Cleaning a Radioactive Nuclear Reactor! | Supersize Grime | Filth

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  • čas přidán 20. 10. 2022
  • In a filthy world some clean-up jobs are bigger and dirtier than the rest.
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Komentáře • 230

  • @kaioh6
    @kaioh6 Před rokem +252

    I WANT TO SEE MORE OF THIS. People need to understand that Nuclear plants are safe, when people are trained correctly and built correctly.

    • @chieffirefigherplays
      @chieffirefigherplays Před rokem +12

      Yes but people can still make mistakes.

    • @thebodybagman577
      @thebodybagman577 Před rokem +12

      Safe? What about the waste they create?

    • @kaioh6
      @kaioh6 Před rokem +39

      @@thebodybagman577 what about the waste that's being created from fossil fuels? 🤪

    • @dynamogaming4953
      @dynamogaming4953 Před rokem +6

      @@kaioh6 dont try to cover the issue by fuels

    • @ohdahngboi_2237
      @ohdahngboi_2237 Před rokem

      @@thebodybagman577 czcams.com/video/4aUODXeAM-k/video.html you're on the internet and you still remain a moron

  • @broke_mikasaa9988
    @broke_mikasaa9988 Před rokem +41

    Idk why but i love watching Videos about nuclear/ radioactive stuffs

    • @darkzones3d612
      @darkzones3d612 Před rokem +1

      me too its about you like death and danger when you feel too safe and clear and you want darkness you wach radiation thats for me at least

  • @michaelairheart6921
    @michaelairheart6921 Před 10 měsíci +26

    I worked around a nuclear reactor. Never saw one that dirty. That dirt and water can spread radiation. We also had radiation detectors you had to stand in to check for contamination.

    • @imeakdo7
      @imeakdo7 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Well it's not a PWR reactor. For some reason graphite reactors are like that

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci +2

      Considering the plant and it's reactors are almost 70 years old I thought it looked fairly clean to me.

    • @mattaddison1910
      @mattaddison1910 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @michaelairheart6921 This one is decommissioned. They're more worried about fuel removal at this point, all the rest is for dismantling so they aren't bothered with dirt.

  • @furyanwolf
    @furyanwolf Před rokem +65

    I'm fairly young and yet, it's pretty wild to think that by the time this reactor is fully demolished, I'll be dead.

    • @ulacylon-timetrio9664
      @ulacylon-timetrio9664 Před rokem

      I’ll be 90 around 2098

    • @paul.alarner6410
      @paul.alarner6410 Před rokem +4

      @@ulacylon-timetrio9664 even longer by the time the uk taxpayer has covered the cost as i bet edf the french owners wont foot the bill,all they will eat is the prophits but none of the decomisioning costs!.

    • @urbansnipe
      @urbansnipe Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@paul.alarner6410the operators never cover the cost if they did they would lose money the costs of decommissioning far exceeds the total profit the plant ever made no one would ever build such plants if that was the case but yeah the promise of cheap clean electricity was a total lie as usual the tax payers end up paying through the arse

    • @Sbinott0
      @Sbinott0 Před 10 měsíci +8

      @@paul.alarner6410a nuclear reactor is fully paid upfront, including the decommissioning costs

    • @markae0
      @markae0 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@Sbinott0 100,000 years cost put into the upfront cost. Right

  • @Rhyd
    @Rhyd Před rokem +17

    And now we are looking towards energy blackouts this winter. Bring back nuclear!

  • @sgtsqueaky
    @sgtsqueaky Před 11 měsíci +7

    I like the use of the word "potentially" when talking about the toxicity of the fuel rods.

    • @MakeItWithCalvin
      @MakeItWithCalvin Před 11 měsíci +8

      Outside the body, it is "safe" as long as you watch the dose rate. If you inhale/ingest it, now we got issues!

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci

      В отработанных твэл вся таблица менделеева. Причем в основном радиоизотопы, а не устойчивые химические элементы. Поэтому без защиты воды к ним нельзя приближаться. Смерть очень быстрая.

