aggie93 said:
NukeAg10 said:
3 mile island was a much different deal. It was a bunch of operators that didn't understand the symptoms of the casualty they were in, and compounded it by troubleshooting the wrong thing. They went days without ever noticing they had a stuck open relief valve, and if their operators were competent or proficient, whichever word you want to use, it would have been an easy fix that wouldn't have led to them uncovering the core more than it already was.
Pure incompetence. With that said, people within a few miles didn't receive more than an x-rays worth of radiation, and the plant's shielding did its job.
Unfortunately those 2 events back to back basically killed the nuclear energy movement for the last 40 years in the US.
As for the OP it was a huge story but it was also a different time. Remember it happened in the Soviet Union which was a black box of information and it happened at a time before the internet. Just a different world in so many ways, it was a while before we really understood what happened.
Yep, really unfortunate. Chernobyl and 3 mile island were gross negligence, bad operators, poor design, bad QA, and a list that goes on and on.
Nuclear is the correct answer to sustainable, low carbon footprint, clean energy. Those events, and then ***ushima, set back nuclear power in the public eye, and then you get the idiots, liberal and conservative, who have no ****ing idea what they're talking about when it comes to how safe it is with today's reactor designs.
The Navy has been operating nuclear reactors since 1954, with zero accidents. Admiral Rickover built one of the best military programs the world will ever see, and the civilian side has taken a lot of that training and operation practices to use on their side. Nuclear can be safe, just need competent engineers and operators to use it.