Report: Nuclear Plants Should Focus On Risks Posed By External Events 133
mdsolar (1045926) writes "Engineers at American nuclear plants have been much better at calculating the risk of an internal problem that would lead to an accident than they have at figuring the probability and consequences of accidents caused by events outside a plant, a report released Thursday by the National Academy of Science said. Accidents that American reactors are designed to withstand, like a major pipe break, are "stylized" and do not reflect the bigger source of risk, which is external, according to the study. That conclusion is one of the major lessons from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident in Japan in 2011, which began after an earthquake at sea caused a tsunami.
already done (Score:4, Informative)
Now, Post-Fukushima, plants are adding response capabilities for apocalyptic type scenarios even though three is nobody that can provide an example of how such an event may happen for the particular site short of some major war type event. Fukushima was simple...don't put reactors that were not design to operate underwater where they can find themselves underwater. Given the situation, the outcome was quite easily predictable.
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When someone has to rely on an ad-hominem you can take it as read that they don't have any specific criticisms. I somehow knew the first comment would be an hominem.
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And, the NRC and industry are already "doing more" so the report is a bit of a redundancy, and a little late on that conclusion.
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Congress acts == too late (Score:2)
> It hardly seems late if it is a report requested by congress
It's been said that one sure sign that an event is over is when Congress finally gets around to doing something about it.
Re:already done (Score:5, Informative)
It gets better, all the way back in 1975, the Wash-1400 report listed tsunamis as one of the potential ways to knock out the safety systems of a nuclear power plant, leading to the exact same outcome we have seen. All the way to the point of having to evacuate a few thousand square kilometers, given the BWR Mark I containment. (Actually, it was just one thousand, but the rest was off-shore.)
The main problem was that just about ALL the tsunami protection in Japan (both for cities and nuclear power plants) was based on the 1960 tsunami, that came all the way across the Pacific from Chile. The result was quite a disaster, but the worst part was the completely unprotected population and certainly not the nuclear power plants. Contamination is quite reversible, 18500 dead people not so much.
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Contamination is quite reversible
Yes, but the effects of short term contamination are not. The evacuated towns in Japan are pretty much being abandoned now, because even when they do manage to fully decontaminate them there will be no-one to live there. All the former residents have had to move on with their lives, find homes and jobs elsewhere, go to other schools and try to start some kind of new life.
Those communities, those businesses are all gone for good.
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But
a) Nobody died. (Unlike due to the direct effects of the tsunami.)
b) In places like Ishinomaki, Kesenuma, Rikuzentakata or Ofunato the people are essentially in the same situation. People can't just go back, because they now realized that those places are too darn dangerous to live in, because of the tsunami hazard. If history provides any pattern there, the towns will be abandonned for several decades upon which people will start ignoring the danger again, rebuild former settlements and then suffer the
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People did die during the evacuation, mostly the elderly. They can't go back because there are still spots of significant contamination where radiation levels are above the legal limit. The towns near Fukushima survived the tsunami unscathed, they are perfectly safe from even the largest waves.
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If all those cities were "fine", 'unscathed" and "perfectly safe from even the largest waves" then how come there were 182 deaths in Namie, 85 deaths in Okuma and 35 deaths in Futaba? And why have all the coastal communities of Namie essentially been scrubbed from the coast? Why has the mayor of Futaba (previous population 7406) said, that 90% of its houses have been destroyed?
As for people dieing during the evacuation. Yes, there have been such reports. But those people died because the evacuation was botc
Re:already done (Score:5, Interesting)
If your definition of "reasonable" is "one millionth" you'd be right, but also perfectly unreasonable. There is such a thing as natural radioactivity, it is everywhere. And if you demand that "artificial" radiation must be less than 1/10.000th of natural radioactivity in the worst contaminated areas to be "reasonable", then you suffer from a gross form hubris. Your claims about Iodine-129 neglect to mention that is has 1/1.000.000.000th of the activity of I-131. Even by your stupid definition, it's not a problem. This is further compounded by the fact that Iodine is highly mobile, most of all, it is water soluble. This means that it will be dispersed in the environment at a much greater rate than it will be concentrated in humans. In fact, it is not even detectable around Fukushima Daiichi.
