Britain’s $70BN Battle To Clean Europe’s Most Hazardous Nuclear Building

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  • Опубліковано 25 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 227

  • @TheImpossibleBuild
    @TheImpossibleBuild  11 місяців тому +11

    Still so much debate around nuclear energy, is it still the way forward?

    • @Zodliness
      @Zodliness 11 місяців тому

      Trust humans to invent something that can wipe out humanity and call it progress. 🤔😉

    • @FixItStupid
      @FixItStupid 11 місяців тому

      No Way Can't Stop The Death That Comes From The Next Nuclear Melt Down Tells ALL No Way Back Nuclear Is Killing Us ALL

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 11 місяців тому

      Debate amongst morons doesn't count! They probably know even less about wind power?

    • @thomasfsan
      @thomasfsan 11 місяців тому

      Yes. Sellafield is a result of weapons programs, experiments, accidents and bad ideas. Modern civilian nuclear isn’t that at all.

    • @jannejohansson3383
      @jannejohansson3383 11 місяців тому

      What you think how Finn's "going to solve" this thing? Working or going to poison planet mostly likely?
      There's no good ideas, but nuclear is way to go. But no how those idiots in Britain did this. This is still better than how US manage to release little everything to earth, air and soil, in their drinking water..... 🎉

  • @alanjones4622
    @alanjones4622 11 місяців тому +48

    The site was originally called Windscale and the two reactors, or piles as they were known, only produced Plutonium for use in nuclear weapons. Power generation took place in nearby Calder Hall using a more conventional reactor. The name of the site was later changed to Sellafield in an attempt to disassociate the place from Windscale. Sellafield also processed spent fuel from other countries in an attempt by the UK Government no doubt to possibly make money. Long term is does not seem to be a good policy to act as the worlds nuclear waste dumping warehouse, especially when the facility is filling up and crumbling, as recent reports have highlighted.

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому

      Some documentaries here on UA-cam -
      *A very British bomb
      *Our reactor is on fire
      *Windscale: Britain's biggest nuclear disaster
      *Thorpe
      *Sellafield: Britain's nuclear power Secerts | Inside Sellafield
      Search- ONKALO
      And you would probably also find interesting to read !?,
      if you Google -
      *The (Nuclear) FLOWER'S Report
      *Struggle for Survival -
      Written by -
      Steven Fox
      *Both incredible reads *

    • @alanjones4622
      @alanjones4622 10 місяців тому

      The big concrete "Chimneys" were there to facilitate the air cooling of the reactor "Piles". I am told that air is not made radioactive used as a cooling medium, only the smoke from unintended combustion can do that. Smoke only came out of one when the "pile" set on fire. Fortunately biological filters installed at the top on the instruction of physicist Sir John Cockcroft stopped most of the damaging radio active emissions. When the "Chimney" venting the fire was demolished in the late 1980`s robot cranes had to be used because the concrete was too "hot" for human workmen to do the demolition. Still the same site, just a name change as if calling it something else made it safer.

    • @je-fq7ve
      @je-fq7ve 10 місяців тому

      thanks for that clarification i had heard of Windscale and all the problems they have. Renaming it is a shitty move.

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 10 місяців тому

      @je-fq7ve
      UA-cam these videos
      * A very British bomb.
      * Our reactor is on fire.

  • @ashleygoggs5679
    @ashleygoggs5679 11 місяців тому +39

    I think its unfair to say the government of the time was shortsighted. While radiation was somewhat understood at the time it wasnt nearly understand as it was today. Sellafield was built with the standards of the last century, in fact it was Gen 1 and one of the first nuclear reactors in the world. The down side to being one of the first is the lessons that end up being needed to learn. The saying "you must learn to walk before you can learn to run" springs to mind, if we didnt have Sellafield we probably wouldnt have such high standards in modern reactors just like how Chernobyl forced the USSR and modern russia to completely change how they now work with their reactors. Sellafield overall while very dangerous is not nearly as dangerous as people think it is. Will it cause some people to have premature cancer, sure, but with the current epidemic of cancers anyway those people would likely still live a very normal life span unless they dont adhere to safety standards and get mild or severe radiation poisoning.

    • @tetrabromobisphenol
      @tetrabromobisphenol 10 місяців тому

      The only time nukes aren't safe, is when lazy, cheapskate half-assers get involved, so please stop making excuses for their bullcrap. As someone who is about as pro-nukes as you can get, I find all of this apologist activity to be intellectually dishonest, ridiculous, and counterproductive to getting the public to accept nuclear's role as a clean energy alternative. They knowingly cut corners at Windscale and Sellafield, and indeed they harassed the one guy not playing along with the half-assing (Cockcroft) until he was ultimately proven absolutely correct. Their ethos and MO needs to be rejected for the good of all.

  • @BerlietGBC
    @BerlietGBC 11 місяців тому +136

    Very inaccurate indeed, you have mixed up all different plants and storage and what they relate to witch considering just how well the site and its history is documented is this is a very lazy presentation, you have all the correct information just not put together in the right order and not included parts of the history that are import

    • @ashleygoggs5679
      @ashleygoggs5679 11 місяців тому +18

      my thoughts exactly, he makes it sound like sellafield is the most dangerous place on earth and the most radiation polluted but thousands of people still work there no problem.

