THURSDAY 08 MARCH, 2012 |

Many Americans Still (Very) Jumpy About Nuclear Power
by Energy Matters

Fukushima may have disappeared from mainstream media headlines for the most
part, but its radioactive shadow still lingers on in the minds of many Americans
close to one year after the event.
On March 11, 2011, radioactive materials began spewing from the Fukushima I Nuclear Power
Plant in Japan following a massive earthquake and tsunami that damaged the
facility.
Today, a 20 kilometre exclusion zone still exists around the nuclear disaster
site - an area equivalent to the entire city of Adelaide, all of its inner and
most of its outer suburbs. The Fukushima disaster was and continues to be the
worst nuclear incident since the Chernobyl crisis in 1986. More than 25 years
on, a 30 kilometre exclusion zone still exists around the Chernobyl site.
Fukushima saw a backlash against nuclear energy around the world - an
understandable knee-jerk reaction to the horrific event. However, even 12 months
on, the fear of nuclear power among many United States citizens hasn't
dissipated.
A survey conducted for the Civil Society Institute (CSI) of just over 1,000
Americans has found 57% are less supportive of expanding nuclear power in the United States than they were before the
crisis.
Other key findings include:
- 77% support "a shift of federal loan-guarantee support for energy away from nuclear
reactors" in favor of wind and solar power.
- 61% are now less supportive of nuclear power.
- 65% would oppose the construction of a nuclear reactor within 75km of their
home.
- 77% of respondents are now more supportive than they were a year ago of the
use of clean, renewable resources such as
solar
energy.
Commenting on the findings, Peter Bradford, a former member of the United States Nuclear Regulatory
Commission and currently adjunct professor at Vermont Law School on Nuclear Power and Public Policy,
said public skepticism of the magnitude revealed in the survey is a near "fatal
flaw" for the nuclear energy sector.
"The nuclear industry has spent millions on polls telling the public how much the public longs for nuclear power. Such polls never ask real world questions linking new reactors to rate increases or to accident risk. Fukushima has made the links to risk much clearer in the public mind. This poll makes the consequences of that linkage
clear."
According to the Civil Society Institute survey report, issues not helping the
nuclear cause in the USA include a number of incidents in 2011 and this year
where nuclear reactors operating within the nation needing to be shut due such factors as natural disasters, equipment failure and radioactive
leaks.
One in three US citizens
live
within a 50-mile radius of a nuclear reactor - which is the same evacuation area
U.S. nuclear officials recommended for Americans living near Fukushima. The CSI
survey also found 52 percent of Americans living within 50 miles of a nuclear reactor
still do not know what to do in the event of nuclear reactor emergency - a
similar result to a
nuclear
survey performed last year.
The full Civil Society Institute survey report
can
be viewed here.
Related:
Fukushima Nuclear Disaster Could Cost $257 Billion
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