You also neglect to say that the total radiotoxicity of all longlived fission isotopes is less than the radiotoxicity of the natural uranium before it went through the reactor. It is LESS than what was naturally there anyway. I know you don't care about such facts, lots of other people do.
Your body is full of potassium-40, carbon-14, thorium, uranium and their decay products. If you're so scared of radioactivity that you must demand Cs-137 to decay to one-millionth of the current concentrations before you feel safe, then go commit suicide. There is no place in the solar system that will satisfy your demands. You, sir, are a lunatic.
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Wish I had points to up vote you. :)
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This statement is confusing. Regardless of th
Carbon dating is amazing. Look it up. (Score:2)
Carbon dating is a very interesting technique. I think you'll be amazed at how it works. Or, you'll deny the existence of carbon dating in order to preserve your misconceptions.
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What has carbon dating to do with backround radiation? ... your comment is pointless.
Obviously nothing
if you looked it up, you'd know (Score:2)
> What has carbon dating to do with backround radiation?
If you looked up how carbon dating works, you'd know the answer to that.
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I know how carbon dating works.
And rest asured the carnon dating of animals living around Fukushima womt be affected by the desaster.
In 10,000 years their remains look exactly the same regardless if the disaster had happend or not.
Hence: the one who knows nothing about carbon dating obviously is YOU.
Re:already done (Score:5, Informative)
Natural radioactivity is mainly something that hits you from the 'outside'... it hits your skin
Except for the ~5kBq of K-40 in your nerves. And the C-14 in all of your tissues. Also, cosmic radiation doesn't stop on your skin - it's comprised of extremely high energy particles [wikimedia.org] at 1 GeV or more. Those sort of energies make the radiation from nuclear reactors seem like child's play. That is not to say that you'd rather be inside of a nuclear reactor - most definitely not, the flux there is many orders of magnitude larger - but it does show that cosmic rays don't just "hit your skin", but instead fire right through you and irradiate your internals quite easily.
First of all a healthy person has no Uranium or Thorium in his body.
I'd be careful with throwing around superlatives like "none", but it's probably fair to say that the abundance of actinides in most humans would be classed as "trace" at best.
you are again mixing up external radiation by natural sources with radioactive elements incorporated into the body
Except that both K-40 and C-14 are both natural and inside your body. In fact, we use C-14 abundance in tissues to date when organisms died [wikipedia.org]. Whether something is or isn't natural has no bearing on where it is harmful.
The fallout is measurable every where in north Japan.
This statement, while true, is misleading, or at the very least oversimplified. We have extremely sensitive measurement equipment, but the mere detection of the presence of a radionuclide does not in itself imply any danger from it. What needs to be assessed is the particular type of radionuclide, its abundance and sample distribution, in order to be able to at least roughly assess the potential biological impacts. In pretty much any scoop e.g. topsoil you'd be able to find all manner of toxic stuff, from mercury through arsenic, lead and even to uranium - this is simply a consequence of the magnitude of Avogadro's number.
I'll leave you with just one tiny factiod: long-haul flights are associated with elevated exposure to cosmic rays, easily 20-30x sea-level background and comparable to some of the hotter parts of the Fukushima exclusion zone [iidj.net]. This has been repeatedly assessed [youtu.be] and demonstrated [youtube.com]. As such, one would expect to find radiation-related cancer clusters among airline crew, who spend a sizable amount of their lives in this elevated radiation environment. And yet, no reliable evidence [iop.org] for this has been found so far.
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Comparing the 'natural' intake of C14 and other elements 'in a normal' amount with the levels in Fukushima makes you a moron. Not C14 or other minimal intake.