    • @dc-4ever201
      @dc-4ever201 11 місяців тому +10

      Yeah like it was called Windscale when it had it's major accident way back, not Sellafield.

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 11 місяців тому +9

      Very amateurish and confused! A 10 year old child could do better! Doesn't seem to understand that radiation decays with time = part of the decommissioning process!

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому +2

      From what I could make out !!! I think he's taking about ...
      THORPE. !?
      And he's a weeee tad slightly a little bit behind!? with the "discussions" for using subterranean HLNW
      High Level Nuclear Waste depository timeline.
      It's already been designed to take in all the world's nuclear power stations Waste, it's already installed, and it's fully operational
      ONKALO

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому

      ​@dc-4ever201
      UA-cam -
      BBC 1| Inside story- Our reactor is in fire

  • @gardenogauge
    @gardenogauge 11 місяців тому +12

    Theres more inaccuracies in this video than their is accurate facts

  • @andyh7152
    @andyh7152 11 місяців тому +13

    Apparently the high storage at windscale/sellafield water pond is cracking and leaking as well

  • @allanbradshaw3498
    @allanbradshaw3498 11 місяців тому +3

    The truth is all reactor in Britain generated Plutonium and this was used to make nuclear weapons. The cost of cleaning up nuclear waste was not considered in the race to build weapons. Plutonium can be used again in Fast breeder reactors .

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 10 місяців тому +3

      Actually, the truth is more complicated than that.
      As far as I know, no CEGB reactors were ever used for military plutonium production.
      Spent Magnox and AGR fuel has been reprocessed at Sellafield, to make "civil plutonium" which be used to make Mixed Oxide (MOx) fuel for reactors but generally has just been stored at Sellafield because MOx was never very widely adopted in UK reactors.

  • @grantpratt299
    @grantpratt299 10 місяців тому +8

    I live next to Hanford plant in Washington USA and it is in even a worse state.

  • @A-Trainspotter-From-Berkshire
    @A-Trainspotter-From-Berkshire 11 місяців тому +4

    In britain, we have been transporting spent nuclear fuel on the railway network since at least the mid-1980s.

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 10 місяців тому

      This is correct but I think those rail transport operations have taken place since the 1960s, when the CEGB Magnox reactors first started sending spent fuel to Sellafield (then called Windscale) for reprocessing.
      Later on the CEGBs AGRs also began to ship fuel for reprocessing in THORP and those sites still ship spent fuel to Sellafield for interim storage, while awaiting geological disposal.

  • @andydelle4509
    @andydelle4509 11 місяців тому +10

    Bechtel is pronounced "beck-tell" not "betch-all".

  • @weareallbeingwatched4602
    @weareallbeingwatched4602 10 місяців тому +4

    Cockroft's follies were seriously worthwhile. The sizewell accident.

  • @cornwall_in_Squares
    @cornwall_in_Squares 11 місяців тому +14

    Lived near Sellafield and worked for the local authority, processing of not just the legacy waste but waste shipped in from all over the world Sellafield will never be cleaned up in many lifetimes. Bury the waste and hope its safe? is that an answer not really its just moving what can't be reprocessed to somewhere it can be forgotten about.

    • @ashleygoggs5679
      @ashleygoggs5679 11 місяців тому +6

      Not entirely. The thing with nuclear fuel is its the one form of energy production that requires the least amount of fuel. I.e. you get far more out of the fuel then coal or gas etc. Coal and gas is released into the atmosphere where we can all inhale the carcinogens. While nuclear fuel is accounted for, the only way the fuel hurts you is if your close to it. Becuase of nuclear wastes inherant danger the security for the waste is insanely high meaning that all nuclear nations can account for probably 99.9% of wasted fuel.
      Finland is likely going to be the first best place to make an underground nuclear repository. the waste will be put into caverns miles under the ground meaning any potential leakages will not effect the environment around them. Furthermore the caves are then filled in with a special clay that goes rock solid if water leeches in so the nuclear repositories are shielded. Finlands Repository is expected to cope with that 99.9% nuclear fuel that i mentioned and much more when its fully complete. What this means is we can then put all our waste fuel in one area in the world that isnt threatened by natural disasters such as volcanoes and earthquakes meaning its positioned the absolute most ideal place. Couple that with nations using the storage paying finland to keep a hightened security perimeter so nobody can gain access, this will arguably be the safest possible way to hold the nuclear fuel. Nobody is going to go digging up the land in finland becuase its in desolate area. You only need one main entrance which can be very heavily guarded. I really dont see how you can possibly come up with any downsides.

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому

      ​@@ashleygoggs5679
      It's called
      ONKALO
      It's already been installed and it's fully operational

    • @tru5059
      @tru5059 6 місяців тому

      ​@ashleygoggs5679 Thanks for that reassurance, I live in the lake district, and its always been a worry to me, on what you read or watch,

  • @Sniperboy5551
    @Sniperboy5551 11 місяців тому +17

    Wouldn’t Chernobyl be Europe’s most hazardous nuclear site?

    • @madmatt2024
      @madmatt2024 10 місяців тому +2

      That's what I was thinking too. It's technically in Europe but not in the EU.

    • @linzc3033
      @linzc3033 10 місяців тому +6

      ​@@madmatt2024 Sellafield isn't in the EU either.

