Nuclear Plant Breakdown | National Geographic

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • Engineers must replace a rotor in a nuclear plant that has powered 1,000,000 homes for five years.
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    Nuclear Plant Breakdown | National Geographic
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Komentáře • 182

  • @murdoch3396
    @murdoch3396 Před 3 lety +12

    My Grandfather was an iron worker in Berwick back in the 1970’s and he helped build those cooling towers. Very proud to see what he helped to create :)

  • @johng4155
    @johng4155 Před 5 lety +7

    This plant has Boiling Water Reactors. That is why the turbine is contaminated. The main steam lines come directly from the reactor.

  • @user-zp2ek7kp8r
    @user-zp2ek7kp8r Před 4 lety +13

    Nuclear power is often misunderstood

  • @crozz131
    @crozz131 Před 15 lety +6

    For the BWR Turbines, they let them sit for while then give it a full cleaning. Most of the contamination is surface level so it comes off with the cleaning. The turbine will still be a source of radiation after the cleaning but it will be small. About as much as a microwave. It will then get shipped to a refurbish facility to be re worked then it may find its way back into the same unit some day or a similar one. Im a pipefitter so I cant comment on the work but Ive seen many done in the past.

  • @mattyjmar10
    @mattyjmar10 Před 3 lety +6

    0:44 Narrator: "If anything goes wrong, we could be talking about serious money."
    $10 Million: "Am I a joke to you?"

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety +6

    As a Radworker, rock on national geographic.
    Re: Contamination, depends whether it's a BWR or PWR. In a BWR, a turbine will be contaminated, in a PWR, it won't be.

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety +4

    It does. The turbine is radioactive. That's why everyone is in anti-cs and why everyone runs in with swiffer mops after they remove the turbine's casing. When the turbine is running, giant cement shields are in place to shield from any radioactive rays. Once the reactor is shut down and the turbine has had a few weeks, it' s just dealing with the contamination, mostly.
    This is all as far as I know, I've only personally seen a PWR opened up.

  • @BigEvan96
    @BigEvan96 Před 16 lety +7

    Having a nuclear reactor is not an act of war...Its so that an infinite amount of energy can support millions of homes and 10mill to replace it is well worth it.

  • @MiningPhotography
    @MiningPhotography Před 14 lety +4

    Fascinating video! I worked an outage in the Turbine Room of a TVA Coal Plant in Kentucky. It's one of the world's largest coal plants and we had to to a complete retrofit and overhaul on one of 3 Units. Unit 2 was the Unit and this video shows the process in pretty decent detail. Obviously it takes days, but this is pretty cool to watch in just a couple of minutes! LOL!

  • @Jim54_
    @Jim54_ Před 3 lety +2

    Our Civilisation’s rejection of Nuclear power was a massive mistake, and the environment has payed dearly for it as we continue to rely on fossil fuels for our electricity

  • @ludolorandi
    @ludolorandi Před 16 lety +2

    You're right, but the MSRs I'm referring to come between the HP and LP stages of the turbine, where the exhaust steam from HP is reheated and the moisture it picks up is taken out again before entering the LP.
    This is a BWR plant and has a steam separator and a steam dryer in the RPV. You're probably thinking about PWRs (which I don't know that well).

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety +2

    Depends whether it's a PWR or a BWR. in a BWR, the steam is made in the reactor vessel, which is the case here. In a PWR, the steam comes off a steam generator, and is not radioactive.

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 15 lety +1

    The biggest problem is that this is a BWR. A BWR turbine takes the steam directly from the top of the reactor. It contains some short-lived radionuclides which have to be dealt with before the turbine can even be removed from its housing.

  • @moonwalker5058
    @moonwalker5058 Před 14 lety +5

    Man, such great technology and power!!!

  • @UKRentor1605
    @UKRentor1605 Před 15 lety +1

    the control rods are encased in a containing metal which are all sealed, but they always say the water is contaminated because the casing is in contact with the nuclear material and some of that might come off, or even one of the rods may be faulty and may slightly expose nuclear material to the water. At most the water is very slightly radioactive, but even if it isn't they say it is because thats what the regulations dictate they have to say.

