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Ukraine

- Means the border- AKA “Little Russia”- Nearly four centuries of

Russian rule developed strong links between the nations

- In 1991 Communism collapsed and Ukraine gained its own independence

- Breadbasket of Eastern Europe

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Fallout from Chernobyl

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400 million people exposed in 20 countries

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Chernobyl’s political fallout

• Stimulated Gorbachev’s glasnost (openness)

• Stimulated nationalism in Ukraine, Belarus, and other republics that lost clean-up workers.

• Growth of environmental opposition

• Questioning of the heart of technocratic power– Soviet leaders were engineers, not lawyers– USSR collapsed within 5 years.

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Radiation and Health

• Health effects as a result of radiation exposure:-increased likelihood of cancer-birth defects including long limbs, brain damage, conjoined stillborn twins-reduced immunity-genetic damage

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3.5 million sick, one/third of them children

8,000 deaths in 14 years

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My grandmother, by Luda

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Death of my life, by Marina

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Chernobyl is war, by Irena

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Beauty and the beast, by Helena

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Nothing escapes radiation, by Irena

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Chernobyl, our hell, by Eugenia

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“It Can’t Happen Here”

• U.S. reaction to Chernobyl, 1986– Blamed on Communism, graphite reactor

• Also Soviet reaction to Three-Mile Island, 1979– Blamed on Capitalism, pressurized-water reactor

• No technology 100% safe– Three-Mile Island bubble almost burst

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Three-Mile Island, PA 1979

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Health around TMI

• In 1979, hundreds of people reported nausea, vomiting, hair loss, and skin rashes. Many pets were reported dead or showed signs of radiation

• Lung cancer, and leukemia rates increased 2 to 10 times in areas within 10 miles downwind

• Farmers received severe monetary losses due to deformities in livestock and crops after the disaster that are still occurring today.

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Plants near TMI

-lack of chlorophyll -deformed leaf patterns -thick, flat, hollow stems -missing reproductive parts -abnormally large

TMI dandelion leaf at right

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Nuclear reaction

• Chain reaction occurs when a Uranium atom splits

• Different reactions– Atomic Bomb in a split second– Nuclear Power Reactor more controlled, cannot

explode like a bomb

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States with nuclear power plant(s)

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Nuclear power around the globe

• 17% of world’s electricity from nuclear power – U.S. about 20% (2nd largest source)

• 431 nuclear plants in 31 countries – 103 of them in the U.S.– Built none since 1970s (Wisconsin as leader). – U.S. firms have exported nukes.– Push from Bush/Cheney for new nukes.

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Technology depends on operators

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Other reactor accidents (besides TMI and Chernobyl)

• 1952 Chalk River, Ontario– Partial core meltdown

• 1957 Windscale, England– Graphite reactor fire contaminates 200 square miles.

• 1975 Browns Ferry, Alabama– Plant caught fire

• 1976 Lubmin, East Germany– Near meltdown of reactor core .

• 1999 Tokaimura, Japan– Nuclear fuel plant spewed high levels of radioactive gas

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Risk of terrorism(new challenge to industry)

9/11 jetpassed nearIndian Point

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• Nuclear energy has no typical pollutants or greenhouse gasses

• Nuclear waste contains high levels of radioactive waste, which are active for hundreds of thousands of years.

Summary Positives and Negatives