Contrary to your quite uneducated assertion that background radiation in a "normal" amount is somehow inconsequential compared with the radiation levels at Fukushima, they are rather comparable. We have quantified [wikipedia.org] these things quite accurately. Terrestrial background is anywhere from 0.1 uSv/h (Japan) to 0.3 uSv/h (USA) in most places on the planet, ignoring outliers. By comparison, the Fukushima exclusion zone [iidj.net] typically ranges from 0.1 uSv/h to ~15 uSv/h with the median being somewhere close to 3 uSv/h or
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If something is a magnitude higher (factor 10x - 30x, as you pointed out), it is not 'comparable' in its effect to the 'original' thing.
It is quite a difference whether I drink *one* beer or 10 - 30.
The exclusion zone is not what we are talking about ... or where. The article and our discussion is about the plant side.
From a radiotoxicity standpoint, they are in fact not really distinct. You may recall that Sievert is a unit of committed dose,
You try to compare stuff that can't be compared. A cosmic ray, a
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"so cosmic rays might even win from a danger perspective particle-by-particle"
That is what I pointed out: they kill most cells they "touch" right away. So for what they hit they are more dangerous, but for the whole body they are less dangerous as they don't "accumulate" in the body and don't continiously bombard the DNA.
A cosmic ray is like a bullet, it goes in and goes out ...
Regarding the rest, I'm not an expert regarding Sieverts ... most publications are in Becquerel anyway.
notably zero of which becam
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Ironically, the longer the half life, the less dangerous the material is. The truly dangerous ones have relatively short half lives which will easily have them dissipate well within a human lifetime.
eight days. Gunpowder dangerous, candles are not (Score:3)
Iodine is most dangerous because it releases all of it's radiation quickly. With a half-Life of just eight days, it releases enough energy, quickly enough, to do real harm. After a few weeks, the radiation is pretty much gone. You can visualize that as being like gunpowder, it releases its energy quickly, and that's dangerous.
Other substances release energy very slowly, over the course of hundreds of years. That's like the heat energy released from from iron rusting - it takes a long time to release t
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Re:already done (Score:5, Informative)
If a major natural disaster hits, a nuclear plant is probably one of the safest places to be.
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It will, in fact the reactors near Fukushima experienced major quakes beyond their design basis..
Is anybody else concerned that anything like a nuclear reactor could ever encounter a major quake beyond their design basis?
Shouldn't we be designing reactors to handle any quake that is reasonably likely to occur? Japan is highly prone to earthquakes - I'd expect any reactor design to account for a very strong one.
We're not talking about a freak incident like a comet impact that destroys all of Japan. We're talking about an earthquake in one of the most earthquake-prone regions on Earth. I'd expect a re
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Shouldn't we be designing reactors to handle any quake that is reasonably likely to occur? Japan is highly prone to earthquakes - I'd expect any reactor design to account for a very strong one.
They do, but you have to prescribe a specific requirement in the license and that is on the regulator. The actual designs handle quite a bit more than the licensed design specification, because a reactor designer will typically consider the worst site where a reactor is expected to be built, and the site specific design can be augmented if necessary. US plants have conservative earthquake requirements to start with as prescribed by the NRC, and they do consider the location. Designing a facility to withsta
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Shouldn't we be designing reactors to handle any quake that is reasonably likely to occur? Japan is highly prone to earthquakes - I'd expect any reactor design to account for a very strong one.
They do, but you have to prescribe a specific requirement in the license and that is on the regulator.
My issue is with the statement, "the reactors near Fukushima experienced major quakes beyond their design basis." That suggests to me that regulators set a design basis requirement smaller than earthquakes that have subsequently hit the region.
Obviously they have to set some kind of design threshold, since no machine can withstand an earthquake of such magnitude that it destroys the earth and half the solar system with it. I'd just expect them to take the largest earthquake in known history in that area,
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The earth quake was a millennial quake, so they figured they only had a five percent chance of seeing one in the life span of the plants. In other words, they cut corners. They also cut corners on personnel. Competent management could have prevented the meltdown even post tsunami. For instance, they could have vented the Hydrogen gas, and they should have moved mountains to get the generators running (or get new generators flown in) and keep them fueled.
