Thursday, March 27, 2014

The Myth of Nuclear Safety: Fukushima Reveals That Nuclear Power Is Here to Stay

The Myth of Nuclear Safety: Fukushima Reveals That Nuclear Power Is Here to Stay

Einstein's successor at Princeton is Freeman Dyson, who has been called "the most prestigious physicist on the planet." He is a supporter of a nuclear future and an ardent disbeliever in climate change.
Dyson claims:
"The fundamental problem of the nuclear industry is not reactor safety, not waste disposal, not the dangers of nuclear proliferation, real though all these problems are. The fundamental problem of the industry is that nobody any longer has any fun building reactors. ... Sometime between 1960 and 1970 the fun went out of the business. The adventurers, the experimenters, the inventors, were driven out, and the accountants and managers took control. The accountants and managers decided that it was not cost effective to let bright people play with weird reactors. So the weird reactors disappeared and with them the chance of any radical improvement beyond our existing systems. We are left with a very small number of reactor types, each of them frozen into a huge bureaucratic organization, each of them in various ways technically unsatisfactory, each of them less safe than many possible alternative designs which have been discarded. Nobody builds reactors for fun anymore. The spirit of the little red schoolhouse is dead. That, in my opinion, is what went wrong with nuclear power."
http://truth-out.org/news/item/22681-the-myth-of-nuclear-safety-fukushima-reveals-that-nuclear-power-is-here-to-stay

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