  • @HotAxleBox
    @HotAxleBox Před rokem +9

    Dungeness is a very strange place, almost surreal. Definitely worth the visit

  • @benjaminstoker4493
    @benjaminstoker4493 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Weirdest reactor I've ever seen. All USA reactors use bundles which are much larger than the ones seen here. Currently working a job as a dry caste technician and those bundles are 18 ft tall. Can see why they use smaller fuel since it's easier to move around.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci +4

      AGRs and Magnox reactors in the UK are wide and flat while PWRs and BWRs as used in the US are tall and thin.

  • @Heimbasteln
    @Heimbasteln Před rokem +12

    Thats interesting, in Germany the reactors start to get torn down immediately after the fuel elements are removed.
    They remove everything that is contaminated first (and some clean stuff to get access to other contaminated areas), then it will be demolished like any normal building.
    The problem is, they havent gotten to the second stage yet, even though some reactors are in demolition for 30 years.

    • @streaky81
      @streaky81 Před rokem

      They do in the UK too but some of the support and monitoring infrastructure you still need and that can't be demolished (unless you're replacing it of course), nor can any environmental barrier structures. But yeah, they start to clear the sites generally reasonably quickly.

    • @Gabriel-yd4bq
      @Gabriel-yd4bq Před 10 měsíci +3

      Yes, because germany doesn't want nuclear reactor anymore, therefore they are destroyed instead of refueled

    • @placeholdername0000
      @placeholdername0000 Před 4 měsíci

      Meanwhile in the US they have made entire powerplants disappear in less than 20 years. All that remains is the spent fuel, for which they don't have a reprocessing plant, unlike in the UK.

    • @Heimbasteln
      @Heimbasteln Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Gabriel-yd4bqOur reactors are too old to be used for a much longer time anyway (at least if you want to do it safely).

    • @Heimbasteln
      @Heimbasteln Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@placeholdername0000Thats interesting, I thought they just abandon them and hope they stop existing one day, I have seen a few videos of people entering one.

  • @somethingelse411
    @somethingelse411 Před rokem +5

    The Moggy and Burkey show. Top blokes, both of them.

  • @DaveKazkade
    @DaveKazkade Před 9 měsíci +3

    5:53 blew my mind "its been designed to survive 80mph train crashes." so im thinking if it tumbles off a train car or something during a derailment or wreck. not a literal train smashing into it at 80mph.

  • @startheangel9760
    @startheangel9760 Před rokem +23

    They should invest in nuclear energy, we're dealing with an energy crisis

    • @jegowysokoscjankowalski
      @jegowysokoscjankowalski Před rokem +4

      Nuclear plant starts returning money after 30 years of service so I doubt a lot of them will be built.

    • @paul.alarner6410
      @paul.alarner6410 Před rokem

      need to open our coal mines againe not rely on this nuke shit!. or russian gas+ oil.

  • @ttul
    @ttul Před 10 měsíci

    “Something’s about to happen…” god I love this narrator

  • @mattaddison1910
    @mattaddison1910 Před 3 měsíci

    It's interesting that this reactor design is similar to the RBMK, in that the reactor hall floor is comprised of concrete slabs you can walk on, and have to lift to access the reactor.

  • @dannytrejo9976
    @dannytrejo9976 Před 3 měsíci

    Loved the narrator😂

  • @danielmoore9608
    @danielmoore9608 Před 11 měsíci +2

    year 2098? wow, unlikely to witness that then xD

  • @michapietraszewski3035
    @michapietraszewski3035 Před rokem +6

    That's how they take care of safety and the last fuel container check the guy does without gloves....

    • @svampebob007
      @svampebob007 Před rokem +2

      I know right!
      "And here we have 54k fuel rode waste, bob's going to lick every single container as a last measure to make sure it was safe, if bob gets cancer we'll know it wasn't clean"

    • @streaky81
      @streaky81 Před rokem

      It's not even vaguely radioactive and even if it was it'd be a tiny dose, it's just a semi-paranoid extra checks. If it arrives at the other end and there are radioactive particles on it somebody is getting fined.

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It's been checked multiple times before it gets onto the truck already.