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому +10

      @@linzc3033 EU isn't a polity, it's a stack of papers and wishful thinking.
      Sellafield is in Europe, Chernobyl is in Europe

    • @anhedonianepiphany5588
      @anhedonianepiphany5588 10 місяців тому

      No, that title would certainly go to Russia’s Mayak Facility and its nearby environment. Sellafield doesn’t even come close even though it’s quite a mess itself.

    • @alanjones4622
      @alanjones4622 10 місяців тому

      That was because the Russians were operating it which made it worse with their cheapskate cavalier attitude to safety. Containment buildings not up to the necessary standard and staff using protective equipment more suited to working in a bakery or food factory.

  • @жительевросоюза
    @жительевросоюза 11 місяців тому +5

    You can also make a video about UK's second nuclear disaster - Dounreay fast reactor project and the worlds only nuclear beach. Regarding nuclear waste dumps and storage facilities, i think that is dead end road. Europeans should invest in research on how to recycle nuclear waste. Russia for example have just managed to close nuclear circle and can reuse nuclear waste with their fast BN-800 reactor

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому

      Country Fast reactor technology was to demonstrate that you can get a lot more power from spent thermal nuclear fuel! Which it did safely and that technology is in the bank for the future!

    • @жительевросоюза
      @жительевросоюза 10 місяців тому

      @@piscesDRB we can't deny that it was groundbreaking and first of it's kind, but in no way it was safe. For example nuclear power rods were cut and cuttings were simply washed down the drain, thats how nuclear beach was created. Also they had nuclear waste pit explosion, there are some documentals you can watch on youtube about this

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому +3

      @@жительевросоюза Baffled by some of these discussions! I was responding to your comment about the Dounreay Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor which was Sodium Cooled. Too many meaningless words being bandied around like "safe" & "waste"? What is safe? Nothing including trains, boats, planes, child birth, old age, surgery, vaccinations etc. What matters is that something is acceptably safe, compared to the benefit and risks have been analysed by professionals to underpin any constraints or mitigations on use - like waste storage and discharges under a Site Licence - that can make the Directors liable for prosecution in breach! Trust me "they don't like it up 'em!" So in general any type of reactor fuel has 2 parts (fissile bit - uranium/plutonium) and metal cladding which transfers heat to the coolant. Could be Stainless Steel? Zirconium? Magnox? etc. Reprocessing at Sellafield requires the cladding to be stripped off and stored for later waste processing or decommissioning! Any discharges to sea are subject to a limited Site License and another Environmental Safety Case. At Sellafield in the 80's they built a very large "filtration/absorption plant SIXEP that dramatically limits radioactive discharges. By the way, radiation is just a way of transmitting energy and EVERYTHING in the universe, galaxy solar system, Earth is and always will be RADIOATIVE to some extent. Our risk of harm depends upon "dose uptake". Also please stop talking about Sellafield or Dounreay as a PLANT - they are SITES with dozens of different plants built upon them for different purposes.

    • @CA_I
      @CA_I 10 місяців тому

      Agree with the first post, Dounreay is another site that has left a contaminated legacy. It doesn't fill you with confidence for future plants when there is no long-term solution to the safe storage of highly radioactive waste.

    • @TheSilmarillian
      @TheSilmarillian 10 місяців тому

      @@piscesDRB Valid comment indeed.

  • @jeebusk
    @jeebusk 11 місяців тому +4

    I'm not sure I would define nuclear waste as toxic, that term seems more appropriate for chemicals.

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      Toxic = poisonous. The description fits

    • @jeebusk
      @jeebusk 10 місяців тому +2

      @@BOZ_11 radioactivity is not a poison...
      You're saying your cell phone is poisonous?

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      @@jeebusk "You're saying your cell phone is poisonous?" -- Do not funking put words into people's mouths.
      "(tɒksɪk IPA Pronunciation Guide)
      ADJECTIVE B2
      A toxic substance is poisonous."
      It's called: 'RADIATION POISONING'. Is that clear, big boy?

    • @Anaximander9
      @Anaximander9 Місяць тому

      Aside from their radioactivity, plutonium and uranium are very chemically toxic.

  • @garethjohnstone9282
    @garethjohnstone9282 10 місяців тому +2

    Not a mop and bucket job this, lads. Might have to get the brillo pads out. And some bleech.

  • @GraemeMurphy
    @GraemeMurphy 11 місяців тому +5

    So much for the "electricity so cheap we will give it away for free" that was claimed in the early 1960's when the Windscale nuclear power plant was opened by our late Queen !

  • @Miguel_El_Chileno
    @Miguel_El_Chileno 10 місяців тому +1

    Please make a video about the Hanford Site outside Richland, Washington State

  • @JediBuddhist
    @JediBuddhist 10 місяців тому +1

    Big up to Lord Cockrofft for saving our country. ☘

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 11 місяців тому +5

    Beck-tel, dear friend.

    • @toadtws
      @toadtws 11 місяців тому

      Let’s get some shoes.

  • @dave4882
    @dave4882 10 місяців тому +1

    Could this waste be reprocessed like spent fuel? That separates the radioactive material (small%) from the almost non radioactive material (large%) so that only a small amount needs to be buried.

    • @Freshbott2
      @Freshbott2 10 місяців тому

      If that was a thing they’d be doing it in the first place to reuse instead of talking about it like it hypothetically could already exist like people have been doing for 30 years.

