• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Merged nuclear power safe?

Nosi

Illuminator
Joined
Jun 14, 2009
Messages
3,164
Many people on this forum believe nuclear power to be safe, clean, efficient energy. If it is done right and built well, a nuclear power plant should stand well against what is thrown at it.

Others believe there is no such thing as safe nuclear. Nuclear power plants are simply accidents looking for a date to happen.

The Japanese were very much "the for want of a nail" school when it came to building nuclear reactors. They made them tough and resistant to earthquakes, storms, cold to hot weather. Tough didn't cut it March 11. A 9.0 quake followed by a tsunami slapped their islands around like half chilled Jello, overwhelming the performing specs of the nuclear reactors. We are now looking down the jaws of serious consequences of having such dangerous sources of energy on a jumpy, jittery Earth.
 
Well, a good start would be "don't build them where there's a lot of earthquakes".


They were also of an old model, I think the same as the 3 Mile Island one?
 
I’m never sure what people mean when they ask whether it’s safe. Safe relative to what? Compared to not having enough power?
 
Many people on this forum believe nuclear power to be safe, clean, efficient energy. If it is done right and built well, a nuclear power plant should stand well against what is thrown at it.

Others believe there is no such thing as safe nuclear. Nuclear power plants are simply accidents looking for a date to happen.

The Japanese were very much "the for want of a nail" school when it came to building nuclear reactors. They made them tough and resistant to earthquakes, storms, cold to hot weather. Tough didn't cut it March 11. A 9.0 quake followed by a tsunami slapped their islands around like half chilled Jello, overwhelming the performing specs of the nuclear reactors. We are now looking down the jaws of serious consequences of having such dangerous sources of energy on a jumpy, jittery Earth.

So far any possible damage to the environment from the nuclear power station seems to me to pale into insignificance when compared with say the recent oil leak and spillage in the Gulf of Mexico.

In the UK it has proven (this is from a radio programme I heard) it's very difficult to clean up a site that an old coal powered power-station occupied because of the years of pollution - the land may never be be declared safe for domestic use.

For some reason we seem to fear pollution from nuclear power stations disproportionately when compared to the pollution caused by other forms of energy production.
 
For some reason we seem to fear pollution from nuclear power stations disproportionately when compared to the pollution caused by other forms of energy production.


I suspect it’s because nuclear power is arbitrarily deemed a more egregious example of meddling with God’s plan or disrespecting the Gaian earth mother or something equally daft.
 
I suspect it’s because nuclear power is arbitrarily deemed a more egregious example of meddling with God’s plan or disrespecting the Gaian earth mother or something equally daft.

I think you might be right.

We shouldn't be complacent about the dangers that can effect nuclear power plants at all but the alternative is to resign ourselves to living in caves.

[/ok slightly my haipa bowl]

We're simply going to have to keep learning from setbacks like this but I'm still a fully paid-up fan of nuclear power. If anyone has a better idea then I think we'd all love to know what it is.
 
I suspect it’s because nuclear power is arbitrarily deemed a more egregious example of meddling with God’s plan or disrespecting the Gaian earth mother or something equally daft.

And it shares a word with nuclear weapons so I think that adds to the fear it seems to engender. Thinking about it a tad more the most recent newsworthy stories regarding nuclear power have all been about Iran's nuclear ambitions and that has constantly linked nuclear power to nuclear weapons.
 
"Safe" is entirely relative. How many people die in coal mines? How many in oil refinery accidents? How many people die from lung cancer caused by coil and oil soot? How many people died in 3 mile island? How many from Chernobyl?

MrQ
 
nuclear power is very safe....until there is a massive earthquake and/or massive power failure that even kills its fail-safe systems.

then...nuclear power is the most dangerous kind.
 
Deaths per TWh for all energy sources: Rooftop solar power is actually more dangerous than Chernobyl


Coal – world average 161 (26% of world energy, 50% of electricity)
Coal – China 278
Coal – USA 15
Oil 36 (36% of world energy)
Natural Gas 4 (21% of world energy)
Biofuel/Biomass 12
Peat 12
Solar (rooftop) 0.44 (less than 0.1% of world energy)
Wind 0.15 (less than 1% of world energy)
Hydro 0.10 (europe death rate, 2.2% of world energy)
Hydro - world including Banqiao) 1.4 (about 2500 TWh/yr and 171,000 Banqiao dead)
Nuclear 0.04 (5.9% of world energy)
 
And it shares a word with nuclear weapons so I think that adds to the fear it seems to engender. Thinking about it a tad more the most recent newsworthy stories regarding nuclear power have all been about Iran's nuclear ambitions and that has constantly linked nuclear power to nuclear weapons.

True. Plus, people who fancy themselves fashionable postmodernists might be inclined to look askance at the very idea of power. But perhaps I’m being intellectually parochial.
 
nuclear power is very safe....until there is a massive earthquake and/or massive power failure that even kills its fail-safe systems.

then...nuclear power is the most dangerous kind.

