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Nuclear power is not safe enough to be accepted as one of the best energy resources. Experts cannot be one hundred percent sure that an accident won’t occur. Even a tiny accident will cause very serious problems, and have bad consequences. This type of energy is very dangerous because it is very difficult to manage when there is an accident. As a matter of fact, accidents can happen all the time, because the people that work in a nuclear plant have to be very well trained, very intelligent, and ready to confront any accident that may occur and, as we all know, humans are not perfect, and they make mistakes. The problem is that those mistakes can destroy all kinds of life in a town or city. In more than thirty-five years, the United States nuclear power plants have produced more than 32,000 metric tons of nuclear waste. If stacked end to end it would cover a football field to a depth of about four yards. (“High” 1-2)
Nuclear power is obtained by different combinations of atoms, called fission. As professor John McCarthy explains in his web site, nuclear power can
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After that terrible accident occurred at the Three Mile Island Plant, the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission decided to improve the operators’ training, instead of improving the nuclear plants safety, because the unit 2 accident was due to an operator’s error. Reactors in the future should contain pumping devices to remove the heat and radiation if an accident occurs. It was very dangerous and irresponsible to do that, because they chose to obtain the government’s funds instead of doing the necessary tests. about nuclear plants safety for 10 years, said: “These plants were flunking elementary school security exams, and complaining the whole time that exams were too hard. be produced by the fission of uranium, plutonium, thorium, hydrogen or helium. Only a small quantity of nuclear products was released, thanks to a very important component of the reactors called the vessel, a valve that closes automatically if the reactor has a problem. (“Nuclear” 9-11)
Nuclear Plant
(“Energy” 7)
Other examples of nuclear reactors are the high-temperature gas-cooled reactor, the liquid metal reactor, the CANDU reactor, and the advanced gas-cooled reactor.
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