  • @jimhilton9023
    @jimhilton9023 11 місяців тому +2

    They need to stop making waste no matter what you do with it its still dangerous

  • @beresheeth
    @beresheeth 11 місяців тому +5

    The real price to pay!

  • @billynomates920
    @billynomates920 10 місяців тому

    i live in the uk so yes, i live near sellafield but not as close as most people in ireland!

  • @paulgibson490
    @paulgibson490 11 місяців тому +3

    What about all the piles of nuclear waste in the USA that have contaminated huge areas for years. You are talking like it only happens in the UK.
    Sellafield is a nuclear reprocessing plant as well as a one time power production plant.

  • @EcoHouseThailand
    @EcoHouseThailand 11 місяців тому +11

    Nuclear energy is the most expensive you can produce. Accurate decommissioning costs are never included in levelised cost of electricity produced from Nuclear as they are impossible to forecast. Fukushima's estimated final cleanup cost is estimated to be one Trillion Dollars. Hinkley Point C, the UK’s latest nuclear plant has a guaranteed contracted sale price of £92.50/ MWh a price which rises with inflation every year v Wind which is less than £40/MWh with costs falling all the time.

    • @domtweed7323
      @domtweed7323 11 місяців тому +3

      That's only true for the first nuclear reactor in a series (like Hinkley Point C), cause inexperienced the engineers always fuck up on the first build of something so complicated. When you build multiple reactors, like France who built 30 of each of their 2 reactor designs, they get quite cheap. Nuclear reactors are like solar and wind, they need economies of scale to be viable.
      Also more than half the cost of Hinkley Point C is interest because they borrowed at an absurdly high rate. Had they borrowed at the government interest rate for the time, which was about 2%, rather than north of 8%, they'd have saved most of that.

    • @NitroCheng
      @NitroCheng 11 місяців тому +1

      And can you calculate the price we paid for burning fossil fuel? How much life did it cost for the pollution form coal plants? Did solar panel and wind turbines solve this issue and saved millions of lives and trillions of dollars in these decades after people against the nuclear energy? Cant you see we paid more after rejecting nuclear power?

    • @EcoHouseThailand
      @EcoHouseThailand 11 місяців тому +3

      @@NitroChengAll I’m saying is that nuclear is not economic now, it was was certainly better than coal in previous decades.

    • @O000hShiny
      @O000hShiny 11 місяців тому

      short term yes we have paid more but as time goes on and more and more renewable's come on the prices have and will continue to drop, with nuclear the prices always go up @@NitroCheng

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      @@domtweed7323 since nuclear waste has to be managed in perpetuity for many thousands of years, it's a massive net negative energy solution. It's not like coal where you can build a chimney stack and let mother nature take care of it. We'd be wasting energy produced thousands of years from now to manage nuclear waste from our current period. Again, a massive net negative energy equation. Nuclear proponents are emotional and myopic

  • @bamaraiderable
    @bamaraiderable 11 місяців тому +8

    I have read that new nuclear tech will be able to use nuclear waste as a fuel source with almost nothing left behind. That sounds like a good place to continue R&D.

    • @stickynorth
      @stickynorth 11 місяців тому +7

      Breeder reactors, traveling wave reactors not to mention conventional reprocessing of fuel rods like the French are all possible now with current Gen III and Gen IV technology... Nuclear technology truly is remarkable...

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 11 місяців тому +9

      That's nuclear fuel being recycled, what is called high level nuclear waste. The waste discussed in the video is intermediate level waste - materials that come into contact with high level waste and are thoroughly contaminated, but are not themselves high level waste. There isn't enough fuel in the waste to be extracted to recycle as fuel, but too much for the materials to be recycled as anything else, either.

    • @bamaraiderable
      @bamaraiderable 11 місяців тому +1

      @@willythemailboy2 Thanks. I did not know that about this waste.

    • @domtweed7323
      @domtweed7323 11 місяців тому +2

      We've been able to do that for decades, its old tech. But its more expensive than mining new uranium.

    • @ajward137
      @ajward137 11 місяців тому +1

      @@domtweed7323 True, but the solution is surely to include disposal and storage costs in the calculated sale price. "Cradle to grave" has to be the motto in all things (fossil fuels included) if we want to continue to live here!

  • @jadeboswell-rz2ly
    @jadeboswell-rz2ly 11 місяців тому +1

    Would be interesting to see you do a comparison of three mile incident and the above.

    • @madmatt2024
      @madmatt2024 10 місяців тому

      Completely different situations. Three Mile Island was an accident but didn't create nearly as much of a mess as Sellafield created due to their own negligence. Clean up officially ended for Three Mile Island unit 2 in 1993. Sellafield is obviously going to take far longer to clean up, even longer than it's going to take to fully decommission the remaining Three Mile Island unit 1, which didn't fail.

  • @dc-4ever201
    @dc-4ever201 11 місяців тому +6

    When I consider the fact that we have no long term high level nuclear waste storage facility in the UK. We had the perfect opportunity to use some dissused coal mines in the North East whose coal seams went miles out under the North Sea, they could have stacked the waste out there as it's miles underground and out to sea, seawater by it's own nature acts as a shield. This would have been a solution that could have taken all our waste for hundreds of years.

