I sure hope you didn't pay much for that class...! Was it on the HuffPo website as a freebie, perhaps?Ok I took a enviro. science class this year and I have this question pertaining to nuclear power.
Building the nuclear plants were expensive. Producing nuclear power is more expensive than coal & the fuel rods have to be watched & secured for many years after use. So why even continue generating electricity via nuclear power plants? (no new nuclear power plants have been built recently to my knowledge)
if nucular power is safe then how do we protect the plants from teh terrists?
Ok I took a enviro. science class this year and I have this question pertaining to nuclear power.
Building the nuclear plants were expensive. Producing nuclear power is more expensive than coal & the fuel rods have to be watched & secured for many years after use. So why even continue generating electricity via nuclear power plants? (no new nuclear power plants have been built recently to my knowledge)
Yes, nuclear power is safe when contained. But unless you've been to their plants and personally inspected the level of damage you are just talking out your ass.
I had question on the test:
what's the most dangerous radiation rays?
a) beta rays
b) alpha rays
c) some other rays
what was the right answer?
+1
Infact you talked about everything being contained and theres little chance of it spreading...
These reactors were built in the 70s. And they aren't storing spent fuel rods properly. They basically have the spent fuel rods on an upper level of the building under 30 feet of water. Also there is no containment vessel if things go bad. Chernobyl didn't have a containment vessel either and look how that turned out.
US reactors = Japanese Reactors?
Nuclear Power is the devil...but I digress.
Seriously, I live 15 minutes south of the San Onofre nuclear power plant here in southern california, and I drove by the damn thing every day for 14 years. Never once did I worry about my safety living that close. After this Japan problem, I guess it could become a problem in the event of a major natural disaster, but there's probably more to worry about at that point, like not having food, water or shelter.
I live less than two miles from a nuclear power plant, and I'll take my chances. I live in for the most part a middle class town, but the amount of money this plant brings in for our town it doesn't look like that. The town is kept very nice, with parks, schools and such it looks like a high-middle class town, when really it's not. Low taxes make it available for people with lower income jobs to live in a nice area. To live in an area like this with all the benefits from the plant is, in my opinion, well worth my "risk" of exposure from an accident.
So who here is making bank on potassium iodide supplements?
Sales of Geiger counters and potassium iodide spike after Japan earthquake. - latimes.com
So who here is making bank on potassium iodide supplements?
Sales of Geiger counters and potassium iodide spike after Japan earthquake. - latimes.com