I worked as a research scientist in the Canadian nuclear industry for 23 years. Having studied CANDU reactors in great detail, I can say I would not want to live within 10 miles of one. Pickering Unit 3 (P3) had a serious LOCA in August 1983 from a pressure tube rupture that was not supposed to be possible (according to all the scientists at Chalk River).
Chalk River scientists also believed that the N2 annulus gas system used by all CANDUs at that time could not produce particulate carbon -14. When P3 was opened up for repairs in 1985, thousands of curies of particulate carbon-14 were released to the air and was soon found on swipes taken in the offices AND IN THE HOMES of staff working at Pickering.
And, let's face it, the long-term disposal of CANDU fuel IS a major problem. AECL has been working on this for 50 years and has not come up with a viable plan. So hundreds of thousands of hot fuel bundles are stored in glorified swimming pools that have been known to leak into the local ground water after just 25 years of operation.
And, by the way, a spent fuel storage bay makes a GREAT terrorist target!
I'd like to know more about your background, as I've never ever heard a nuclear energy research scientist come out against the idea. Heard them say one variety of reactor or process was flawed, yes.
I've actually never liked the CANDU especially, but I've not seen any reason I wouldn't want to live near one. Are you aware of some of the things that come out of a coal stack?
The "spent fuel" issue has come up and been addressed before and what you are saying is the simplistic view which I have heard over and over and fails to address the actual physical nature of the stuff.
Furthermore, I'd be interested to know what scientist claimed it was impossible for a high pressure pipe to rupture. Given that there is no "infinately strong" metal and that pressure pipes of all sorts have had a tendency to rupture on occasion before.
This is of course, why there are contaimnet structures and why there are measures for this. One does not buy a fire extinguisher because theyexpect their house to catch fire, but because they know it can happen.
Is this the same scientist (the one with the pressure pipe which can not explode) who designed the "unsinkable ship" and the "Aircraft which simply cannot possibly crash ever"