Visualizing Environmental Science

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Nuclear Energy 435

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Unit 1 Unit 2

Unit 3

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and many will be unable to return. Farmers had to aban-
don their crops, and high radiation levels will limit sea-
food catches in the area for at least decades. The Nuclear
Safety Commission estimates that cleanup of the Fuku-
shima Daiichi site alone will cost at least $250 billion.

The Link Between Nuclear Energy
and Nuclear Weapons
Fission is involved in both the production of electricity
by nuclear energy and the destructive power of nuclear
weapons. Countries that own nuclear power plants have
access to the fuel needed for nuclear weapons (by
reprocessing spent fuel to make plutonium). Responsible
world leaders are concerned about the consequences of
terrorist groups and states of concern (such as Iran and
North Korea) building nuclear weapons. These concerns
have caused many people to shun nuclear energy and
to seek alternatives that are not so intimately connected
with nuclear weapons.
There are several hundred metric tons of weapons-
grade plutonium worldwide. Storing plutonium is a se-
curity nightmare because it takes only several kilograms
to make a nuclear bomb as powerful as the ones that de-
stroyed the Japanese cities of Nagasaki and Hiroshima in
World War II. However, since the 2001 terrorist attacks
in the United States, the security of plutonium stockpiles
and nuclear power plants has been increased substan-
tially to reduce the chance that terrorist groups could
steal plutonium and enriched uranium and use them to
make nuclear weapons.

On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9.0 earthquake in
Japan created a tsunami that severely damaged the Fu-
kushima Daiichi nuclear power station. The tsunami dis-
rupted both the normal power supply and two backup
systems that pump cooling water. Without cooling water,
three of the six reactors at the plant underwent melt-
down. An explosion caused by a buildup of hydrogen
in an overheated vessel caused severe damage to one of
the reactors (Figure 17.18). The Fukushima Daiichi ac-
cident contaminated both the ocean and surrounding
land. People from neighboring areas were evacuated,

GENIA SAVILOV/AFP/Getty Images, Inc.

NG Maps


Global
Locator


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The arrow indicates the site of the explosion. The upper part of
the reactor was completely destroyed.

Health consequences of Chernobyl
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This 14-year-old is recovering from thyroid cancer. A significant
(25-fold) increase in thyroid cancer in children and adolescents
occurred within a few years after the accident.

Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant,
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This photo, taken a few days after the accident, shows the
severely damaged unit 1 (far left) and badly damaged unit 3 (right).
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