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому

      The answer is -
      ONKALO

    • @dadoVRC
      @dadoVRC 10 місяців тому +2

      @@grahamfisher5436 Short term answer, like it was at Asse storage in Germany.
      Everyone now say that it's safe, but the time scale is enormous, and no one can say how things evolve.

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 10 місяців тому

      @dadoVRC yes
      I completely agree with you 💯
      I'm from Newark-upon-Trent
      Google-
      Fulbeck celebrates 30-year nuclear waste celebrations
      If you look on Google Earth Fulbeck is 2 miles from Newark
      Read the newspaper articles, and how many train loads
      As a rural community we stopped it being dumped in our back garden

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorth 11 місяців тому +12

    If the UK still reprocessed their nuclear waste there wouldn't be much to store. While Sellafield shows us how NOT to handle nuclear waste, visit Le Havre in France for the opposite to see how the world SHOULD be operating nuclear... And yes while 240 excess cancer deaths is sad that in tiny in comparison to the devastating effects oil and gas never mind coal have on the environment... Not to mention death count! Ban oil and gas not nuclear!

    • @bookworm4027
      @bookworm4027 11 місяців тому +2

      No nuclear going on in Le Havre, you're prolly Talking about La Hague? Le Havre has a disgusting coal station however.

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 11 місяців тому

      That's nuclear fuel being recycled, what is called high level nuclear waste. The waste discussed in the video is intermediate level waste - materials that come into contact with high level waste and are thoroughly contaminated, but are not themselves high level waste. There isn't enough fuel in the waste to be extracted to recycle as fuel, but too much for the materials to be recycled as anything else, either.

    • @domtweed7323
      @domtweed7323 11 місяців тому

      Compared to thousands of deaths from coal pollution the 240 deaths is trivial.

    • @tireballastserviceofflorid7771
      @tireballastserviceofflorid7771 11 місяців тому +1

      And you believe that numbers? The UK is anything but transparent. An estimated 10,000 people were directly effected in 1986. And how many in Japan? That mess is still happening. Modern coal is nearly as clean as Nuks. How much emissions will be released digging and filling those repositories? Decompositioning those old nuks? Look at the big picture and modern data from energy plants. Stack scrubbers are incredible efficient. Nuks are great don't get me wrong, but you can't dismiss reality.

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому

      ​@@tireballastserviceofflorid7771search and watch -
      Onkola

  • @eddygrunge4749
    @eddygrunge4749 11 місяців тому +2

    is there a plan for where the excavated smegma will be moved to?

  • @matthewbaynham6286
    @matthewbaynham6286 11 місяців тому +3

    The title of the video is not very accurate "... Europe’s Most Hazardous Nuclear Building", really more hazardous than any nuclear building that is in Ukraine, after all one particular Ukrainian building was in the news in 1986 for a bit of a nuclear hazard.

    • @davidclift5989
      @davidclift5989 11 місяців тому +2

      The release of radiation by the Windscale fire was greatly exceeded by the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, but the fire has been described as the worst reactor accident until Three Mile Island in 1979.

    • @matthewbaynham6286
      @matthewbaynham6286 11 місяців тому

      @@davidclift5989 well that's just nonsense

    • @davidclift5989
      @davidclift5989 11 місяців тому

      @@matthewbaynham6286 In what way? Current estimates put additional cancer deaths from Chernobyl at over 4000.

    • @matthewbaynham6286
      @matthewbaynham6286 11 місяців тому

      @@davidclift5989 no they don't

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      @@matthewbaynham6286 Oh, be quiet, Matt: "A 2005 report from UNSCEAR estimated up to 4,000 eventual cancer deaths related to Chernobyl among the 600,000 most highly exposed people."

  • @GR-wr2it
    @GR-wr2it 10 місяців тому

    So many inaccuracies in this, did you use Wikipedia for references?

  • @hoperp1951
    @hoperp1951 10 місяців тому

    Clearly a video produced in USA where all units of measurement must relate to "olympic swimming pools", "the weight of a house", "the size of a football field". USA is only 4% or the total world population and one of only 2 countries in the world (along with Myanmar - Burma) that are still in the dark ages and have not gone Metric.

  • @Itwillgrowback
    @Itwillgrowback 11 місяців тому +9

    We can’t transition to a cleaner world without nuclear energy. Plus, nuclear plants today have so many modern failsafes they didn’t before.

    • @philliplamoureux9489
      @philliplamoureux9489 11 місяців тому

      We can do the transition without nuclear. They are not failsafe to producing million year hot waste

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому +2

      since nuclear waste has to be managed in perpetuity for many thousands of years, it's a massive net negative energy solution. It's not like coal where you can build a chimney stack and let mother nature take care of it. We'd be wasting energy produced thousands of years from now to manage nuclear waste from our current period. Again, a massive net negative energy equation. Nuclear proponents are emotional and myopic

    • @je-fq7ve
      @je-fq7ve 10 місяців тому +3

      yes and every time there is an accident they add a new round of safe guards. Nuclear power is to expensive and takes to long to build to be helpful.

  • @kylewil12plays
    @kylewil12plays 10 місяців тому

    i don't have the facts behind the reason why they cant find someway to make better use of the waste instead of doing what mind kind does with all problems it seems and just hide it under ground.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 5 місяців тому

    The best way to hide this is to change its name.

  • @jeffreyamos7288
    @jeffreyamos7288 10 місяців тому

    Some of your data is misleading eg you stated that some of the waste will remain toxic for 10,000 years, lead remains toxic permanently.

