Perils of the Peaceful Atom; The Myth of Safe Nuclear Power Plants

Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1969. First Edition [stated]. Presumed first printing. Hardcover. xiv, 274 pages. Endpaper chart and map. Occasional footnotes. Principal Sources. Index. Pencil erasure residue on fep. DJ, has ink note on front flap, and is soiled and has edges worn. Endpaper soiling in spine area. An exhaustive analysis of the many potential problems with nuclear power, even for peaceful purposes. Derived from a Kirkus review: Some say the world will end in fire, including the authors of this work, who scan the threat posed by the expansion of nuclear power plants. They refer to such potential hazards as accidental blasts, accumulated radioactive wastes, and thermal pollution of waters used to cool reactors (overheated rivers have already "cooked" fish and grown new parasites; hotting up the seas may make minerals and plankton unobtainable for future use). Attacking not only the safety but also the much-touted economy of the heavily subsidized nuclear plants, the authors sharply criticize such "watchdogs" as the Atomic Energy Commission, Congress, and the press for complacently promoting the splendors of the "peaceful atom." Their own solution: scrap the reactors and work on cleaning up fossil fuels. Few will argue with their critique of the AEC, or with their assessment of thermal pollution, a real peril which also derives from other sources. But some may feel that the authors - journalists, not scientists - have exaggerated the risks of "runaway chain reactions," while underplaying the health hazards of using our present - and admittedly limited - fossil fuel supply. Condition: Good / Good.

Keywords: Nuclear Power, Atomic Energy, Reactor Safety, Reactor Accidents, Power Plant, Chet Holifield, Craig Hosmer, Radiation, USS Thresher, Risk Assessment, Hazard Analysis

[Book #73819]

Price: $35.00

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