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety +1

    Right. In a PWR, the primary coolant (reactor) is separated from the turbine by the steam generator. The water that spins the turbine never comes in contact with the water that cools the reactor.
    How do they fix a boiling what? a BWR? Generally reactors don't need much in the way of repair..

  • @MastaRikta
    @MastaRikta Před 16 lety +5

    Homer Simpson must have been off that day.

  • @NathanSink
    @NathanSink Před 16 lety +1

    I know the way the video is titled gets more attention, but its actually called a "shutdown", not a "breakdown". I shutdown is scheduled about every 18 months for routine maintenance and to refuel the reactor.

  • @PieceOfPieSoftware
    @PieceOfPieSoftware Před 16 lety +1

    lol "We like to say lower, not drop. Drop is bad"
    Looks like a tough job, gotta have some courage for that.

  • @GrnArrow092
    @GrnArrow092 Před 11 lety +7

    They have the title wrong for this video. They call it a breakdown, but by watching the video, they should have called it Nuclear Plant Upgrade. They're changing out the generator rotor for better efficiency. They mentioned the possibility of radioactivity going through the turbine, but I don't understand how that is possible. Heat is exchanged from the reactor loop through the heat exchanger to the loop that carries the water from the condenser to the generator.

    • @wolfpat
      @wolfpat Před 6 lety +9

      This is a General Electric BWR. The steam is made in the reactor, and flows directly to the turbine. What you describe is a PWR like Westinghouse, Babcock & Wilcox, and Combustion Engineering make.
      There are a lot of other key differences too. For example the fuel assemblies are much smaller in a BWR. But there are more of them. And the control rods in a BWR are moved in and out of the core hydraulically from the bottom of the reactor. PWR rods are moved by way of an electric jack. To trip the PWR, the jack is deenergized, and the rods fall into the reactor. The BWR trips by releasing stored hydraulic pressure to push the rods up into the reactor.
      The control rods themselves are way different too. In a PWR, control rods are little rodlets that insert into selected fuel assemblies. My old plant, a PWR, had 156 fuel assemblies, but only 52 control rods. A BWR has many more control rods that are like paddles that provide a barrier between 4 fuel assemblies.

    • @johnjones5354
      @johnjones5354 Před 2 lety +1

      @@wolfpat Nice description. My BWR had 764 fuel assemblies and 185 control rods.

    • @wolfpat
      @wolfpat Před 2 lety

      @@johnjones5354 I worked at Brunswick for a year prior to transferring to Harris.

    • @johnjones5354
      @johnjones5354 Před 2 lety

      @@wolfpat I had a friend that went there in (I think) the early 90's, in the I&C department.

  • @ap327145
    @ap327145 Před 16 lety +1

    none of that stuff radioactive...unless one of the secondary reactor loop pipes bursts or leaks which liquid is slightly irradiated

    • @user-zp2ek7kp8r
      @user-zp2ek7kp8r Před 4 lety

      Taargus Taargus very true

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 4 lety

      These reactors are boiling water reactors. The turbines are mildy radioactive from the water which passed directly through the core.

  • @happyavacado1495
    @happyavacado1495 Před 4 měsíci

    Sean buddy I hope you make new episodes of this amazing show for a very long time

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety

    No, I'm in school for Power Production, specialization Radiation Protection. However, I've had some operations training in the past. Between that and my classes I'm pretty familiar with the basics of nuke power.

  • @schismtomynism
    @schismtomynism Před 16 lety +1

    solar power= product of a nuclear reaction (fusion). most of nuclear energy doesnt come from gamma radiation. it comes from kinetic energy yielding from fission reactors.

  • @Lifewontwait29
    @Lifewontwait29 Před 13 lety +20

    nuclear power is the BEST

  • @CongressmanPeanut
    @CongressmanPeanut Před 13 lety +1

    One of my teacher's friend's job was to clean radioactive material off the sides of aircraft carriers after underwater nuclear tests.

  • @anthawks9374
    @anthawks9374 Před 2 lety

    I went to school with Sean riley. We went rancho San justo middle school.. in hollister California Grew up together... even entered the talent show together..we lip synced Dr jekyll and Mr Hyde.

