Don’t Let Nuclear Accidents Scare You Away From Nuclear Power

1 September 2020 • 
Commentary, Publications
In a new article in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Noah Mayhew and co-authors argue that safety should not remain a barrier to the expansion of nuclear power.
Share this:

The painful lessons imparted by nuclear accidents must be learned, but they should not deter countries from pursuing nuclear power, according to VCDNP Research Associate Noah Mayhew. In a new article published by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Mr. Mayhew, Bulat Aytbaev, Dmitry Grigoriev and Vladislav Lavrenchuk note the steadily increasing global demand for energy and argue that nuclear will need to be part of the energy mix in order to meet that demand.

The authors give overviews of each of the three major nuclear accidents at Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima Daiichi, including the factors that caused them, the subsequent reactions of the public and governments, as well as lessons learned. The authors note that nuclear energy has a remarkably safe track record when compared to other sources of electricity generation, and this is aided by the fact that safety culture and safety by design have become central tenets in the nuclear industry. They conclude that, while cost may remain a barrier to the expansion of nuclear power, safety should not.

Read the full article

Feature image courtesy of spoilt.exile.

Related Experts

Noah Mayhew
Senior Research Associate

Related Content

VCDNP Delegation at the 2024 IAEA International SMR Conference

28 October 2024 • 
Senior Research Associate Noah Mayhew and Senior Fellow Ingrid Kirsten discussed safeguards by design and stakeholder engagement at the IAEA’s first International Conference on Small Modular Reactors and their Applications.
Read more

Nuclear Technology for Research and Sustainable Development: The Benefits of Accelerator and X-Ray Technologies

18 July 2022 • 
On 7 July 2022, the VCDNP hosted a webinar on the benefits of accelerator and X-ray technologies and their potential to expand access to nuclear technologies for health, the environment and food security in developing countries
Read more
1 2 3 5
cross
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram