| > I've seen two catastrophic meltdowns just in my lifetime. In that same time: -- Chinese businesses improperly dumped into a of silicon tetrachloride (and other nasty pollutants) waste from photovoltaic production. http://spectrum.ieee.org/green-tech/solar/solar-energy-isnt-... -- Multiple fly ash spills spread heavy metals (arsenic, chromium, mercury, etc) over large areas of land and into major rivers. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingston_Fossil_Plant_coal_fly... -- An incredible amount of CO2 was released, leading to accelerating risk of catastrophic climate problems. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14085030 That's just a handful of problems I can find links for in a few minutes. The impact even from nuclear isn't anywhere close to the same scale of damage that other types of power already did to the environment. > But a mistake doesn't cost one generation, it costs many. Even if this was a concern - it's not - we're still talking about a temporary problem, that gets much smaller each half-life. The metals from fly ash are a permanent problem. |
No matter, I'm not sure why we're comparing Chernobyl against these and other environmental disasters when they should be lumped together--these are all sins of our species.