  • @marionbowler5440
    @marionbowler5440 Před rokem +1

    Excellent 🇨🇦 🍁😎

  • @jakewestbrook3214
    @jakewestbrook3214 Před rokem +5

    now I want to know the history of this place

    • @andersm5269
      @andersm5269 Před rokem

      I advise you to check out (not physically) the Hanford Site in the U.S. If you want some spicy nuclear history

  • @cymbala6208
    @cymbala6208 Před rokem +4

    6:48 there's a lot of debris at the bottom of the pond 😬

    • @crystallake6198
      @crystallake6198 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I'm quite shocked that the rods are simply laying atop one another in the spent fuel pool. This would never happen in most facilities. Here in the US, each individual rod or fuel bundle gets a its own shielded cubical in the pool to prevent accidental criticality.

  • @MaxWalker-cs5wy
    @MaxWalker-cs5wy Před měsícem

    Man "This is a electronic dose meter"
    At end of the day feels sick and realised he picked up his pager by mistake 😂😂😂

  • @ronoconnor8971
    @ronoconnor8971 Před 6 měsíci

    50 tons? The tractor/ trailer weigh 12 tons, so #130,000 on the street. Not here in the USA, not with wheels like that trailer had, and no pilot car in front? We never saw behind. Some story though. Nice video. Santa Nofre in San Diego stores their spent fuel onsite which is scary. I live far away though

  • @amadeusjohansson
    @amadeusjohansson Před rokem +1

    mmmm yes film grain in THE CONTROL ROOM

  • @thefeatheredfrontiersman8135
    @thefeatheredfrontiersman8135 Před 11 měsíci

    That's so crazy.

  • @jimbelter2
    @jimbelter2 Před rokem +3

    In the UK, do they placard hazardous materials in the same fashion as they do in the US? I took a course on transporting hazardous materials so I thought this was a worldwide system in marking said materials with placards and the UN number on all sides of the vessel

    • @matthewnation69
      @matthewnation69 Před rokem +1

      yes

    • @Ayrshore
      @Ayrshore Před 6 hodinami

      Yes - the spaces for them can be seen as they close the door on the lorry.

  • @carmenmajor6432
    @carmenmajor6432 Před rokem +2

    Wow . OMG

  • @dhpstudios2009
    @dhpstudios2009 Před 11 měsíci +4

    So they first build a nucleair facility for about ten years build, then they can deliver power for many years and afterwords they have to do this.and still they say it’s save,Suuuuure😂

    • @Sharpless2
      @Sharpless2 Před 10 měsíci

      because it is safe. But hey, we all know exactly what kinda person you are. Keep inhaling those fosil fuel fumes and let natural selection show us once again who the smarter side was.

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci

      Number of people killed due to Nuclear Power generation, fueling and processing in the UK in some 70 odd years : zero.

  • @Coombsly
    @Coombsly Před 10 měsíci

    Seen one of these flasks go past my school on the railway lines in the late 90’s

    • @_jacobgreen_4849
      @_jacobgreen_4849 Před 7 měsíci

      I’ve seen them fly past Appledore about two years ago

    • @Ayrshore
      @Ayrshore Před 6 hodinami

      They go past my house several times a week.

  • @Clematisch
    @Clematisch Před 10 měsíci +2

    Are we just going to ignore the fact that everything in there is (at least for a nuclear reactor) pretty dirty and that there is debris just laying around in the spent fuel pool?

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It's an issue with all fuel pools. Once they empty the reactor they will clean the pool out. Old fuel pools at Sellafield are being decommissioned now.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci

      The place is 70 years old and hasn't generated electricity for over 15 years, it's not exactly a spring chicken as power plants go.

  • @Xaltov
    @Xaltov Před rokem +2

    O o o o radioactive

  • @robhavock9434
    @robhavock9434 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Wouldn't it be great if the radiation was safe every pensioner could keep warm in winter without huge energy bills, with a fuel rod.

  • @baronealbert
    @baronealbert Před 10 měsíci

    Before this I watched a video here called "What if you fall into a nuclear waste pool". It said i could easily swim withouth any worries. Good.

