How the eff can you support nuclear when this is how easy it is to militarise a nuclear power plant & hold europe to ransom with the threat of another russian made nuclear cloud.
Sick of the blind support for nuclear, how much money to temporarily cover their last reactor f-up (€1.5 billion structure) & now this.
What's the contract worth annually to the 3 big power firms overseeing it? who pays?
Take a good hard look at this video...
..We (as the nato alliance, fronted up by the bigger swaggering country members) PROMISED, ukraine deemed an unsafe nuclear country after CCCP dissolved protection to give up their nuclear stock, PROPER PROTECTION, yet here we are, missiles gone, nuclear remains, back to square one.
(& that protection, late coming, ...not much assistance from 2014, till mid 2022 that results in this FUBAR scenario ongoing)
As the sarcophagus was funded by the European Bank, can anyone tell me how much % russia put in for their problem?
I refer you back to the video posted the other day about the russian attitude to nuclear safety, it's a good watch!
Yes i'm bloody exasperated at the "nuclear is safe" arguments.
Russian firing positions on top of ukrainain soviet era nuclear plant
Russian firing positions on top of ukrainain soviet era nuclear plant
1906 ripplewatts @wind Turb-ine-erry
It's the wifes Tesla 3 (she lets me wash it)
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It's the wifes Tesla 3 (she lets me wash it)
Leaf 24
Celotex type insulation stuffed most places
Skip diver to the gentry
Austroflamm WBS
A finger of solar + shed full more
Re: Russian firing positions on top of ukrainain soviet era nuclear plant
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00187wz
It was a night of intense negotiation which would change the world order as Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons.
Clive Myrie examines what was at stake in Budapest in 1994, how the deal was finally reached and how it went on to shape the world we face today.
Three decades ago, the newly independent country of Ukraine was briefly the third-biggest nuclear power on the planet. Thousands of nuclear arms had been left on Ukrainian soil after the collapse of the Soviet Union. But in the years that followed, Ukraine made the decision to denuclearise.
As Ukraine fights for its continued independence and the world hopes to stave off a catastrophic acceleration of nuclear weapons activity, Clive finds out how that agreement was negotiated and interpreted – and what it says about the situation we find ourselves in today.
He talks to negotiators and others with an interest in those important diplomatic discussions 28 years ago.
Producer: Ashley Byrne
A Made in Manchester production for BBC Radio 4
It was a night of intense negotiation which would change the world order as Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons.
Clive Myrie examines what was at stake in Budapest in 1994, how the deal was finally reached and how it went on to shape the world we face today.
Three decades ago, the newly independent country of Ukraine was briefly the third-biggest nuclear power on the planet. Thousands of nuclear arms had been left on Ukrainian soil after the collapse of the Soviet Union. But in the years that followed, Ukraine made the decision to denuclearise.
As Ukraine fights for its continued independence and the world hopes to stave off a catastrophic acceleration of nuclear weapons activity, Clive finds out how that agreement was negotiated and interpreted – and what it says about the situation we find ourselves in today.
He talks to negotiators and others with an interest in those important diplomatic discussions 28 years ago.
Producer: Ashley Byrne
A Made in Manchester production for BBC Radio 4
1906 ripplewatts @wind Turb-ine-erry
It's the wifes Tesla 3 (she lets me wash it)
Leaf 24
Celotex type insulation stuffed most places
Skip diver to the gentry
Austroflamm WBS
A finger of solar + shed full more
It's the wifes Tesla 3 (she lets me wash it)
Leaf 24
Celotex type insulation stuffed most places
Skip diver to the gentry
Austroflamm WBS
A finger of solar + shed full more
Re: Russian firing positions on top of ukrainain soviet era nuclear plant
And now the dam has gone to hell (in highwater)
"As for the Zaporizhzha Nuclear Power Plant. It is unable to get the water to the cooling reservoir any longer because the water level in the Kahovka water reservoir dropped below the limit to enter the NPP lake. IAEA says that for now the NPP is safe and for the next month the water in NPP system is enough for cooling.
The question is what will happen after one month "
"As for the Zaporizhzha Nuclear Power Plant. It is unable to get the water to the cooling reservoir any longer because the water level in the Kahovka water reservoir dropped below the limit to enter the NPP lake. IAEA says that for now the NPP is safe and for the next month the water in NPP system is enough for cooling.
The question is what will happen after one month "
1906 ripplewatts @wind Turb-ine-erry
It's the wifes Tesla 3 (she lets me wash it)
Leaf 24
Celotex type insulation stuffed most places
Skip diver to the gentry
Austroflamm WBS
A finger of solar + shed full more
It's the wifes Tesla 3 (she lets me wash it)
Leaf 24
Celotex type insulation stuffed most places
Skip diver to the gentry
Austroflamm WBS
A finger of solar + shed full more