  • @ulsfarkhoplite1388
    @ulsfarkhoplite1388 Před 12 lety +19

    Nuclear energy is cheap and makes a ton of electric to power our cities, I think we need more nuke plants.

    • @RNA0ROGER
      @RNA0ROGER Před 5 lety +1

      Fast reactors are even cheaper

    • @ruby3504
      @ruby3504 Před 5 lety

      Ur are so idiotic it make so much damage to nature like the chernobyl disater it wasnt ezsay to clean up lol?

    • @benmacdonald5445
      @benmacdonald5445 Před 4 lety

      Ruby I can’t tell if you’re being sarcastic. Are you?

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety +1

    FAIL. Nuclear plants are in the center of parks and reserves. The ones I've been at have been host to massive amounts of wildlife. Nuclear plants are clean that way. If you see cleared areas, it's parking and transformer yards.

  • @schismtomynism
    @schismtomynism Před 16 lety

    uranium isnt the problem. it's the fission products like Cobalt-60. thorium is already used in breeder reactors, but due to treaties we have with russia, we don't use them because they yield plutonium as a byproduct (which is weapons grade nuclear fuel).

  • @GEAUXFRUGAL
    @GEAUXFRUGAL Před 8 lety +2

    I just finished NAT GEO program Worlds toughest fixes and in my scope of employment I have been involved in one way or another with some aspect of each episode on disc one. The first was diving offshore changing out a bow thruster on a rig. I have worked in a ship yard building vessels with dynamic positioning systems as a pipe fitter apprentice also as a rigger same ship yard, as a trucker I was delivering divers offshore I was responsible for the loading and transport of them and their equipment. The 2nd episode was aircraft repair I have been on the tarmac of airports more than one time in my scope of employment pre 9/11 I use to deliver food to aircraft and had to position the truck near the aircraft no room for error you make a mistake you damage an aircraft the down time alone can be more than you earn in 10 years. I also was a driver when we delivered asphalt for the repair of the airport we did this while aircraft were taking off and landing. The third was changing out the turbines of the steam generator of the nuclear power plant. I have not gone into those sensitive areas where I was required to wear the radiation detection equipment but I have delivered cryogenics to a nuclear power plant many times. I have had to deal with the guards that walk around with their AR 15 and their S&W 40 cal side arms they are not so nice to you as they were in this episode and they usually are buff dudes covered in tattoos they clearly would enjoy taking you out. Nat Geo truckers go there and more. I have even worked at NASA in 2 ways. The trucking job for divers a large portion of the diving work is at Stennis space center they also use diving to train astronauts. I have been to Stennis for the diving portion and for the delivery of fuel for the testing of the rockets that combine hydrogen and oxygen. When they test the rockets it is unreal the power involved in placing an object in outer space.

  • @deepwaterescue4u
    @deepwaterescue4u Před 14 lety

    Nice vid I work these outtages on turbines and generators all the time. I love doing tearing these guy down and rebuilding them...

  • @TL013
    @TL013 Před 16 lety

    And patience. Lifting stuff that big would need to be done slowly too.

  • @am74343
    @am74343 Před 6 lety +1

    Whatever happened to Sean Riley? I used to like this show! I wish they'd make new ones again!

  • @bibbyandal
    @bibbyandal Před 13 lety +3

    i presume this is a BWR reactor as theyre being so cautious with the contamination.
    BWR's are an odd design i think

    • @douro20
      @douro20 Před 5 lety

      Just as safe as a PWR when properly maintained. And decontaminating the steam circuit is actually quite easy since the radionuclides in the steam are short-lived.

    • @user-zp2ek7kp8r
      @user-zp2ek7kp8r Před 4 lety

      Very true

  • @meccaturbo
    @meccaturbo Před 13 lety

    @douro20 The main advantage of a BWR is the thermal efficiency. No steam generators as there are in PWR's.

  • @billp1955
    @billp1955 Před 16 lety

    AMAZING!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @ShaneM686
    @ShaneM686 Před 16 lety

    "i would never say drop"
    lol funny

  • @charlesdaniel3619
    @charlesdaniel3619 Před 5 lety +2

    Harness water power to make steam !

