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A major nuclear incident was narrowly averted at the heart of Britain's Royal Navy submarine fleet, The Independent on Sunday can reveal. The failure of both the primary and secondary power sources of coolant for nuclear reactors at the Devonport dockyard in Plymouth on 29 July last year followed warnings in previous years of just such a situation.
Experts yesterday compared the crisis at the naval base, operated by the Ministry of Defence and government engineering contractors Babcock Marine, with the Fukushima Daiichi power-station meltdown in Japan in 2011.
(Op Link)
Operated under extremely tight security and secrecy, the Devonport nuclear repair and refuelling facility was built to maintain the new Vanguard ballistic missile submarines and is also home to the Trafalgar- and Astute-class attack submarines – both powered by nuclear reactors.
The catalogue of waste dumped at sea by the Soviets, according to documents seen by Bellona, and which were today released by the Norwegian daily Aftenposten, includes some 17,000 containers of radioactive waste, 19 ships containing radioactive waste, 14 nuclear reactors, including five that still contain spent nuclear fuel; 735 other pieces of radiactively contaminated heavy machinery, and the K-27 nuclear submarine with its two reactors loaded with nuclear fuel.
Information that the reactors about the K-27 could reachieve criticality and explode was released at the Bellona-Rosatom seminar in February.
Wrabbit2000
Okay.... Let me wrap my mind around this...
(Op Link)
Operated under extremely tight security and secrecy, the Devonport nuclear repair and refuelling facility was built to maintain the new Vanguard ballistic missile submarines and is also home to the Trafalgar- and Astute-class attack submarines – both powered by nuclear reactors.
It's 00:30 seconds to midnight on the big 'ol clock of doom with the numbers falling fast.....and a lets say whatever world events are, a British ballistic missile submarine is called on to..well, do what no one ever wants to do.
..in the shadows lurks a Russian sub, made just for the purpose of stopping that from happening ..when..they hear .....reactor alarms and a melt down in progress.
Umm.. Look on the bright side? The Russian attack sub may die laughing, anyway. They won't have fired a shot. Okay, quality really matters on some things... Just sayin'...
Kratos40
reply to post by research3300
One thing comes to mind. The Kursk. What happened to the reactor core? I remember that there were several explosions and yet the Russians managed to lift the wreckage from the bottom of the sea.
Would this be a different scenario if the UK Subs reactor core went critical?