miroz
Active member
13688245:Rosa_Park said:as part of the test, yes. There are a lot of things the workers did that would usually be considered poor running of the plant, because the accident happened during a drill that was meant to practice what they would do in case of an accident.
as you said yourself:
however, I do agree with you that as computers and such start being more involved, it will be safer, but that doesn't eliminate all of the accidents. we have had 2 in the ~100 years that we have had nuclear power, even if we can go 500 without another, that still sucks, and is more than would happen with other energy sources.
I think you're arguing semantics. My point is that your description of the accident was incorrect. They withdrew the control rods because they wanted to get the reactor to the low power level prescribed by the test, not as a part of the test. It was the actions leading up to the "test" that doomed the reactor. The reactor's instability at low power was a product of design, and the operator's insistence on performing the test despite numerous signals that the reactor was suffering was plain stupidity.
What other energy sources? We cannot sustain our way of life without baseload power in some form. Power storage does not have the capacity to meet that demand even if renewables adopt a significant chunk of the generation mix. If you want change now, you have to displace coal. Burning coal affects orders of magnitude more people per unit energy generated via air pollution than nuclear ever has or will.