    • @Sumo-san
      @Sumo-san Před 5 lety

      That power isn’t available everywhere.

  • @hotsauce8671
    @hotsauce8671 Před 3 lety

    That rotor looks like a big sparkplug

  • @ICANanimations
    @ICANanimations Před 15 lety

    so if you got a Pressurized Water Reactor the water gets heated by a seperate loop of liquid.
    wich is in direct contact with the reactor.
    and if you got a boiling water reactor the water gets boiled directly in the core.
    I guess the turbine is dificult to replace that way.
    so how do they fix a Boiling

  • @o7jimmy
    @o7jimmy Před 16 lety

    Wow.

  • @schismtomynism
    @schismtomynism Před 16 lety +1

    wrong. moisture seperators come before the turbine (in a boiler water reactor, it occurs in the oulet plenum, and reheaters come afterward. there are typically turbine bleed sections, which is what youre probably referring to...

  • @luxemkingII
    @luxemkingII Před 16 lety

    nuclear energy = clean energy(waste not calculated)
    solar power = clean but not efficient enough

  • @soccerp4161
    @soccerp4161 Před 3 lety

    I get the difference between a BWR and PWR, but I don't understand why the turbine is contaminated even with a BWR. Aren't the fuel rods uranium encased in metal tubes that are welded on both sides? Doesn't that mean that the uranium and water never come into direct contact? I don't see how you get contamination unless one of those metal tubes cracks or breaks.

    • @dannywilliamson3340
      @dannywilliamson3340 Před 2 lety +1

      Activation of the oxygen atoms by the neutron flux makes highly radioactive nitrogen-16, which irradiates everything downstream. The half-life of N-16 is only 7 seconds, so it's all gone pretty quickly after shutdown, but the small amount of activated corrosion products in the pipiing and turbine internals has to be dealt with.

  • @team222badbrad
    @team222badbrad Před 13 lety

    @n310ea It was an upgrade not a repair.

  • @billschoe43
    @billschoe43 Před 13 lety

    Is there going to be more World's Toughest Fixes with Sean Riley? Does anybody know?!

  • @trentvo2736
    @trentvo2736 Před 5 lety

    Pat L this is true of a PWR (Pressurized Water Reactor) but this was about a BWR (Boiling Water Reactor) where the steam goes directly from the reactor to the turbine, no steam generators, I do not like this reactor type I think it is inherently dangerous to run the boiling water directly from the reactor to the turbine is it contaminates everything downline, as with the pressurized water reactor water is pressurized 2000 PSI to prevent boiling of the 900 degree water running through the steam generators closed loop the turbines never see Radioactive or contaminated water...

  • @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi

    no, that's the cooling tower, where water vapor goes to cool and maybe be recovered as water :(

  • @damaged01
    @damaged01 Před 13 lety +2

    Dude looks like vanilla ice.

  • @FuelEfficiency
    @FuelEfficiency Před 6 lety +1

    When ice age comes, we will be in trouble.

  • @ICANanimations
    @ICANanimations Před 15 lety

    ok I found a sketch now its clear to me.
    the core is in contact with liquid dont know what.
    that gets heated and heats the water to steam.
    so I think that means no radio active water.
    that water flows through the turbine causing it to rotate.
    but if I'm wrong. the water DOES get in contact with the core. or get radio active, and than the rotor gets radio active to. just like the top of that thing. right?

    • @totallyunofficial3435
      @totallyunofficial3435 Před 2 lety

      The PWR (pressurized water reactor) does not have contaminated steam going through the turbine, but a BWR (boiling water reactor) has steam straight from the reactor to the turbine causing contamination.

  • @patrickray1679
    @patrickray1679 Před rokem

    Literally nobody in the industry pronounces "turbine" that way.

  • @PlutoniusX
    @PlutoniusX Před 13 lety +7

    @ndaboro
    Don`t want Coal, Don`t want Oil, Don`t want Nuclear. What do you think we should get energy from? Magic and fairy dust?

  • @schismtomynism
    @schismtomynism Před 16 lety +1

    this turbine setup consists of a single turbine, not cross compounded. most nuclear plants (bwrs, pwrs, breeder reactors, etc) use saturated steam. their turbines are designed with this in mind.

