot, and staffed by retarded turtles; neither of those is the case with the reactors in Japan, which are fine.

And they get scared by radiation, because they can't understand it, even though you get hit by more radiation watching TV than you do walking around a nuclear power plant.

EDIT: A friend posted this article on Facebook, makes sense to me.
http://theenergycollective.com/barrybrook/53461/fukushima-nuclear-accident-simple-and-accurate-explanation
You underestimate the number of retarded turtles in the world.

Isn't Japan supposed to be, y'know, sophisticated? Especially compared to the Russians (technologically)?

OP: people do not "suddenly" fear nuclear power. These fears are nothing new. I'm not sure of Russia's tectonic layout but there's no such thing as an earthquake-proof building, just as there is no such thing as a foolproof nuclear power plant.

Before any of the posters calls me one of the aforementioned hippies, I don't bathe in patchoulie (or even know how to spell it!) and I support nuclear energy as one option to help cure the U.S. of our oil addiction
 

funguy2121

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gl1koz3 said:
Those power plants are not of the same design as Chernobyl... Catastrophic coolant failure is much less of a possibility. Also, imagine what crazy shit can happen when any non-alternative energy plant blows up. Yeah, much worse. So they should just piss off.
Wasn't Chernobyl a part of the Soviet Union? How much progress has the region seen in the intervening years?
 

Darchrow

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Nuclear energy is safer than most people think.
What happened in the one in Japan is that the Fuel Rods are fully exposed because they put the secondary power off-site, which meant that the secondary power got wiped-out, if it was placed somewhere else that was much safer and say actually designed to withstand Earthquakes then this wouldn't have happened.

It was a design fault by the people who build that plant, not necessarily a fault on nuclear energy.

Coal mining is has a least more deaths yet I don't see it being a massive issue with the media, even when the Chilean miners got stuck.
 
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To those who are worried about the nuclear reactors, read this [http://morgsatlarge.wordpress.com/2011/03/13/why-i-am-not-worried-about-japans-nuclear-reactors/]. Its written by someone who actually knows what they're talking about.
THEJORRRG said:
That. Makes. No. Difference.

It was still a nuclear plant that exploded. It showed us all the effects of what can happen, and why we can't take chances with nuclear power.
Something like Chernobyl will NEVER happen with current plants. Never ever ever ever. An example is 3 mile island. Nobody died from that, very, very little radiation was actually leaked, and everything was fine. Because the plant was well designed.

Chernobyl was never happened again, and will never happen again unless someone specifically builds a plant to be exactly like Chernobyl, which will not happen.

Japan's plants are built to withstand these quakes. And even though the recent quakes were stronger than anticipated, the plants still held up, and will be upgraded to withstand future quakes even better.

Naheal said:
When you anomalies create problems that big, we need to make sure that we use this power responsibly. It's clean and safe, for the most part, but when things go wrong, they tend to really go wrong.

What's going on at the Dai-ichi and Dai-ni plants are examples of why we need to have more safeties in place should something like this happen. While it's true that there was no way to properly prepare for such a powerful disaster previously, the fact that it has happened will give us a reason and means to prepare for such a disaster in the future.
You do know that the plants released no more radiation than what you'd get in a long-distance flight? All those plants and the people in them did exactly what they should, and as a result none of them "exploded", or will explode and release oodles of deadly radiation, like Chernobyl.
 

Regiment

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It's a pretty good sign of safety when it takes a magnitude-9 earthquake and a 30-foot tsunami in quick succession to damage (as of right now, four days after, none of the plants have melted down) a nuclear power plant.
 

Jaime_Wolf

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Because people have the faintest inkling of how they work.

If they had no idea, they'd be hard-pressed to be scared and if they actually knew what they were talking about, they'd know enough not to be scared.

Instead, they know just enough to act like smug little assholes marching forth with luddite fanaticism to save the world.

All this when, in reality, nuclear power is the safest, cleanest sort humanity has access to right now. Yes, the extremely rare disaster is dangerous to the local area and yes, the waste is hard to dispose of safely (though far, far from impossible as many would lead you to believe). However, it's a damn sight better than the majority of other power sources that are actively destroying the entire world. When someone has a solution that doesn't have any of these problems, I'll be right on board. In the mean time, nuclear is the best option we have. Note: this is not an invitation to argue that better alternatives already exist; please don't derail the thread.

As an aside, the number one question to ask someone to see if they have any idea what they're talking about is to ask whether they think a reactor meltdown results in a nuclear explosion. Better yet, ask them if they think a reactor can explode at all (spoiler alert: it can't).
 

Alden Hou

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Wilson Driesens said:
Because they are hippies who fear an alternative energy that might actually work, and they listen to horror stories about things like Chernobyl and Three-Mile Island, ignoring that fact that neither of those are possible with a well-designed, safely implemented reactor. Things like a nuclear plant going critical is only possible if the plant was designed by a drunken idiot, and staffed by retarded turtles; neither of those is the case with the reactors in Japan, which are fine.

And they get scared by radiation, because they can't understand it, even though you get hit by more radiation watching TV than you do walking around a nuclear power plant.

EDIT: A friend posted this article on Facebook, makes sense to me.
http://theenergycollective.com/barrybrook/53461/fukushima-nuclear-accident-simple-and-accurate-explanation
^this, all you hippies read this quote and stop biotching about safe alternative energy.
 