  • @donaldmaxwell3428
    @donaldmaxwell3428 11 місяців тому

    so what about the dragon reactor at winfrith Dorset ???

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому +2

      So what about it?

    • @donaldmaxwell3428
      @donaldmaxwell3428 10 місяців тому

      it has been decommissioned@@piscesDRB

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 10 місяців тому +1

      I don't think Dragon produced particularly large volumes of radioactive waste or any facilities that are now hazardous enough to be needing urgent and expensive remedial actions.

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому +1

      I thought it was defueled and dormant?

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 10 місяців тому

      @@piscesDRB I'm sure it was defueled long ago and does indeed lie dormant. I expect Magnox South (or just plain Magnox) have a website where folk can learn more about it's status. I had an office on Winfrith site back in the early noughties but the former research reactors were by then far removed from my bailiwick.

  • @johnmeyers4782
    @johnmeyers4782 11 місяців тому +8

    A little research wouldnt have gone amiss! 😂
    Its a jumble of "facts" youve found on the internet and thrown together for a few views.
    Absolute shyte marra!

    • @grahamfisher5436
      @grahamfisher5436 11 місяців тому

      Like..
      started the research by
      typing into UA-cam and watched these
      Videos-
      * Sellafield Britain's nuclear disaster !
      and -
      * THORPE
      ( built at the Sellafield site )

  • @arturmichalak7189
    @arturmichalak7189 10 місяців тому

    i'm living in poland, where whe are planing to build a nuclear power plant since 80'

  • @darklegion7780
    @darklegion7780 Місяць тому

    Clean energy

  • @gowdsake7103
    @gowdsake7103 10 місяців тому

    just why 70 billion ?

  • @heartland96a
    @heartland96a 11 місяців тому +1

    It’s pronounced Becktell over here

  • @u1zha
    @u1zha 11 місяців тому

    Stock footage of professionals nodding = thumbs not up

  • @boardmandave
    @boardmandave 11 місяців тому +6

    I live 45 miles away in Blackpool so if a disaster occurred I would be one of the first to go however I'm glad we created all of that plutonium to be taken seriously during the nuclear Arms Race

    • @battaliance
      @battaliance 11 місяців тому +2

      And what sorta disaster are you imagining?😂 from a nuclear site that has no active reactors? The worst that can happen is a radiation release and the xhances of that spreading 40 odd miles is slim 😂 worst case scenario would be a fire In which case its possible it would get to Blackpool but that would all depend on wind direction etc so yeah don't think your special that you would be "one of the first to go" 😂

    • @boardmandave
      @boardmandave 11 місяців тому +1

      @@battaliance ok well if you're going to be a dick about it ...An EU report in 2001 warned an accident at Sellafield could be worse than Chornobyl, the site of the 1986 disaster in Ukraine that exposed five million Europeans to radiation. Sellafield contains significantly more radioactive material than Chornobyl. So of course you are right I wouldn't literally be 'one' of the first to go it's a turn of phrase... but I would be one of the first to leave I can tell you that. have you nothing better to do then pick apart people's innocent comments on the internet

    • @battaliance
      @battaliance 11 місяців тому +3

      That was in 2001... while Sellafield was still actively generating electricity,as in still had an active reactor capable of exploding and spreading radiation just like chernobyl...(would have been worse due to the amount of excess waste on the site which chernobyl didnt have) I'm not being a dick just correcting misinformation

    • @rovhalgrencparselstedt8343
      @rovhalgrencparselstedt8343 10 місяців тому +1

      I wish fission(splitting the atom) had never been discovered/invented.

  • @piscesDRB
    @piscesDRB 11 місяців тому +2

    Never heard so much incoherent drivel! My cat could o a better job! Mixing up THORP with the empty Prototype AGR Containment Sphere and Piles Reactor??? You'll be sticking in a bus stop next! Wouldn't know where to start sorting him out!! Another one that seems not to know that radioactive materials have "half lives" and 'temporary storage time' is part of the decommissioning process that makes it easier, safer and cheaper!

  • @josephwaggener9307
    @josephwaggener9307 11 місяців тому +2

    It’s pronounced Bek-tel. Do your research.

  • @blacksmoke9419
    @blacksmoke9419 11 місяців тому +1

    Waste from sellafield has been exported to Russia for decades! I worked on theses vessels 🚢 😊

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому

      What waste? Why would Russia want it?

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      @@piscesDRB they get paid to take it

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому

      @@BOZ_11 Who (Russians?) got paid by whom? (Sellafield???) to take what "waste"?? There words like "waste" are meaningless! Is this something to do with Chernobyl? Where if UK were helping the EU Clean-up process then Sellafield I'm sure would insist on returning waste to its origin for long term storage? Very sensible!

    • @philiphawkins4684
      @philiphawkins4684 10 місяців тому

      Dumped over board then?

  • @blackshuck1175
    @blackshuck1175 11 місяців тому +1

    What a load of bs. Do your research first please

  • @Ruairi.C
    @Ruairi.C 11 місяців тому

    The title is wrong, England is no longer in Europe.
    Britain is spending 70Bn to clean up their own waste not Europe's.

    • @gordondocherty
      @gordondocherty 11 місяців тому +6

      Did Britain relocate to another continent? Must have missed that. I thought it was still geographically located in Europe - or does radiation respect political borders?

