Everything emits radiation. How much is the issue.Retro_Origin wrote: ↑Wed. Aug. 03, 2022 8:18 pmNever heard this before, can you cite anything (just for my curiosity, not because I don't believe you).
Will I buy a Tesla
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It's different because of the magnitude of the consequences. The only thing that will fix Chernobyl is time, thousands of years. I realize the risk here in the US is almost negligible but it's not eliminated.
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You can look at a source like this:Retro_Origin wrote: ↑Wed. Aug. 03, 2022 8:18 pmNever heard this before, can you cite anything (just for my curiosity, not because I don't believe you).
Coal Ash Is More Radioactive Than Nuclear Waste
Be very careful to read the addendums at the end. Back in the real world if you look up charts for average radiation exposure there will typically be a section labeled less that 1% that includes a few sources one of which is burning coal.
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Im sure the nuclear power plants are a terrorist or even a mental persons target so it doesnt just take a mistake to become a disaster. Safeguards and security can fail. And a mistake that cant be fixed easily.
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Back when I lived on Long Island, it was brought out during a public meeting I attended. The info was from a rep of LILCO (the former Long Island Lighting Co) discussing the Shorham LI power plant under construction back then. The meeting was in response to all the negative press of the time that was based heavily on misinformation about US nuclear power plants.Retro_Origin wrote: ↑Wed. Aug. 03, 2022 8:18 pmNever heard this before, can you cite anything (just for my curiosity, not because I don't believe you).
Was also confirmed to me by my then brother-in-law who was a metallurgist for Combustion Engineers in Connecticut - a company that builds reactors.
It was an open to the public meeting. Many local politicians were personally invited. But NOT ONE person opposed to the plant showed up to voice their opposition.
One other thing mentioned at that meeting was the 3 Mile Island radioactive steam release. The newspapers played it up to be a big disaster, which paniced many people back then, but the actual amount of radiation exposer to people down wind was the same as getting a yearly Doctor's Office chest x-ray.
You can google granite radiation. It's low, but in the huge quantities of granite in lower Manhattan buildings it's more radiation than you'd receive from a much longer exposer at a US nuclear power plant.
Nuclear power plants are so well shielded and monitored that, ironically, coal fired power plant have higher radiation levels.
https://www.ne.anl.gov/pdfs/NuclearEnergyFAQ.pdf# ... 0radiation.
You can also Google radiation levels at higher altitudes. There's a lot of info about it. Here is just one of many. https://www.epa.gov/radtown/cosmic-radiation
Paul
Last edited by Sunny Boy on Thu. Aug. 04, 2022 9:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Have you ever seen how the containment buildings are built here in the US? It's one of the reasons for the high cost. Don't quote me on this but the containment walls are around 5 five thick, the rebar is like 2 inches on a one foot squared grid. I don't know the exact specs but it's something along those lines.
I'm not saying someone couldn't come up with some ingenious plan but attacking it from the outside is not an easy task.
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They get a lower dose per year than aircraft flight crews.
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Yup, I was at the demo of Ct. Yankee Nuke plant dome. They took it down from the bottom with rock busting hammers mounted on two, or three, Cat excavators. Big job, it was fun to see that dome drop 10' at a time .Richard S. wrote: ↑Thu. Aug. 04, 2022 5:46 amHave you ever seen how the containment buildings are built here in the US? It's one of the reasons for the high cost. Don't quote me on this but the containment walls are around 5 five thick, the rebar is like 2 inches on a one foot squared grid. I don't know the exact specs but it's something along those lines.
I'm not saying someone couldn't come up with some ingenious plan but attacking it from the outside is not an easy task.
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Thats what i thought i until i researched it. This from IAEA :"With the caveat that no loss of human life should be considered acceptable, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) states that 31 people died in the three months following the Chernobyl accident. Two of these deaths were due to the initial explosion, while the remaining 29 were first responders who succumbed to acute radiation sickness (ARS)."Richard S. wrote: ↑Thu. Aug. 04, 2022 5:53 amFar more people died than 31, both short term and long term. A lot of the helicopter pilots for example were dead in a few years. You can never come up with number.
But even if it were many more ,its dwarfed by the other energy deaths. When i worked in a deep mine in 1978, 9 guys died in just the 2 yrs i was there from a single cave-in. Not counting all the black lung cases industry wide which my father was one. Your odds of dying related to any one of the other energy production sources are vastly greater. Even solar (falling off roofs and electrocution)and windmill construction and maintenance causes lots of deaths.
Last edited by k-2 on Thu. Aug. 04, 2022 11:26 am, edited 2 times in total.
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I tried to look up your odds of dying from a nuclear meltdown or accident but i couldnt find it. Some obscure causes are listed as too few to rate. So few they cant even come up with a number.
If anyone can find it please list it and post a link. You would think this would be the most
important consideration when deciding to build or not to build one.
If anyone can find it please list it and post a link. You would think this would be the most
important consideration when deciding to build or not to build one.
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The odds of you getting killed by running down the stairs with scissors are 1 in 118,000,000
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coalnewbie wrote: ↑Thu. Aug. 04, 2022 11:34 amThe odds of you getting killed by running down the stairs with scissors are 1 in 118,000,000
Id guess your odds of getting killed by a flying toilet are much greater than a dying from a Nuclear power plant accident. Nuclear bomb is a another story altogether.
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Bathtubs kill far more people each year than all the US nuclear reactors have in total of 60 years.
Paul
Paul