SlickSnake
Diamond Member
- May 29, 2007
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Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Originally posted by: SlickSnake
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Originally posted by: SlickSnake
Originally posted by: K1052
Originally posted by: SlickSnake
Leak contaminates 100 in France - 4th nuclear accident in 2 weeks.
Yea, it's completely safe. It's perfectly normal to glow in the dark if you live in France.
The problem with nuclear power is all the little spills and mishaps each plant has on a yearly basis. And the vast majority of them you never hear about. You never hear about close calls or anything else regarding poor maintenance or mistakes, unless a major accident occurs in the US. It is all very closely guarded.
From the story:
a dose smaller than 1/40th of the regulation limit
Obviously France should scrap their reactor fleet immediately.
My point stands. You would most likely not hear about any of those accidents in the US. You hear about them in France because, well, it's socialist France. In the US it is far to politicized and the corporations just sweep little mishaps like these under the rug and hope you don't notice the fish in the river have 2 heads.
Of course. Because investigative reporters hate doing guaranteed ratings blockbusters like exposés on the nuclear power industry. I mean, there's no way a reporter could possibly make his name by blowing a story like that.
You've obviously not grown up near a nuclear plant. The local media has stories almost every other month about something or other happening at the plant I grew up near. And you know what? They're all FUD.
ZV
You can't run a story when you don't know it happened and the plant workers are fired for going public. And that only happens in major events.
The fact of the matter is there are even plants built over fault lines in California that are not earthquake proof. And how about a tornado striking a plant? Or some other natural disaster or calamity? If the control of the plant is interrupted for any reason, even a prolonged power failure, you have a major disaster that is going to be imminent.
As a matter of fact, Davis-Besse WAS hit by a tornado. In fact, it was a direct hit. The news made a huge deal out of it. You know what actually happened? The reactor shut down as it is designed to do and every safety feature performed exactly as designed resulting in absolutely zero issues. From the news reports though, you'd think it was a half-second from going Chernobyl.
ZV
The size of the tornado would be the key there. A tornado of a small F1 scale might do little damage. But wait until an F2 or greater hits it.
74% of tornadoes are F0-1, 25% are F2-3 and only 1% are F4-5 worldwide. And an average of 1000 per year in the USA alone.
The Fujita Scale is used to rate the intensity of a tornado by examining the damage caused by the tornado after it has passed over a man-made structure.
And don't forget the small factoid that the vast majority of all tornadoes worldwide are right here, in the good old USA.
Tornado frequency worldwide - Tornado alley Oklahoma -Kansas 40 Tornadoes per year and F2-F5 42%!