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Reply to "Chernobyl on HBO"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]As horrible as this incident is, I hope rehashing it in this miniseries is not bad PR for nuclear power. A lot went wrong in this situation, and a lot has changed since then. [/quote] Really? This is your concern? There are, perhaps, millions of individuals dealing with radiation-induced cancers and birth defects related to the Chernobyl disaster. And that's just one incident. I really hope that nuclear power does not spread. We have other options. I'll take tar sand oil before more nuclear power.[/quote] Then you really know nothing. [/quote] Educate me. PS - do you work at one of these "public affairs" groups that are trying to shape the narrative online about this mini-series?[/quote] My spouse is a former nuclear engineer. I certainly don't understand nuclear power to the depths that he does, but he's been blathering on endlessly about the Chernobyl miniseries, so I pick up a thing here and there. The type of reactor built for Chernobyl has never been built outside of the USSR. A Chernobyl type incident couldn't be replicated in the US because we simply don't have reactors like that. The physics are different. There's never been a death in 50 years of the US using nuclear power. There's been three historic incidents in all that time. The horrible one, Chernobyl. The one where there was some containment leakage and the lasting impact is unknown, Fukushima. And three mile island, where it was completely contained and no one was injured. The space it takes to run a nuclear power plant is incredibly small compared to the power generated. Most of the waste is recyclable. The small amount that isn't recyclable is exactly that....small. It's cheap, low impact to the environment, safe, and doesn't use land which could best be used for other purposes. I'll never convince people of all that, of course. Some people are still afraid of air travel, and the incidents of accidents are historically low...but that's not on the news. [/quote] Interesting. I have two friends who began working at the NRC in the Clinton era. They have degrees in nuclear engineering and nuclear health physics. Both started out very pro-nuclear energy, but became less and less so over the years. By the late 2000s, one was very against it, and said that many people in the industry felt similarly after several years. This change in outlook made me more weary about what's going on with nuclear.[/quote]
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