    • @denysvlasenko1865
      @denysvlasenko1865 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Generally yes. These pools are ~7 meters deep. You'd have hard time diving deep enough to get close to the fuel.

  • @antejl7925
    @antejl7925 Před 9 měsíci

    What happens to the containated water in the pool eventually?

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci

      Massively diluted with sea water until it's as harmless as background radiation and then pumped out to sea.

    • @honja6528
      @honja6528 Před 4 měsíci

      The spent fuel pool water is actually pretty safe as the fuel is contained in steel

    • @honja6528
      @honja6528 Před 3 měsíci

      @@krashd I don't think they would use sea water because of corrosion

  • @raid1170
    @raid1170 Před rokem +1

    Coooool

  • @LuxAudio389
    @LuxAudio389 Před 9 měsíci

    Wonderful invention. 😑

  • @ciivenncarolbundy5670
    @ciivenncarolbundy5670 Před 10 měsíci

    This was one of the magnox reactors ?

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel Před 10 měsíci +3

      "Dungeness A is a legacy Magnox power station consisting of two 250 MWe reactors which were connected to the National Grid in 1965 and reached its end of life in 2006. "

    • @christopherleubner6633
      @christopherleubner6633 Před 9 měsíci

      1965... yup its time for sure.

  • @AnthonyChopra
    @AnthonyChopra Před 10 měsíci

    it could be turned into a common park by 2098 id be long gone prob by then

  • @DavidHuber63
    @DavidHuber63 Před 2 měsíci

    Sister truck driver is gorgeous!

  • @colchronic
    @colchronic Před 10 měsíci +3

    The fuel rods are ribbed for your pleasure

    • @Sharpless2
      @Sharpless2 Před 10 měsíci +1

      i can not physically explain how much i hate this comment 💀

  • @Gollammeister
    @Gollammeister Před 10 měsíci

    Reprocessing? Aren't those used rods waste as in they meant to be safely disposed of? As in put into longterm safe secure storage?

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci +1

      Из этих отходов выделяют плутоний. И используют его в реакторах на быстрых нейтронах.

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Useful isotopes and other elements are removed from the spent fuel at Sellafield. The UK is a world leader in fuel reprocessing

    • @JanicekTrnecka
      @JanicekTrnecka Před 9 měsíci +3

      Spent fuel is very valuable and reusable resource, every country that mastered reprocessing and handling such materials has a great advantage. Just a fraction of this material has no use (at least now) and is locked in glass like substance, insoluble in water and showed deep down into ground.

  • @AggrarFarmer
    @AggrarFarmer Před měsícem

    English RBMK ahahaha xD

  • @braderzjamez3197
    @braderzjamez3197 Před 3 měsíci

    So they take the waste on road and train through highly populated areas when it’s already by the sea ready to be shipped around the coast with less danger to the public.

  • @liefmaston7803
    @liefmaston7803 Před rokem +1

    dude was shaking like a leaf holding that meter at the beginning . i would say he has been exposed lol

  • @BrodyLuv2
    @BrodyLuv2 Před 2 měsíci

    If you can do this then I need to hire you to help with my childs mothers pots and pans & general kitchen area 😫 🙏😭

  • @carsonfletcher1591
    @carsonfletcher1591 Před 8 dny

    I can't imagine not donning a respirator due to Alpha contamination! scary

  • @F17THY
    @F17THY Před 10 měsíci

    I would like to see if Dungeness agree with "Tacky Swabbing" with bare hands on potential loose contamination is a safe working procedure, but other than this and incorrect EPD wearing its a well structurally organised video for public to understand safety measures and process to create a Clear image of the NI

  • @hbarudi
    @hbarudi Před rokem +4

    Next there is a new technology reactor that can convert those spent fuel rods into harmless isotopes...

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci +1

      Скорее новое топливо для реакторов на быстрых нейтронах. Микс топливо.

  • @kamohelonkosi3715
    @kamohelonkosi3715 Před rokem

    Is this safe to watch ?

  • @dejebony4614
    @dejebony4614 Před 9 měsíci

    I always wondered why Chernobyl hadn't been demolished or something. But I guess the time frame me be something of the same even though that's a whole different country.

