[ RadSafe ] Forwarded to the list: Indian Point Licenseextension.
Mercado, Donald Paul. (ARC-QH)[CONSOLIDATED SAFETY SERVICES INC]
donald.p.mercado at nasa.gov
Fri Dec 30 12:55:07 CST 2011
There is a difference of willingness to accept risks when considering whether the risk is voluntary or imposed. I will voluntarily accept risks of driving, but unwilling to accept the risk of second hand smoke. Antis are not willing to accept the imposed risk, minimal or imaginary as it may be.
________________________________________
From: radsafe-bounces at health.phys.iit.edu [radsafe-bounces at health.phys.iit.edu] On Behalf Of Jeff Terry [terryj at iit.edu]
Sent: Friday, December 30, 2011 10:27 AM
To: franz.schoenhofer at chello.at
Cc: The International Radiation Protection (Health Physics) MailingList
Subject: Re: [ RadSafe ] Forwarded to the list: Indian Point Licenseextension.
I believe that was my point. We accept risks by doing anything. Either we do the best we can do given rational constraints or we don't. I don't think that it is surprising at all that humanity has survived until now. Humans used to accept reasonable risk to ensure the betterment of the species. Hunting, mining, etc. were dangerous but were done.
It is now that the species had become so risk averse that I fear for its survival.
Maybe I went overboard with my examples. Let me give a more common example, in the US we do not protect underground lines from backhoes. People routinely did in to these causing gas leaks, etc.
You design to accommodate failure whatever its cause, anticipated or not.
Jeff
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 30, 2011, at 12:03 PM, franz.schoenhofer at chello.at wrote:
> Jeff,
>
> The risks you describe are not at all restricted to nuclear power. Ever heard of landslides, inundations, tornados? You as an American citizen should know much better than me!
>
> So what? The human race is subject since millions of years to all kind of "environmental" impact and especially disasters. Surprisingly it survived until now.....
>
>
> ---- Jeff Terry <terryj at iit.edu> schrieb:
>> You have to design systems so that you can react and deal with an unanticipated events.
>>
>> You cannot design in protection from even all anticipated events. For example, we know that at some point a large body from space will hit the earth, we know that Yellowstone will erupt again. These are events so large in impact that they protection from these events cannot be designed in.
>>
>> You either accept the risk in power generation or you do not.
>>
>> Jeff
>>
>>
>> On Sep 30, 2004, at 11:03 PM, Steven Dapra wrote:
>>
>>> Dec. 30
>>>
>>> "every possibility"?
>>>
>>> Given the limitless imaginations and the lurid fantasies of the anti-nukers I suspect this could become an exquisitely long list.
>>>
>>> Have you examined all the possibilities of the dangers that go along with driving your car? Elephant gets loose from the circus, wanders across the road while you're rushing to the reactor in an emergency response. You broadside the elephant, killing it; and a band of crazed PETA members wielding pitchforks and staves descends on you. . . .
>>>
>>> Steven Dapra
>>>
>>>
>>> At 10:19 AM 12/30/2011, you wrote:
>>>> It's what you don't think about that gets you. While Indian Point won't
>>>> have a 130 m (I'm trying to go metric.) tsunami, I'm not confident that
>>>> there's some other unanalyzed accident sequence that will cause major
>>>> problems. The power reactor major incidents and near misses, e.g., Browns
>>>> Ferry fire, TMI, Davis Besse vessel failure, etc.) were all unanticipated.
>>>> How can we be sure that we've looked at every possibility? A major release
>>>> from IP would be a disaster for millions of people. I agree, it's not
>>>> funny.
>>>>
>>>> Bill Lipton
>>>> It's not about dose, it's about trust.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Sep 30, 2004 at 10:40 PM, Steven Dapra <sjd at swcp.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Dec. 30
>>>>>
>>>>> I realize it's not funny. It seemed to me you were invoking the
>>>>> China syndrome in jest, and I responded in kind.
>>>>>
>>>>> A 400 foot tsunami does not fall within the realm of "opinion." A
>>>>> claim like this bespeaks someone who is utterly out of touch with the
>>>>> rational world.
>>>>>
>>>>> Steven Dapra
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> At 10:52 PM 12/29/2011, you wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Steven et al,
>>>>>> It's really not funny. I think the majority of the public actually
>>>>>> believe the
>>>>>> horror scenario of a "China syndrome" is actually possible.
>>>>>> Unfortunately, so do
>>>>>> many Washington bureaucrats. Some other "possibilities" that have actually
>>>>>> received serious consideration in siting studies include, falling
>>>>>> airplanes,
>>>>>> meteor impact, and people actually spending their entire life living at
>>>>>> the site
>>>>>> boundry at the center of any and all downwind release trajectories. My
>>>>>> favorite
>>>>>> occured at the siting hearings for the San Onofre Power Plant. According
>>>>>> to one
>>>>>> witness, his seismic analysis indicated that the plant could be hit by a
>>>>>> 400
>>>>>> foot high Tsunami. Such an occurence would make the Fukushima event seem
>>>>>> trivial
>>>>>> in comparison. Of course, in such an event, everyone living between Los
>>>>>> Angelas
>>>>>> and the Mexican border would likely drown to death, buy the really serious
>>>>>> consequence might be the release of some I-131, deadly Plutonium, and
>>>>>> maybe even
>>>>>> the terrible Depleted Uranium. Everybody is entitled to their opinion, no
>>>>>> matter
>>>>>> how absurd, but what law says that it must be taken seriously.
>>>
>>> [edit]
>>>
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>
> --
> Franz Schoenhofer, PhD, MinRat
> Habicherg. 31/7
> A-1160 Vienna
> Austria
> mobile: ++43 699 1706 1227
>
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