  • @milkman2040
    @milkman2040 Před 2 lety +1

    If nuclear power had a different name, people wouldnt have went crazy and stupid

  • @ItsRapty
    @ItsRapty Před 13 lety

    @123woodbridge Not really , when everything is shuted down i think it is safe. and anyway if it was dangerous they would be with special clothing from radiation

  • @Deathend
    @Deathend Před 16 lety

    "Time to rock and roll"

  • @violativelos3r
    @violativelos3r Před 14 lety

    @CHRIS1974100
    yeah youre right but when things go wrong therye normaly disarstorous

  • @ICANanimations
    @ICANanimations Před 15 lety

    so the rotor is contaminated. what is the radiation dose you get from it?

    • @wolfpat
      @wolfpat Před 3 lety +1

      One day I checked out the steam lines where they came through the wall from the MSIVs. The dose rate there was 3 R/Hr.
      But by the time it hit the turbine control valves, it was 200mR/Hr.
      That was at Brunswick.

  • @ludolorandi
    @ludolorandi Před 16 lety

    Moisture separators & reheaters underneath the turbine weigh about 185 ton

  • @RLHubner
    @RLHubner Před 15 lety

    It's like a pan with water and the core is the fire.

  • @kip7295
    @kip7295 Před 5 lety

    10years!!

  • @MonkeyScout
    @MonkeyScout Před 16 lety

    Solar power is impractical for now. Maybe in the future.

  • @schismtomynism
    @schismtomynism Před 16 lety

    okay, prove me wrong. show me a link or something.

  • @jw9626
    @jw9626 Před 15 lety

    there goes bartlet

  • @Lindiz
    @Lindiz Před 14 lety +3

    nuclear power 4-life !

  • @MonkeyScout
    @MonkeyScout Před 16 lety

    Cancer is unlikely.

  • @Nycki1337
    @Nycki1337 Před 13 lety

    Oh no! Core meltdown! Quick, take a video for the internet!

  • @n310ea
    @n310ea Před 13 lety

    Damn, those rotors have a low life expectancy, you would think they would last around 10-15 years with frequent maintenance.

    • @milolouis
      @milolouis Před 5 lety

      They last longer than that The video says that it was an upgrade

  • @K4Fusion
    @K4Fusion Před 11 lety

    No . . . super magic fairy dust!

  • @RLHubner
    @RLHubner Před 15 lety

    the core heats the water and makes steam...

  • @luxemkingII
    @luxemkingII Před 16 lety

    yes there have been...-.-

  • @ReDbOAtHuNgGaR
    @ReDbOAtHuNgGaR Před 15 lety

    thats a small rotor, love my job,local 740

  • @RLHubner
    @RLHubner Před 15 lety

    Yes, if it was they wouldn't be there with no special suits and stuff...

  • @kishoreinhere
    @kishoreinhere Před 7 lety +1

    what will they do with old turbine?

    • @grantchisholm1308
      @grantchisholm1308 Před 7 lety

      Kishore Rajagopal idk

    • @grantchisholm1308
      @grantchisholm1308 Před 7 lety

      😐

    • @wolfpat
      @wolfpat Před 6 lety +2

      There are several things they might do with it. First, they'll decontaminate it. Since it hasn't been directly exposed to anything that emits neutrons, the turbine itself isn't radioactive. Almost everything on it that is radioactive should wash off.
      Once it's clean, it might be just sold off as scrap metal.
      Or, it might be sold to another nuclear utility. If someone who uses turbines from the same manufacturer has messed theirs up, they might sell it to them. It would be a temporary substitute until a new one can be built. The last time I was involved with this kind of thing, there was a 48 month turnaround time for one of these. No plant wants to remain down for 48 months while they wait for a new turbine assembly.

  • @Aslyuriel
    @Aslyuriel Před 13 lety

    @Allante715 solar hydroelectricity and wind

  • @RingshadowCat
    @RingshadowCat Před 15 lety

    Oh, don't be a jerk. I only used it because the statement I was replying to was so horribly wrong.

  • @nuclearcarnie
    @nuclearcarnie Před 15 lety

    At least spell it right...Bartlett. And where are they going?