Ocoton

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While there is an underground sync in case of overload wherein the radiation gets trapped inside, the earthquake could've very well damaged it. If that's the case, this will be the third time radiation has fucked Japan, except this one is actually a massive problem. fun fact: Chernobyl could destroy europe. The only thing stopping it is a rapidly decaying metal coffin around it that only allows tiny amounts out. Japans one is a lot stronger. We're talking the radiation will reach and pwn america. the waste they produce is dangerous, the power output isn't that exceptional when compared to the fusion reactors they have [yes, those do exist, they charge hydrogen atoms in a gold casting and the hydrogen atoms fuse for a few seconds, while it's not permanent the power output from it is stunning.] and if you don't see Chernobyl as a big deal then you haven't honestly looked at it. You haven't spent hours seeing the videos and pictures of the disgusting, lief ruining mutations it caused and the agony that is still going to this day.
 

Phishfood

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InterAirplay said:
Anyway, nuclear power plants = very very good in terms of power and pollution but if one goes tits-up, you're screwed completely. I was wondering, why not build an enormous blast shield over nuclear power plants? in case of imminent explosion, just close it up, pump in emergency coolant and if it all goes badly, then at least it's all contained.
They do. Physics lesson for some of you: A meltdown is exactly what it sounds like. The reactor melts into a nasty pile of red hot radioactive goo. It doesn't explode, it doesn't jump up into the air. It sits there wibbling.

So, RE Japan reactors and meltdown:
1) The opperators believe they have control over the reactors and they will not melt.
2) The reactors are contained in a massive concrete shell which will stop any radiation escaping.
3) The because of 3 the only reason to stop a meltdown is so the reactors can be used again (Japan needs electricity too).

The little radiation that has "escaped" so far was deliberately vented and was short lived, relatively harmless gas. About the same dose as a Chest X-ray.

If all 6 reactors that were said to be in trouble were to melt down right now, all that would happen is they would have to lock off the concrete shells and walk away while it cooled down. End of.

Windscale, 3 mile island and chernobyll are 3 accidents out of many hundreds of power plants running successfully for years.


A couple people mentioned living near heysham plant, did I not hear that heysham 1 and 2 were being decomissioned soon? so any potential heysham 3 would be a replacement rather than an addition?
 

Evil Tim

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Ocoton said:
fun fact: Chernobyl could destroy europe. The only thing stopping it is a rapidly decaying metal coffin around it that only allows tiny amounts out.
Most nuclear reactor designs don't wait until after the reactor explodes before putting up a containment building. The containment building itself is thus usually not designed in thirty seconds and built by people who are dying of radiation poisoning.
 

Mechsoap

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blekx said:
But why not use solar and wind power? It will never explode and produces absolutely no yellowcake. Why invest in a type of power which produces waste instead of clean ones which can potentially continue until the sun explodes in 5 million or so years.
The problem with wind and solar energy, is that its not as effective as you think it is. You can only have effective solar arrays in the desert, and you can only have windmills in very windy areas, and wind isn't constant.
 

CrazyGirl17

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Sep 11, 2009
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summerof2010 said:
CrazyGirl17 said:
Blame nuclear radiation, not to mention the problem of what do do with the nuclear waste generated.

I dunno, I think people are really jumpy around this kinda thing. If there wasn't a problem with meltdowns and nuclear waste I'd be fine with it, but...

(Any feedback on how ignorant I am on this topic?)
Meltdowns aren't really a problem. They couldn't do nearly as much damage as what happened with Chernobyl (which wasn't as damaged as people think it was anyway), and they're extremely unlikely to happen in the first place. The new designs eat the old waste as fuel too, and there are even ideas going around to use the minuscule amount of waste from that process as well, in further reactors.
Thanks for the info, though I doubt that will convince some people...

Makes me feel a bit better, though.
 

Kyuubi Fanatic

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Feb 22, 2010
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People have always feared Nuclear Power Plants, it just hasn't been the thing to obsess about for the last whenever. Apparently tho, the US has a ton of such plants right near California's fault line. Who made that decision??
 

Evil Tim

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Kyuubi Fanatic said:
People have always feared Nuclear Power Plants, it just hasn't been the thing to obsess about for the last whenever. Apparently tho, the US has a ton of such plants right near California's fault line. Who made that decision??
It's California, the state where people are endlessly surprised when the places that caught fire every year since they moved there catch fire this year too.
 

Kyuubi Fanatic

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Feb 22, 2010
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Evil Tim said:
Kyuubi Fanatic said:
People have always feared Nuclear Power Plants, it just hasn't been the thing to obsess about for the last whenever. Apparently tho, the US has a ton of such plants right near California's fault line. Who made that decision??
It's California, the state where people are endlessly surprised when the places that caught fire every year since they moved there catch fire this year too.
Ahh, Evil Tim... Thank you ^_^
 

Cpu46

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Sep 21, 2009
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THEJORRRG said:
RAKtheUndead said:
THEJORRRG said:
Yeah, but if something DOES go wrong, stuff goes, very, horribly wrong.
See: Chernobyl outskirts.
Chernobyl. Was. An. Anomaly. [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/read/18.241623-Probing-The-Inaccuracies-Nuclear-Power]

Stop using it as an example.
That. Makes. No. Difference.

It was still a nuclear plant that exploded. It showed us all the effects of what can happen, and why we can't take chances with nuclear power.
Chernobyl is an outlier as far as nuclear power safety statistics go.
Yes it was a tragedy that still effects the area around it but take this into consideration: There are over four hundred reactors in use today. Around 10 reactors in history have had melt downs and eight Russian/solviet submarines have had reactor accidents, six of which were due to loss of coolant.

Chernobyl was one of three to have a large scale melt down. The others were Three mile island and Lucens reactor. Three mile island was only a partial meltdown and was contained so well that the other reactors are still in use today while Lucens was built in an underground cavern and was contained, like three mile island it was only a partial core meltdown.