posted on Sep, 16 2011 @ 09:34 AM
Today's plants far safer than Fukushima: US expert
The first of Fukushima Dai-ichi's six nuclear reactors came online in 1970, a full nine years before the Three-Mile Island crisis in the United
States and 16 years before Chernobyl, the world's worst nuclear disaster.
"The Fukushima plants were early plants, and so... more modern designs would be much more robust in their capability to deal with the situation" that
Japan faced, said former US Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman Richard Meserve.
"Plants are much safer in their designs today."
Fukushima plant celebrated full 40 years just few months before the disaster caused by magnitude 9.0 earthquake and 14-meter (46-foot) tsunami
impact. Its reactors belong to first generation of BWRs designed in the 60s, lacking many safety systems which are a certainty in newer plants.
Thus using Fukushima disaster as an argument against building new modern nuclear plants or whole nuclear powr field is simply not correct. Especially
when advanced breeder reactor designs like
Molten salt reactor like
Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor or
Advanced Heavy Water Reactor hold promise to deliver enough energy to satisfy
humanitys needs for hundreds of thousands of years, and do so actually cheaper and easier than nuclear fusion, all while burning all current nuclear
waste and offering unprecedented passive safety.
edit on 16/9/11 by Maslo because: (no reason given)