    • @ninja23yt
      @ninja23yt Před 9 měsíci +2

      Chernobyl is far more radioactive, it's not something that can really be demolished

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci

      @@ninja23yt It is being dismantled though, but very slowly.

  • @Gollammeister
    @Gollammeister Před 10 měsíci

    I'd love doing that job wow

  • @trtveit
    @trtveit Před 9 měsíci +1

    Chernobyl 2.0

  • @deniseroe5891
    @deniseroe5891 Před rokem +3

    Good heavens, that’s a lot of work. I will pass on this job.

  • @Lucas-bs8ui
    @Lucas-bs8ui Před rokem +1

    when you sead you were going ot the reactor i wanted you to not do it

  • @urisingh1730
    @urisingh1730 Před rokem +3

    2098!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!😱😱😱😱😱

  • @doxielain2231
    @doxielain2231 Před rokem +1

    All this to boil some water.

    • @honja6528
      @honja6528 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes all the power we get comes from boiling water from coal to fissionable material

  • @BrodyLuv2
    @BrodyLuv2 Před 2 měsíci

    The Trucks carrying that should certainly not have Air filled tires !?
    That is leaving them open to damage and also someone could do something deliberately to cause an incident guys .. do you guys agree ?

  • @danbrit9848
    @danbrit9848 Před 10 měsíci

    when your grid starts having brown and black outs do go crying

  • @dankification
    @dankification Před 10 měsíci

    Inb4 another Chernobyl disaster happens if anything goes wrong

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci

      Не обязательно. Достаточно даже умышленно нарушить работу аэс (теракт). Рисков очень много.

  • @ms_cartographer
    @ms_cartographer Před rokem +1

    This would be such a cool job.

  • @christopherchandler1261
    @christopherchandler1261 Před 10 měsíci

    Good luck trying to clean up Chernobyl. 😩

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci +1

      Chernobyl is being cleaned up as we speak.

  • @clyth41
    @clyth41 Před 5 měsíci

    That's really worrying having a woman x 2 in charge of nuclear waste.. In a truck.. In the roads.. Jesus.....

    • @honja6528
      @honja6528 Před 4 měsíci

      Man you really sit on your ass typing that shit go touch some grass

  • @peb2392
    @peb2392 Před 3 měsíci

    i work in a nuclear plant its excactly what its shown
    😊😊

  • @atarian345
    @atarian345 Před 13 dny

    "potentially toxic" aka toxic

  • @UnrealNarcissist
    @UnrealNarcissist Před rokem +2

    Really, he is wearing his watch while donning his gloves? That's so against common sense, the watch will pick up radioactive contamination and will need to be disposed of.

  • @Aloh-od3ef
    @Aloh-od3ef Před 9 měsíci +1

    Only two people removing the fuel rods….
    Know wonder it taking so long to decommission 😂

  • @JamesBrown-gf6sc
    @JamesBrown-gf6sc Před 9 měsíci +1

    Potentially toxic? No, they are 100% toxic 😂

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci +1

      So both of those men died while filming? It didn't look like it to me. You need to learn what potential means.

  • @LiveMedia123
    @LiveMedia123 Před 10 měsíci

    Kind of insane to think that our kids have to clean up our mess in the future. It just blows my mind

  • @ghostbirdlary
    @ghostbirdlary Před rokem

    why would they shut it down. its safe

    • @justt1ice
      @justt1ice Před rokem +4

      These 60's reactors are not very powerful (10 times less as HInkley Point) so the economics of upgrading their safety to modern standards don't check out.