No. Not even then. Nothing is 100% safe of course.
Check out how many people die from coal each year.
 
nuclear power is very safe....until there is a massive earthquake and/or massive power failure that even kills its fail-safe systems.
then...nuclear power is the most dangerous kind.


Yes, yes, yes. It’s very dangerous… relative to nothing. Similarly, Jupiter is moving northwards and I am the most purple of all the things too purple to exist.
 
And it shares a word with nuclear weapons so I think that adds to the fear it seems to engender.
Nail. Hammer. Hit. That in a nutshell is exactly why people don't like it. Infact it's so bad that when Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging was developed they dropped the "nukular" from the title to give MRI because it was highly likely people simply would not stick themselves in the machine.

"Nukular" = mushroom-cloud. And that's how people see it. Fear plays an enormous role. Radiation is invisible, a bit like the plague and because there is a complete lack of education with regard to what radiation is then people just think it kills you. They don't understand dosage.

I've been watching NHK World, the Japanese news in English. It's been extremely informative - they even had the designer of the reactors on to explain what the reactors were designed to withstand and what the issues are with the cooling systems. They have done their job well considering that they designed them to withstand scenarios they predicted at the time. Unfortunately you can't know everything, there is a risk, but that's what engineers do - we minimise the risk as much as possible within constraints.

1/5th of all reactors are in earthquake zones. Fear-mongering has set us back decades. I find it bizarre that a tsunami has killed thousands, may be tens of thousands and people are concerned about nuclear power.
 
I've struggle to find the facts in amongst the hyperbole and scaremongering. I know that there have been severe problems with at least a couple of nuclear reactors in Japan but exactly how much if any damage has been done and what, if any, is the impact of this damage on human health/life.

On the face of it, it would appear that its significantly more dangerous to build homes, roads, buildings, etc near earthquake zones than it is to build nuclear power stations. Would I be correct in thinking this?
 
nuclear power is very safe....until there is a massive earthquake and/or massive power failure that even kills its fail-safe systems.

then...nuclear power is the most dangerous kind.

I can't say about the earthquakes, but power failures aren't a problem.

It's been many years since I took a tour of a nuclear power plant, but among the things I remember where the power generators they had on site - each of them would be sufficient to supply a small city with electricity, apparently. (They were diesel engines the size of a garage each.)

So even if for some reason they couldn't get any power *from* the grid (and assuming that they can't use the power they are generating themselves for some reason) they would remain operational.

Should that not work, it the fuel run out for the generators or something else cut the entire power supply the plant would most likely not explode but simply shut down. I believe that if the automatic shut down fails they still have options of doing it manually.

The things are not only build to not explode on you under the worst of conditions they are build to keep going under pretty bad conditions, too.
 
On the face of it, it would appear that its significantly more dangerous to build homes, roads, buildings, etc near earthquake zones than it is to build nuclear power stations. Would I be correct in thinking this?

Difficult. It depends on how you look at things a lot.

If given the choice I'd much rather be in the nuclear power plant than any home or office building when the earthquake happens.

Of course, if they build the roads and homes to the same standards as the nuclear power plants, I'd much rather be in on of those homes far away from the power plant.
 
David Aaronovitch mentions a lot of paranoid conspiracy theories that were spawned in the UK during the Eighties due to nuclear power. I think some of it took its cue from Karen Silkwood's death and Three Mile Island and was re-inforced during this age by the Chernobyl incident.

Aaronovitch points out that some of the anti-nuclear stuff also came about at a time when Davros-lookalike and All-Round Evil One Thatcher was closing down mines and all the entire economies of towns. It also happened at a time when it was clear that US nuclear weapons were stationed in the UK and also when the atomic clock was at something like two minutes to midnight at most.

There were some conspiracy theories according to Aaronovitch involving one old lady called Hilda Murrel who was murdered in 1984.

There were also a lot of movies about nuclear war such as Threads and When The Wind Blows.

And there were also the conspiracy dramas such as Defence of the Realm and perhaps the most artistically accomplished of them all, Edge of Darkness.

Indeed, Edge of Darkness's main point does seem to be that Man has turned its back on the fruits of Gaia and will be destroyed for it. And unfortunately the show seems to rejoice in this possibility with the "optimistic" idea being that once humans are all dead the Earth can get back to doing whatever it was that makes Gaia's life worthwhile. The moral message is piffle but the soundtrack is great.

Click here for the soundtrack.
 
nuclear power is very safe until hundreds of thousands of people have to evacuate their homes in fear of radiation poisoning.
 
nuclear power is very safe until hundreds of thousands of people have to evacuate their homes in fear of radiation poisoning.

And when an oil refinery goes up in flames that happens, there was an area in Manchester that had quite a few evacuations over the years because of a dye factory (Clayton Aniline Company). It's a standard practice to evacuate an area when there may be some safety issue.
 

Back
Top Bottom