andrew wrote:I've been reading this thread for a while but have yet to comment and give my tuppence worth.
Looking at this in rational terms, the situation in Japan has not been caused by the failure of a nuclear plant but by a natural disaster which in turn has damaged (among other things) a nuclear power plant which was commishioned in the early 70's.
To apply the reasoning used by the panic brigade about Fukushima roads and buildings etc should be scrapped as they failed due to an eathquake.
Given my location and there not being much threat of an earthquake or tsunami, I would happily have a nucler power plant in the back garden (the other flat owners/occupiers might object, it would block out some light and the backie if only about 15m x 10m so it would be either really small or very tall) as they are safer than they have ever been.
But I digress. My point is had nuclear plants been constantly falling to bits and exploding then I would feel totally different but I do not see any reason to give up on nuclear power as it is safe barring unprecedented natural disasters.
Looking at this rationally, there is no reason to give-up on nuclear, however lessons neeed to be learned going forward, to improve safety, which is pretty good anyway.
Thank you for your input Andrew, but I fear that perhaps you might be missing ... well my point at least if not the point of the other posters who are concerned about all this.
The ultimate problem is actually:
- Nuclear power, although still pushed as "safe", still has no long term solution for what to do with the waste. And that's when everything goes to plan!
- Marketed as a way of ensuring a country's energy security, every waste dump, reprocessing plant and power station presents a very significant target for terrorist organisations.
- Nuclear technology, in this case power stations have the potential to cause literally global fallout in the event of a serious incident, putting every man, woman and child (and their children, and their children's children and so on).
Agreed, this particular event was TRIGGERED by a terrible natural disaster, or more accurately several natural disasters. Not least because it stands in one of the most seismically active areas in the world, and RIGHT on the coast-line of the country which gave us the word Tsunami.
This was therefore in my opinion an "accident waiting to happen". You can argue that it was built a long time ago, but frankly that is no excuse. It shouldn't have been built there then, and it should have been dismantled and "made safe" as soon as this was realised, but it wasn't and neither were a number of similar plants also in areas frequented (in geological terms) by Tsunami and or earthquakes.
I see what you're saying when you talk about roads failing, and should that mean that roads should not be built either, but the fact is, if a road fails, it MIGHT kill or injure 200 people which would be a disaster. This "disaster" is on a scale of potential deaths/injury which is literally tens or hundreds of times higher, and that I fear is a conservative estimate.
To give you an example of what I mean. Let's imagine that the government decided to build an enormous drinking water reservoir up a mountain just above a massively populated city. Being near to the city is an advantage to the engineers because they don't need to lay miles of pipes, and being elevated from the city is also helpful because it means that no pumping is required. the only trouble is, the engineers decide to build it out of glass. Glass can be shown to be very strong, as anyone who's been to the top of the CN tower in Torronto can tell you, but as we all know, glass can shatter under the right circumstances. You say that you don't live in an earthquake zone, but your homeland USED to be an earthquake zone thousands of years ago, would you REALLY bank your life on there NEVER being an earthquake again in your lifetime or that ofyour children, or their children? Or worse, some nutter with a diamond cutter?
I apologise for rambling, but I hope that I have expressed my feelings properly.
I guess I could have summed all of the above up by saying, anything built in an earthquake/tsunami zone MIGHT fail in the event of a natural disaster, and that might kill or injure people, but the risk of death/injury from MOST things you might build would be limited to a VERY localised area, and that is NOT the case with a Nuclear Power Plant. Plus, when a Nuclear Power Plant is working to it's design and NO natural disaster happens, there is still the unsolved problem of what to do with the waste.
The answer to the ultimate question, of life, the Universe and ... Everything?