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Good point. You'd think that after the fact this could have been escalated so that the military could have heavy-lifted whatever they could into the area.
I'm not surprised about the lack of venting though. You're talking about somebody having to make the call about deliberately venting what was probably contaminated air into the environment. For whatever reason society tends to favor allowing a huge disaster over causing a smaller one - just the trolley problem in another form.
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I get the attitude, but the nuclear engineers I work with were sure the thing was going to explode.
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It won't. ... they got damaged enough to be broken beyond repair and finally they got hit by a tsunami destroying the emergency cooling.
The reactors at Fukushima did not feel anything from the earth quake.
They where 450 miles away from the epicenter. They suffered because surrounding pillars for electric wires collapsed
So an earthquake that was at the site certainly below 6 on the Richter Scale already did server damage.
The news that is survived a 9.x quake is a myth, the 9.x quake was as far away as the di
Re:already done (Score:4, Informative)
You should learn more about how a plant safety design basis is developed, and in particular the difference between safety related and non-safety related systems and components.
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You claimed the plant was not at all affected by the earthquake, which is wrong.
I never said the plant was not at all affected, that is another fabrication by you. The safety systems, those designed to operate after such an event, were quite capable of safety shutting down the plant after the quake. They were not capable after the tsunami hit.
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You said: the plant survived an earthquake undamaged ... should I click ten times parent/parent/parent to quote you?
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Either you are a moron or you should not let other people use your /. account:
http://slashdot.org/comments.p... [slashdot.org]
if I did not miscount, just 5 posts 'back' .... hm, where is the 'that was easy' button?
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Please just stop now while you are behind.
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Well, if you want I quote your exact words and debunk your exact words.
Fact is: the quake was elsewhere. Claiming Fukushima survived a quake is just nonsense. Because: there was no quake.
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Oh, I half chuckled on your first post.
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Actually the earthquake did damage the plant in a very critical way. The emergency cooling system was broken, so that even when they started pumping in water from fire engines it didn't cool the cores and they went into meltdown.
I suggest you try watching this documentary: http://youtu.be/ldki2ji5-gU [youtu.be]
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Given the situation, the outcome was quite easily predictable.
If it was that easy FP&L would be making plans to close Turkey Point instead of expand it. That whole site is going to be underwater and, before that happens, there's going to be a storm surge high enough to swamp it. That's a guarantee which seems to fly in the face of your supposition.
I worked in the nuclear industry for nearly a decade. What I saw with my own eyes could best be described as straining out a gnat and swallowing a cam
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What I saw with my own eyes could best be described as straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel.
I don't have any experience in the nuclear industry, but this sort of thing is common where satisfying inspectors/etc are concerned.
There is a lot more emphasis on looking busy than being safe. If you try to introduce a product in a regulated space and your testing is documented on two pages of paper an inspector would laugh at you and deny your application to market the product. On the other hand, if you produced 10k pages of documentation, but ignored testing some likely failure mode, chances are it wou
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Why would Turkey Point be underwater? If it's the sea-level rise due to Apocolyptic Global Warming then you should be pushing for as much non-CO2 emmiting generation capacity as possible, Solar and Wind are the icing on the cake, but nuclear is your cake.
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Now, Post-Fukushima, plants are adding response capabilities for apocalyptic type scenarios even though three is nobody that can provide an example of how such an event may happen for the particular site short of some major war type event. Fukushima was simple...don't put reactors that were not design to operate underwater where they can find themselves underwater. Given the situation, the outcome was quite easily predictable.
Can you cite any pre-Fukushima regulation that mandates this? Because if you can't, then that's a case of "hindsight is 20/20". I'm pretty sure the type of thing that happened at Fukushima has always been thought to be a "there is nobody that can provide an example of how such an event may happen for the particular site" type of scenario -- until it did happen.