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      @@gordondocherty haha. well said. you're average conservative is 85 IQ

    • @tomwobus1482
      @tomwobus1482 7 місяців тому

      ​@@gordondochertyHe seems to be a bit confused with the terms Europe and the Europen Union... Happens to the best of US...

  • @smitajky
    @smitajky 11 місяців тому

    ALL thinking is, of necessity, short term. We can never foresee the consequences of any major technological or social construct. When the first cars were invented could anyone see the death and destruction, the wholesale division of the nation by roads and freeways and the loss of urban amenity? Could anyone have imagined the social dislocation caused by the mobile phone? We are embarking on renewable energy. Can anyone picture what the future downside will be? One cannot blame those involved at the time. But it should be a cautionary tale about using nuclear power to make the world greener by replacing coal or oil.

  • @dodovet1691
    @dodovet1691 11 місяців тому +2

    Pronounced Bek*Tel

  • @KarlandKristy
    @KarlandKristy 11 місяців тому +1

    Also, I think breeder reactors should be able to use some of this

  • @sodster68
    @sodster68 10 місяців тому

    Tony Blair couldn't a $hit about peoples health!

  • @ronancs
    @ronancs 10 місяців тому

    It's almost like you didn't do any research at all and just threw in half-truths and random footage you found along the way.

  • @domtweed7323
    @domtweed7323 11 місяців тому +6

    Nuclear is green energy, and we should a lot build more.

    • @ashleygoggs5679
      @ashleygoggs5679 11 місяців тому +1

      100% agree.

    • @FixItStupid
      @FixItStupid 11 місяців тому

      NOT AT ALL Leak & Vent Cancer Fools Greed Lie Nuclear @ 41 CPM Next Nuclear Melt Down Comes

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      since nuclear waste has to be managed in perpetuity for many thousands of years, it's a massive net negative energy solution. It's not like coal where you can build a chimney stack and let mother nature take care of it. We'd be wasting energy produced thousands of years from now to manage nuclear waste from our current period. Again, a massive net negative energy equation. Nuclear proponents are emotional and myopic

    • @domtweed7323
      @domtweed7323 10 місяців тому

      @@BOZ_11 Not necessarily. Highly radioactive waste, the really dangerous stuff, can be reprocessed into new nuclear fuel. The French of Russians already do that. After all, every radioactive decay not happening in a reactor is wasted energy.
      The low radioactive waste just needs to be encased in concrete for a few hundred years. You can just leave it and occasionally repaint the casks, no issue.

    • @loomroom
      @loomroom 10 місяців тому

      @@domtweed7323 When compared to obtaining natural uranium, the costs of repurposing waste into new fuel can be higher than mining uranium.
      Worldwide, around 30% of spent nuclear fuel is reused. There are no commercial operations utilising spent fuel (in the US, anyway). It will always be difficult to pursue commercially because of policy considerations over worries of nuclear proliferation.
      The half-life of uranium-235 is 700 million years
      Assuming we halted nuclear tomorrow, that is what we're committed to. There's no hope of ever achieving equilibrium, let alone net energy

  • @dadjake
    @dadjake 10 місяців тому +1

    what is this video? So much inaccurate information, mixing up names, buildings, the purpose of each... Just sounds like fear mongering to anyone who doesn't know more than this video provides about this site. Come on, put some effort into it, and make an accurate video, this is garbage.

  • @hunter-dx4bx
    @hunter-dx4bx 10 місяців тому

    That’s not how you pronounce Rosyth

  • @TimDim-em3pl
    @TimDim-em3pl 28 днів тому

    We've created a monster an nobody wants t ,

  • @craigrobinson5498
    @craigrobinson5498 10 місяців тому +2

    This video needs removing from youtube. Very poor research and full and fails information.

  • @tonysanders536
    @tonysanders536 11 місяців тому +1

    this is so biased. its a joke.

  • @simonmonk7266
    @simonmonk7266 11 місяців тому +1

    I'd hardly call this the most hazardous. More like chernobyl.

  • @kimwarburton8490
    @kimwarburton8490 11 місяців тому

    When proponents of nuclear talk about LCOE, i've never heard them consider the costs of cleanup and storage in the life cycle^.
    Even if everything was equal, i'd still prefer renewables because they are more democratic, so the improved safety, speed and efficiency of new nuclear dont budge me. that said, i currently get my energy from EDF, so im not exactly anti-nuclear. It IS better than fossil fuels.

    • @ashleygoggs5679
      @ashleygoggs5679 11 місяців тому +1

      Problem with Renewables is they arnt flexible, you get what the enviroment gives you. This is why nuclear is needed. The UK could have one of the best energy grids in the world and the safest if all we did was make a few more of the latest gen nuclear reactors, kept on with our wind farms etc. and we could use renewables for the bulk of the load and then use nuclear as the buffer. We could even make more reactors giving nuclear a larger percentage of ther overall grid which means we arnt too reliant on renewables, becuase will the enviroment giveth she also taketh, i.e. Sea wind farms suffer salt corrosion on the edges of the blades making them less efficient over time and the UK has thousands of them making maintenance costs pretty high. Solar panels also last for so long and becuase of the heavy metals inside them they are toxic to the enviroment and cannot be recycled.

