Is there any Nuclear Power Plant near the city or surrounding you live at least 50 miles away they say is the safest to live. This is probably not a question you're asked all that often. But it's one worth knowing the answer to for a couple of reasons: the basic value in knowing where some of your electricity comes from and, in the extremely unlikely event of a meltdown, the practical knowledge of whether you'll have to evacuate your home.
mouse_|2 years ago
defrost|2 years ago
Don't forget to compare the fallout from your nearest nuclear power plant to the radiation from radon gas expressed daily by your nearest granite outcrops. If you live in a valley with nearby granite it's quite likely your vally "fills" with radon gas every day when the winds are still and bows clear when the wind picks up.
https://www.epa.gov/radiation/what-radon-gas-it-dangerous
readyplayernull|2 years ago
> Some 150,000 square kilometres in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine are contaminated and stretch northward of the plant site as far as 500 kilometres. An area spanning 30 kilometres around the plant is considered the “exclusion zone” and is essentially uninhabited. Radioactive fallout scattered over much of the northern hemisphere via wind and storm patterns, but the amounts dispersed were in many instances insignificant.
https://www.iaea.org/newscenter/focus/chernobyl/faqs
neoromantique|2 years ago
...and now I feel even safer living near NPP.
I sadly moved away for unrelated reasons, but I'd move to a similar place in a heartbeat. Turns out that requirements to actually build a NPP(access to water, seismic activity etc) are quite strict and make for a good place to live overall.
floxy|2 years ago
idontwantthis|2 years ago
joshxyz|2 years ago
those things scare me more than a nuclear power plant or an airplane crash.
statistically though what are the odds?
farseer|2 years ago
userinanother|2 years ago
OhNoNotAgain_99|2 years ago
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