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Go read WASH-1400, that one said 36 years before Fukushima Daiichi what would happen when a tsunami hits a nuclear power plant. The predicted result is easily comparable to what we have seen, because Japan (just like the USA) didn't bother to implement major upgrades that were demanded by law in France, Germany and Sweden. Among those are hydrogen recombiners that the Japanese demanded by law in 2012 and were bought in France where they have been implemented for decades. You may remember the hydrogen explos
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Re:already done (Score:4, Informative)
Technically, the Fukushima plant was also already designed to withstand this type of event. It had sufficient backup power systems necessary to continue operating the cooling pumps in the event of a catastrophic disaster of this type.
Where they screwed up was in the redundancy of the backups. This is unfortunately a fairly common failure mode in engineering designs. Say a single diesel generator has a 10% chance of failing to start up if you try to run it during an emergency. People then naively think that if you just put 6 diesel generators into the design, then that reduces the statistical probability of failure to 1 in a million. The chance of all six generators failing is (10%)^6 = 1 in a million.
That's the correct math for generator failures due to independent internal causes. But everything changes when you talk about external causes. Suddenly you have a cause like, oh, say, a tsunmai, which can affect all the generators simultaneously. The failure mode for each generator is no longer independent, and your redundancy does nothing to decrease the odds of a failure. All they had to avoid this effect was put the generators and diesel fuel tanks in different places. But no, the typical Japanese obsession with order and symmetry* mandated that they put all their generators in a row in the same place. And the tsunami took them out and contaminated their fuel all at once. Indeed the two newer Fukushima reactors where the generators and fuel were stored in a different location got through the earthquake and tsunami just fine.
* I rag on the Japanese, but the same thing happened with the Space Shuttle Challenger. They were having problems with poor O-ring seals in the solid rocket boosters. So to reduce the probability of a failure, they just added more O-rings. That worked to stop the independent failures (burn-through due to improper seating of an O-ring in one spot). But when an external factor popped up which caused all O-rings to fail simultaneously (cold weather), the safety of the redundant O-rings was negated.
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Even with diesel failures at a unit, it could still have been safely shut down had
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Tepco ignored geological evidence and relied on historical data when evaluating the height the sea wall *should* have been.
Another key issue is not grouping all of the backup generators on the sea facing side of the reactor with an inadequat
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Another key issue is not grouping all of the backup generators on the sea facing side of the reactor with an inadequate sea wall was a disaster waiting to happen.
Exactly my point, the plant should never have been placed where it could get hit by a tsunami, because it was not designed to withstand one. Had it been designed to withstand one, you would see a lot of differences, including layout of DGs and alternate sources above tsunami level. Improperly assessing the potential event was a failure of the regulator, and the constructor/owner as well.
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Exactly my point, the plant should never have been placed where it could get hit by a tsunami, because it was not designed to withstand one.
I agree with the premise, though I'm not certain that is something you can do with any degree of certainty, certainly not in Japan where earthquake activity is more frequent. The driver of placing them is the availability of cooling water, so this generally means they will be located next to large bodies of water.
I'm satisfied with the approach of making sea walls, and the like, however the external risk we are talking about is if the operator actually complies with the rules, as is the case with Tepco.
Stylized (Score:4, Interesting)
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while the real world rate is one every 18 years
Over 400+ nuclear reactors in the world.
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It really harms the credibility of the NRC when their risk calculation come to a accident every ten thousand years while the real world rate is one every 18 years.
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khallow, he just doesn't understand about application of statistical data, and repeats what he reads from nuclear FUD websites. You won't get a logical response to this obvious point.
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This has nothing to do with "nuclear FUD websites". This is just rudimentary statistics.
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Still, be careful with the terminology of 'accident' and 'near miss' and the statistics behind them, as they get applied and represented in a very inconsistent manner by the anti-nuke lobby.
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But that sounds like a theoretical rate for a limited class of failure modes under ideal maintenance and regulation conditions. Can't say any more about that until I find out what he's speaking of.
The report in question actually refers to (something we've previously discussed) the metrics used to report on reactors by the NRC, specifically accident sequence precursors and licensee event reports. They are actual events that generated a reactive inspection by the NRC or a formal report to the NRC under the Reactor Oversight Process because the risk of damage to the reactor core exceeded a factor of 10, or there was an accident.
