The energy industry is beginning to change. In today's modern world, governments around the world are shifting from traditional power supplies such as coal and oil to more complex scientific nuclear power generation. This relatively new system uses a powerful fuel source that produces virtually no emission while supplying enough energy to meet global electricity demand (Community Science, nd). Although nuclear power seems to be a perfect energy source, there is no defect in the power generation system, nuclear reactors are no exception, and those defects appear in a safe form.
I read your article "The truth about nuclear power". Your thoughts and opinions are important and persuasive. You describe nuclear power as dirty, dangerous, expensive, unsustainable, terrorist-prone and unrealistic. However, I would like to present my personal concepts and opinions on this topic which may deny your proposal. In the beginning life is an exercise, everything that tends to move all have inherent properties of releasing energy in some way. Over the years, humans have used this energy to save, preserve and produce. Many energy sources are used, but the concept of autonomous energy is still very theoretical. In pursuit, we discovered the urgent need for high energy and nuclear power.
Nuclear power generation has been controversial since its founding. People want to know what it does to the environment and the dangers this powerful energy brings to humans. There seems to be many myths about nuclear power of this day. Many people think nuclear power is inherently dangerous and should be banned completely. If you look at them over time, the answer is there. The term Chernobyl is synonymous with nuclear disaster. The explosion of the reactor in Chernobyl, Ukraine in 1986 was a terrible disaster. Efforts to manage pollution, but little effect. After the incident in 1986, there was a wide panic in Europe. The book "Chernobyl: The Story of Truth" conveys a way for sensationalism to transcend sometimes ridiculous things. British Daily Mirror, April 30, 1986
In 1986, the massive disaster in Chernobyl in Ukraine and in Japan in Fukushima in Japan raised public awareness of the dangers of nuclear power generation. Therefore, enthusiasm for nuclear power has waned. The devastating risk of nuclear energy, such as the collapse of nuclear reactors in Japan and Ukraine, far exceeds the potential benefits. Disasters such as Fukushima and Chernobyl released large amounts of radiation to neighboring communities and evacuated thousands of people. Many of them may never come back. If any signs are seen in the current performance of the industry, there is a possibility that a major disaster may occur every ten years.