  • @MonkeyScout
    @MonkeyScout Před 16 lety

    How do they dispose of the old piece?

    • @DomDoesCoasters
      @DomDoesCoasters Před 3 lety

      Wash it down with water and soap and scrap the metal to be made into other products

  • @chrisgrayston1982
    @chrisgrayston1982 Před 5 lety

    You don't scar steel you score or mark steel

  • @wangb13
    @wangb13 Před 16 lety

    eight-ball

  • @PatrickLipsinic
    @PatrickLipsinic Před 6 lety +4

    Got a problem with your video NG. The steam going to the turbine doesn't come from the core. The core coolant goes to a heat exchanger and heats water that runs the turbine.

    • @christopherkelley2761
      @christopherkelley2761 Před 6 lety +3

      You have described a PWR design. BWR design use steam directly from the core.

    • @12345timm
      @12345timm Před 5 lety +2

      Yeah that's in a pressurized water reactor. You can tell by the concrete shielding on the turbine deck that this is a boiling water reactor. Definitely a more dirty design.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 4 lety

      @@12345timm
      It's not "dirtier". It's simpler. PWRs have the added cost and complication of a pressurizer and steam generators, all of which can develop problems. San Onofre closed because of defects in their steam generators. Boiling water reactors don't have those problems.

  • @ICANanimations
    @ICANanimations Před 15 lety

    O I didnt know that. I thought. once exposed always contaminated.

  • @schismtomynism
    @schismtomynism Před 16 lety

    what are you talking about?

  • @MastaRikta
    @MastaRikta Před 16 lety

    No, see, the plant would have exploded.

  • @Aaron-uc4up
    @Aaron-uc4up Před 5 lety

    his explanation of the cooling and steam systems is very vague and basic

    • @Sixstringman
      @Sixstringman Před 5 lety

      Thats because the specifics are closely gaurded secrets of national importance.

  • @luxemkingII
    @luxemkingII Před 16 lety

    the rocket would malfunction, then explode and you would have a tschernobyl 20 times worse and spread over the whole world

  • @matthewporrini50
    @matthewporrini50 Před 3 lety

    I know where this nuclear plant is located

  • @michaelsabella5924
    @michaelsabella5924 Před 7 lety

    not enough detail, video's to short, really didnt show much at all, but thanks anyways. Hey maybe if we stopped being so dependant on nuc / fossil fuel and used newer technology the poor power companies wouldnt have to pay so much for all of this. But then again they pay for nothing they just pass on the costs to the public.

  • @ICANanimations
    @ICANanimations Před 15 lety

    but the steam comes out of the core right?

  • @luxemkingII
    @luxemkingII Před 16 lety

    o.k. first learn german, get the spiegel spezial of august or july 2007, there's your link

  • @mayurwaghmare5552
    @mayurwaghmare5552 Před 3 lety

    Chernobyl ☢️☣️ bring me here ☠️

  •  Před 16 lety

    why the fuck me need this?!
    peace people -.-

  • @ICANanimations
    @ICANanimations Před 15 lety

    I know that stuff is radio active and that touching it is fatal. but...
    what about the radiation it sends out? cuz of his contact with the radioactive water isnt the rotor radio active to?
    so I ask.
    how large is the dose of radiation you get when your standing close to that thing?

  • @milolouis
    @milolouis Před 5 lety

    Seriously? What is fizzion.

  • @morgorth3242
    @morgorth3242 Před 11 lety +3

    i say Molten salt reactor!

    • @milolouis
      @milolouis Před 5 lety

      why?

    • @magicstix0r
      @magicstix0r Před 5 lety

      6 years later and we still don't have an MSR. :(

    • @magicstix0r
      @magicstix0r Před 5 lety

      @@milolouis Safer, better, cheaper, hotter, cleaner.

  • @Vengotoirl
    @Vengotoirl Před 11 lety

    was that a joke?

  • @sachapommepuy
    @sachapommepuy Před 16 lety

    HUMMM?

  • @CHRIS1974100
    @CHRIS1974100 Před 15 lety

    Nuclear is the best industry in the world. Staffed by a well trained specialist and people. No wonder the accident in this industry is just small