These are the metrics used by the NRC so they're not theoretical or limited
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Still, be careful with the terminology of 'accident' and 'near miss' and the statistics behind them, as they get applied and represented in a very inconsistent manner by the anti-nuke lobby.
That is incorrect.
Specifically the term 'near miss' is referred to (in the report) when the NRC sends a special, augmented or incident investigation team, under the Reactor Oversight Process, to a reactor site because the risk of reactor core damage has exceeded a factor of 10. NRC classifies these as 'reactive inspections' as response to a Accident Sequence Precursor.
Accidents come under a different class which results in a formal written report (called a Licensee Event Report) to the NRC because a fail
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Do you understand how this works?
18 * 400 = 7,200 reactor-years per accident.
Not too far away from the 10,000 figure.
Re:Stylized (Score:5, Informative)
If the 1 in 10.000 years is per reactor, 18 years between accidents is "reasonable". With 400 reactors worldwide, that would mean approximately 25 years (~10000/400) between accidents.* Accounting for older designs, improving risk estimation, worse safety/quality standards in some parts of the world, etc. 18 years is close and not "far outside the claimed safety envelope".
Also, one "near miss" per year suggests luck, ten or more per year implies that there are enough safeties and checks in the systems to catch trouble before a catastrophe happens.
* I know this is not exact. It should be close enough. Fanatics can do the 1/(1 - ((10k-1)/10k)^400) stuff with a calculator.
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I see when I googled, an estimate [nrc.gov] for "large" "loss of coolant accidents" around 5*10^-6 per year per plant. That sounds like your number. It's worth noting that the accident category in question hasn't happened yet since they're speaking of loss of coolant from pipe corrosion and mechanical failure in a plant with proper maintenance and the following of procedures, not the many other sorts of loss of coolant accidents that can happen to a nuclear plant (such as the real wo
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Nations like Iran and N. Korea act like mental patients who failed to take their meds. I'm not certain these nations should be allowed to chew gum much less have anything to do with nuclear power.
If my next door neighbor runs over a kid with their car because they don't look backwards when reversing, the solution isn't to remove the reverse gear from every car in the world.
You can't use the existence of N Korea as a rationale to constrain the behavior or legitimate governments.
Most accident scenarios ... (Score:2)
This might work for technical breakdowns, but not for external events. ("All coolant pumps and emergency generators fail - because the whole power plant compound is under three meters of water.").
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Read the NUREG-1150 or whatever more recent document (this one is from 1990 or so). You'll find that your claim is outdated by about half a century.
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Well, If we are talking about shuttered plants that are not operating, with no fuel, then they have plenty of margin, believe me. Anyone reading this thread to this point will clearly see how ridiculous your contention is, so I don't need to continue, but for your own edification, if HB were operating and were hit with a large quake, it would still likely withstand it due to the margin.
Wow, you just can't concede that you are wrong. Plus all of your posts are upmodded so I wonder if you are using a sock-puppet
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typical response for those that can't make a valid point.
Typical response for those who can't understand a valid point.
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Plants often come form nuclear reactor designs and prototypes from the 1950's and 1960's.
We are now seeing the results of a very old sector trying to rebuild itself with new parts. Replacement steam generator plugging (failed pressure test and needed to be plugged). We have seen issues with air tightness of the reactor containments, issues in the re circulation pipe systems, cracks in the core shroud.
Then you have the complex costs of cleaning out a boiling
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Japan is a bunch of islands for crying out loud.
While true, it is quite an oversimplification. Japan is very mountainous even near the shores, in some places, and it would not have been impossible to place the plant a little further "uphill" to prevent this from happening. There are several reason they placed it right on the shore, one of them being construction purposes. LWRs consist of some very heavy single-piece components and it's much easier to ship them in via boat than it is to transport them over the road. In addition, you have a readily availab
Asleep (Score:3)