    • @streaky81
      @streaky81 Před rokem +4

      They were essentially designed for making isotopes for nuclear weapons, so yeah they're pretty inefficient. Basically it's an end of life reactor - there were a bunch of problems found with Magnox reactors in later life; the AGRs were the less weapony intended reactors that were much more efficient. They're very safe reactors because they're gas cooled and there wasn't a steam/hydrogen explosion risk like with what happened at say Chernobyl and later Fukushima but when they designed them they also didn't consider what would happen if you couldn't shut it down, which is to say the reactor core would melt which is bad: it'd be contained, but you wouldn't be able to fully decommission it for centuries at best. There was also issues with direct radiation from the reactors because of the lack of water moderation that isn't the case with the AGRs: it's not a lot of radiation but again isn't good - ostensibly Dungeness A (the reactor here) was particularly bad for this. New fleet plus age led to them being shut down, this one was closed in the mid-80's and to show how old this video is it was actually fully defuelled in 2012 - this was shut down a full decade before they stopped using magnox for making plutonium for weapons.

    • @ghostbirdlary
      @ghostbirdlary Před rokem

      @@streaky81 ahh

  • @fireblaster9961
    @fireblaster9961 Před rokem +6

    Sounds like a very expensive n slow way to get power

    • @SuPrAmAd101
      @SuPrAmAd101 Před rokem +15

      yet its one of the most efficient and cleanest

    • @dinglesworld
      @dinglesworld Před rokem +4

      And it implies some quite dreary things about some of the other ways we get power 😭

  • @breezetixhv
    @breezetixhv Před 10 měsíci +1

    If you're getting rid of the flasks with radioactive waste, filled with water, deep underground for thousands of years, wouldn't that make water to basically run out? if you continue to do this for years and years with tons of radioactive waste, that uses up a lot of water?

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel Před 10 měsíci +4

      the water in the pool doesn't boil because it gets cooled by pumps, and the waste that goes for "deep storage" has already spent enough time in the water pool that it isn't that hot anymore...so the water doesn't boil.

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci

      В будущем такие отходы будут сбрасывать на Солнце.)

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci +4

      The spent fuel goes to Sellafield for processing and recovery. Only the longest half life isotopes will eventually be buried.

    • @breezetixhv
      @breezetixhv Před 10 měsíci

      @@hoofie2002 makes sense! but how do they do this though? isnt the spent fuel radioactive?

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel Před 10 měsíci

      @@breezetixhv omg! This is a CZcams video 's comment section not an AI search engine, anyway...just search for "PUREX (plutonium uranium reduction extraction)" on your search engine of choice.

  • @59tante
    @59tante Před rokem +1

    There are 2 reactors within 7 miles of me. Lots of cancers

    • @peterhalaska7368
      @peterhalaska7368 Před rokem +7

      You’re in rather a safer area than other parts of the world. Being next to a coal plant can expose you to more radioactive elements in the soot. Nuclear energy is clean and safe.

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci

      Multiple studies in the UK have shown no link. The Sellafield cancer clusters were shown to be completely unrelated to any radiation or nuclear material and likely due to population mixing and genetic causes.

  • @ekowatiwahyuni1856
    @ekowatiwahyuni1856 Před měsícem

    🏭☢️💀😢

  • @danbrit9848
    @danbrit9848 Před 10 měsíci +1

    so sad yall are getting rid of the greenest cheapest and safest energy humanity has ever discovered ....who needs clean reliable and safe tho ...

    • @denysvlasenko1865
      @denysvlasenko1865 Před 10 měsíci +1

      "Clean and safe". 4000 km^2 of land around Chernobyl made uninhabitable for centuries.

    • @danbrit9848
      @danbrit9848 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@denysvlasenko1865 also people live there as we Speak lol

    • @Sharpless2
      @Sharpless2 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@denysvlasenko1865 People actively live and party in the exclusion zone. Keep inhaling those fumes bro, youll get it eventually.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 měsíci

      We aren't getting rid of anything, you are thinking of the Germans...

    • @honja6528
      @honja6528 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@denysvlasenko1865 you realize its ben at least 40 years after the meltdown, think of how much we progressed through technology

  • @acewf4552
    @acewf4552 Před 10 měsíci

    2011 jpan tusnami explod the fukushima daichi

  • @wannabefarmer813
    @wannabefarmer813 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I see nuclear a big waste of time , you get 30 years use then years of decomissioning , then the waste is 40.000 year problem just for a half life ,

    • @leafleap
      @leafleap Před 10 měsíci +5

      The longer the half life the better, it means that the decay is slow and there is low radiation.
      Its the elements with a short half life that you should worry about.

