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Waste is still being disposed of. Take the fast neutron reactor, for example. It is essentially fuelled by spent fuel from classic nuclear power plants. After that, the fuel is transformed into isotopes of conventional chemical elements, which are safely sealed in glass cubes and buried. The background from such "waste" is not much higher than from a granite embankment on the river Neva.
The terrorist threat is too exaggerated too. If terrorists blow up, say, the Sayano-Sushenskaya hydroelectric power plant, the consequences will be monstrous. And all this without any nuclear technology. However no one has exploded anything of the kind yet. If a mobile NPP explodes, at most, there will be minor contamination within a limited radius of a couple of kilometres.
Ships and nuclear submarines have had nuclear reactors for a long time. And the people there are military officers, not nuclear physicists with 20 years of apprenticeship. This does not prevent them from using nuclear energy. The nuclear reactor in such solutions is a closed-type device, which is not much more difficult to use than a home microwave oven.
Taki is not disposed of but buried and in 200-500 years our descendants will curse us for these gifts.
At Chernobyl this insignificant contamination took the whole zone out of the habitat, there seems to be no radiation, but dig down a metre, in the Dnieper there is a layer of radioactive silt under a layer of clean silt. and this gift will last for 300 years.
We used to recruit submariners and seamen from nuclear ships. Because of their excellent training, graduates from civilian universities were not so eagerly recruited. And you say that it is not more difficult.
Read and educate yourself.
Taki is not disposed of but buried, and it will take 200-500 years for our descendants to curse us for these gifts.
At the Chernobyl NPP this insignificant contamination took the whole zone out of the habitat, there seems to be no radiation, but dig down a metre and there is a layer of radioactive silt in the Dnieper under a layer of clean silt. and this gift will last for 300 years.
We used to recruit submariners and seamen from nuclear ships. Because of their excellent training, graduates from civilian universities were not so eagerly recruited. And you say that it is not more difficult.
Yep, it's Mishek all over again.
In any case, an alternative to fossil fuels is urgently needed. But that is half the problem. Many states depend directly on oil and gas exports for their budgets. Discovering such energy right now could lead to conflicts. Society itself is not yet ready to give up money. There is definitely no way to reach an agreement now.
Are you guys out of your mind?
Nuclear reactor is a machine without brakes, getting energy from self-accelerating reaction is always potentially dangerous, they learn to operate reactors for decades and it still remains dangerous.
At Chernobyl this minor contamination took the whole area out of the habitat, there seems to be no radiation, but dig a metre of ass, in the Dnieper under a layer of clean silt there is a layer of radioactive. and this present will last for 300 years.
If you give examples of the dangers of atomic energy, it would be better to live in Japan, where the elements are to blame.
But who knows what's better - to live in the "stone age" without the benefits of civilization or to live using everything and being afraid to die from it, whether it's genetically modified products or nuclear power plants?
Solar power is not as environmentally friendly as it sounds. Solar cells are bullshit, the main asshole with a battery station. And money-wise, too.