On April 26, 1986 the night crew at
the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was asked to conduct an operations
experiment. The infamous explosion that resulted released 100
times more radiation than the atom bombs dropped over Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Twenty years later, the Bush administration would like
you to believe that the Chernobyl catastrophe is a dark day in our
history, one that could never happen again, especially here in the
United States. As our new report documents, a nuclear meltdown
could not only happen here, but we have already come uncomfortably
close to an American Chernobyl. Our report, "
An American Chernobyl?"
identifies almost 200 near misses at 50 reactors that have occurred in
the United States since 1986. Of the 200 “precursors to a meltdown”
documented in U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) documents, eight
are considered the most significant. In other words, according to the
NRC, the risk of a core meltdown is greater than a one in 1,000
chance. For the most part, these near misses have not been
well-publicized, and the safety and well-being of those who live near
these facilities has taken a back seat to the publicity needs of the
energy industry.
We learned the hard way that nuclear energy
is dangerous. Fortunately, in this day and age, it is also
unnecessary. Although the Bush administration is calling for a
"nuclear renaissance," to meet our energy needs, we're advocating for a
switch to safe, clean, renewable energy sources like wind and
solar. We hope our report serves as a stark reminder that nuclear
energy is no safer than it was 20 years ago.
Take Action!Sign our petition against nuclear energy