    • @kimwarburton8490
      @kimwarburton8490 11 місяців тому

      @@ashleygoggs5679 I have to update you about your solar panel belief, they CAN be recycled, its just that there wasnt enough waste before now to make it viable. im aware of a company called SolarCycle which has invented machines to make it cheaper, the biggest issue is the glue apparently, and there's some universities exploring this aspect. Also, they COULD be made to standards such that theyd be easier to disassemble. Every component of a solar panel can be reused, and worth money once separated. I saw a video on this within the last week or so. I follow climate change/green revolution new disruptive materials and tech channels fairly religiously XD
      Uk should be making best use of it's status as an island nation and investing heavily into tidal energy. Far as i know turbine blades are not constructed with salt corrosion in mind, whereas tidal does.
      Like i said, im not exactly anti-nuclear, we do need energy. But if we can achieve the same results without the risks of nuclear or fossil fuels, why not? When sellafield had it's mini meltdown a few decades ago, over 200 cancer deaths were attributed to it. I wouldnt want to live with nuclear in my backyard, just incase such happened to me and mine, its a protective stance for human health. Same as i wouldnt live near fossil fuel sites. But renewables? i'd have no issue living next door to them as there is no risk to my health.

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому

      Decommissioning costs have been estimated for decades and up-dated annually and Sellafield apportions costs to the reactors whose power-stations they serve. (sort of reactor pension!) Projects and research programmes develop techniques to deal with wastes streams when the time comes. Yes time is part of the decommissioning process because it gets easier, cheaper and safer with time!

  • @Rorschach1024
    @Rorschach1024 10 місяців тому

    It is pronounced Beck-tal.

  • @BOZ_11
    @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

    since nuclear waste has to be managed in perpetuity for many thousands of years, it's a massive net negative energy solution. It's not like coal where you can build a chimney stack and let mother nature take care of it. We'd be wasting energy produced thousands of years from now to manage nuclear waste from our current period. Again, a massive net negative energy equation. Nuclear proponents are emotional and myopic

  • @bstives58
    @bstives58 10 місяців тому

    Pronounced BeckTel...

  • @radnerd17
    @radnerd17 11 місяців тому +2

    This video is so full of misinformation and BS, please do not take anything said in this video as factual.

    • @impuls60
      @impuls60 10 місяців тому

      Are you high? As a Norwegian myself our goverment have complained about the radioactive leaking onto Norwegian shores for years and making our fish less valueable. If there was an easy fix the English goverment would have stopped the leaking which is an international scandal. In Norway we even have our own test reactor at Kjeller which the worlds richest country can't afford to demolish. Nuclear is so CHEAP, rofl.

  • @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044
    @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 11 місяців тому

    Kerching

  • @DonaldFaulds
    @DonaldFaulds 11 місяців тому +1

    The story presented doesn't align with the facts😂

  • @leethomas8465
    @leethomas8465 8 місяців тому

    Terrible and inaccurate

  • @johnrockley9472
    @johnrockley9472 11 місяців тому

    Very good. Three Mile island didn't go too well either did it? Best not talk about the Japan fiasco! Probably others we don't know about and some on the point of roasting us in the near future too. At least you can sink an old nuclear sub and catch fish already cooked!

  • @rikmorley6469
    @rikmorley6469 10 місяців тому

    Clickbait pish

  • @oml81mm
    @oml81mm 11 місяців тому

    Even I, with very little knowledge of the subject, csn see that some of this is inaccurate. I wonder how much more is inaccurate. I do not trust this video.

    • @piscesDRB
      @piscesDRB 10 місяців тому

      90% is my guess! And I have a lot of knowledge!

  • @Zodliness
    @Zodliness 11 місяців тому

    Typical of Britain to do something that detrimental to the country regardless of any long-term consequences. 🤔
    #Brexit 😉

  • @grandpaandlucas7054
    @grandpaandlucas7054 11 місяців тому

    the most constant resource we have and don't use it, is rivers. turbines tapped of rivers so not to disturb wild wife and salmon to much.

    • @ashleygoggs5679
      @ashleygoggs5679 11 місяців тому +1

      Theres a reason turbines havnt been used. We have experimented with them, the problem is the tides and currents end up destroying the turbines, if it was so easy naturally it would be the best and safest option and it would literally be a facoured renewable source. However Nuclear will always be king.

    • @FixItStupid
      @FixItStupid 11 місяців тому

      @@ashleygoggs5679 And No Nuclear IS Death Fool Leak & Vent Cancer Fact Last Nuclear Melt Down Japan Never Stopped & Cancer UP More Then 30 % Lies Of Greed Nuclear

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 10 місяців тому

      @@ashleygoggs5679 since nuclear waste has to be managed in perpetuity for many thousands of years, it's a massive net negative energy solution. It's not like coal where you can build a chimney stack and let mother nature take care of it. We'd be wasting energy produced thousands of years from now to manage nuclear waste from our current period. Again, a massive net negative energy equation. Nuclear proponents are emotional and myopic

    • @ashleygoggs5679
      @ashleygoggs5679 10 місяців тому

      @@BOZ_11 Not necessarily true, as this depends on the reactor that is used, molten salt reactors using thorium can recycle waste to the point that its half life is signficantly lowered to the point that its 100s of years not thousands of years, Which makes it significantly more manageable... SIGNIFICANTLY!