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@leafleapНе обязательно. У плутония огромный период полураспада. Но он смертельный яд за счет способности к кумуляции в организме человека.

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ Před 10 měsíci +2

      As the other guy already said, longer half-lives are better.
      Something with a half-life of even a few years would be extremely, extremely dangerous.

    • @leafleap
      @leafleap Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@kotnapromke Plutonium is safe to handle, you can hold it in your hands and not be in any danger.
      Its an alpha emitter, and alpha particles cannot penetrate skin, even a piece of paper can stop alpha particles.
      However, if you were to ingest plutonium you would be in big trouble, sure.

    • @christopherleubner6633
      @christopherleubner6633 Před 9 měsíci

      You theoretically could overhaul it but the radioactivity does activate the reactor housing and stuff so the longer you go the worse it gets. Also keep in mind it's basically a pressure cooker on steroids at full power.

  • @danmole1
    @danmole1 Před 3 měsíci

    The most patronising video I've ever seen, can only assume this was intended for kids.

  • @johnhagen31
    @johnhagen31 Před 3 měsíci

    Why do you keep saying "nooclear" instead of "newclear"? You say everything else clearly and crrectly.

  • @genshinmoment0057
    @genshinmoment0057 Před rokem +1

    first

  • @lukej557
    @lukej557 Před rokem +1

    What are these children doing driving around nuclear bombs?

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 10 měsíci +2

      It's not a bomb and physically impossible of undergoing a chain reaction.

  • @robsmith8945
    @robsmith8945 Před rokem +22

    Who came from tiktok 😂

  • @MissilemanIII
    @MissilemanIII Před 5 měsíci

    People also need to learn about nuclear waste and how unsafe it is.

    • @aditya3127
      @aditya3127 Před 4 měsíci

      It’s not after cooling and being melted with glass concrete and steel in dry caste it’s pretty safe

  • @WEERG2008
    @WEERG2008 Před rokem +5

    not worth the risk

    • @benedekhalda-kiss9737
      @benedekhalda-kiss9737 Před rokem +16

      Very much so worth it. More worth it than the renewables... Wind doesn't always blow,sun doesn't always shine and the water doesn't always flow

    • @hovnocuc4551
      @hovnocuc4551 Před rokem +17

      By the deaths per terawatthour, nuclear is one of the safest sources out there together with wind (which is actually slightly worse) and solar. But unlike those two, it's way more efficient, much less disruptive to environment and doesn't require another power plant (typically burning fossil fuels) or storage (don't even get me started on those) to compensate for its lack of stability. To add, the reactor designs we have now are much more safer than they were before - imagine what could we have by now if we didn't waste time and resources on allegedly green sources. Take a look at Germany and see how that worked out for them.

    • @peterhalaska7368
      @peterhalaska7368 Před rokem +8

      Research it. Don’t blindly say what you hear on social media. Nuclear power is one of the most crucial components to solving our climate crisis. Do not give an opinion until you understand what you’re talking about.

    • @Sharpless2
      @Sharpless2 Před 10 měsíci

      @@hovnocuc4551 Its horrible here actually (literally in the middle of germany). My kWh went from 29ct to 37ct and its not going to decrease without Nuclear anymore. Well, this country is doomed anyways so yeah.

  • @BluesBoy-ij2rb
    @BluesBoy-ij2rb Před 3 měsíci

    I wanted to give those young girls the benefit of a doubt , but saying it's no different than driving a car made me concerned ...........the huge amount of weight , center of gravity ,etc. ..............

  • @coys4life450
    @coys4life450 Před rokem +1

    4th

  • @Cessna152ful
    @Cessna152ful Před rokem

    Women shouldn't be doing these jobs. they are way to emotional

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Před 10 měsíci +2

      В немецких концлагерях работало много женщин. Они умели с удовольствием выполнять эмоциональную работу. Даже на суде не раскаялись.

    • @GoldSrc_
      @GoldSrc_ Před 10 měsíci +6

      That's quite a bit of an emotional comment you have there.
      Did seeing women working hurt your feelings somehow? lol.