News: Germany is closing its old nuclear power plants..
and will check whats left ..
That is pure panic setting in Cem!

PR - Public Relations- will click in all over I reckon now Cem

Nuclear power is still very safe in all most parts of the world, especially the modern versions soon (we hope!!) to be rolled out across the UK. Nothing else will give us the power we all need 
tell this to the radiation cooked Japanese and Russians..

and after some time to the Turks 
as I said earlier, if you play with fire no matter what precaution you apply, your hands will burn..
Whatever man does, in the absence of the technology to avoid it, is a risk. For instance, coal mining, burning fossil fuels, building the infrastrucure, and producing the goods we have used in the past, and to date, have killed millions, with TB and emphysema taking many of those during and post the British industrial revolution. Many are still dying around the world due to 'unsafe' industrial processes across a whole range of industries.
Lizzie, are you comparing nuclear radation with standard industrial risks :-? like mining or other..
I hope no..A nuclear power plant is actually a nuclear bomb exploding in a slowed fashion..And if for some reason you cant cool it becomes a real bomb..killing many , poisoning a large area for some thousand years.. Can you imagine such a thing on your island..Human kind start to loose when they think they can beat nature and its forces..As prooven..
In comparison, with the exception of the terribly managed Chernobyl situation, how many have been killed by nuclear power generation in all Western countries put together?
please check the list
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_and_radiation_accidents
how many people have to die for some to accept the danger..
No, nuclear power if the plants are constructed to modern standards, in geographically sound areas, maintained to the highest standards, and monitored properly by the world's nuclear agencies, is perfectly safe, and a lot safer, along with being highly efficient, compared to any other generating medium.
If we want the power,
simple,drop your energy requirements
we need nuclear power generation

Firstly Cem, yes I am making comparisons, because both subjects are comparable in terms of mans quest to produce energy and goods to use. History has taught us that man has taken risks every step of the way, and nuclear power is actually a far lesser risk than those taken before in terms of human fatalities.
The nuclear power generation may be similar to an atom bomb, but it is not the same and is controlled within an environment especially created for it under human and computer control. An atom bomb, created with weapons grade plutonium to kill millions, goes off in an open, non-controlled environment by way of human command. Thus two very different processes.
I do not normally give any credence to Wikipedia, but as you raise the question of the "list", I will quote what it actually says:
"has reported that worldwide there have been 99 accidents at nuclear power plants.[4] Fifty-seven accidents have occurred since the Chernobyl disaster, and almost two-thirds (56 out of 99) of all nuclear-related accidents have occurred in the USA.
Relatively few accidents involved fatalities.[4]"
I have already mentioned the exceptional case of Chernobyl, with exceptional poor management and materials / design in a failing communist state, but even with that the acttual number of fatalities remains uncertain with wild variations. 4000, or 200,000 if so, is a terrible loss of human life. That is undeniable! But that is what I meant by comparing mans losses in past and today's energy generation, directly or indirectly; the losses of human life can be measured in millions. Mankind takes risks in whatever we do. We try to limit them, but sometimes things go wrong. We try and avoid that of course, but then we try and limit the casualties. That is where good modern nuclear generating plant, and practise, comes in!
As for limiting our power use; you know Cem, as I do, that is NOT an option. Mankind must go forward, and dare I say at all costs as we have always done, but now we do really try and limit the risks.
