I am not a rocket scientist at all ,,but i have to ask questions about why Japan built these nuclear power plants beside the sea next to a majer fault line
The entire set of islands that comprise japan are perched on the meeting point of 3 major tectonic plates (The eurasia plate, the philipines plate and the pacific plate), there is literally nowhere they can build anything that is truely more than a few km from a fault-line. As it is, fukushima isn't ON a fault line, it's about 20km from one.
As for building it near the sea, well, that's cooling for you, you either build near the sea or near a river.
and why didn't they build these reactors below sea level as a failsafe and just flood them using some type of diek method,
That wouldn't possibly work. There are reactor designs that use passive cooling NOW, but there weren't 40 years ago when the Fukushima plants were built. Ironically, they were due to be replaced later this year with more modern designs that would have invariably had passive cooling.
Either way, you can't 'just open a gate and flood the reactor'.
it is easier to replace a power plant much harder to relocate a nation.
Every nation should learn right now of what can happen and shut them down.
Ah, anti-nuclear rhetoric.
No-one will be 'relocating an entire nation'. And I think you grossly underestimate the kind of cleanup that dumping hundreds of tonnes of salt water into a nuclear core 'as a precaution' would involve. Especially when minor earthquakes trigger auto-shutdown sequences every few months.
Nature will only tolerate so much
If people think 9.0 is a big earthquake wait for what is to come because of the position of the solar systum ,,there is where the globle warming is coming from not fossel fuels.
Rolls eyes, there's simply nothing I can say to this kind of lunacy, sorry.
sorry to go off in another direction but this is really a majer problem and all of you should let your pollition know your views.
Japan could quite easly be your country.
steve
God bless Japan
Not really, my country doesn't sit on 3 active tectonic plates, nor is it exposed fully to seismic tsunami-generating activity in the deepest ocean on earth - the atlantic cannot generate tsunamis of the size or danger that the pacific can.
The fact remains, of course, that Nuclear power is STILL the safest form of mass-scale power generation with high availability. Not withstanding the death tolls from Chernobyl, SL-1, Windscale, or the potential deaths from Fukushima (and no, 3 mile island doesn't count, not one person died as a result). The total death toll, so far, is about 4000 or so, spread over 60 years of active use of nuclear reactors, compared to the 30,000-300,000 estimated to die
each year from direct effects of coal powered electrical generation - and that's excluding deaths caused due to the need to mine coal to provide stations with fuel, that's just from the particles released from burning coal.
Coal also outstrips nuclear by orders of magnitude in terms of radiological pollution - you
DO realise that coal is radioactive, right?