DB dumps its waste heat into Lake Erie, between Toledo and Cleveland. A 1977 accident portended what destroyed its clone, Three Mile Island Unit Two, on March 28, 1979. TMI2's owners later sued because lessons learned at DB that might've helped them avoid their own disaster were not passed on.
In 2002, news of a hole in DB's head astonished the industry. Dripping boric acid had eaten nearly through the reactor vessel head. Cleveland and the Great Lakes were 3/5ths of an inch from permanent irradiation.
Rather than shut permanently, FE spent millions on a "fix" that failed. Then they cut through the containment and glued on a badly-fitted head from an unfinished Michigan reactor canceled by citizen action.
Shoddy construction and faulty maintenance have perforated the building meant to shield the public from DB's radiation. Its operating/maintenance costs soar while it can't compete with methane.
But it's wind that Ohio's nuke-loving lawmakers most hate. "North coast" breezes blow steadily over flat agricultural land filled with transmission lines. Farmers are desperate for the steady income turbines can bring, especially when sited so close to urban consumers. More than $4 billion in private funding is pending for Ohio wind farms, guaranteeing billions in long-term revenue and thousands of secure jobs.
But in 2015, FE's bought lawmakers concocted a setback provision meant to kill those projects. Other mid-western/Great Plains states are now filling with cheap nature-based electricity. But anti-wind Ohio may now bury its fiscal future with unsustainable electric rates.
All reactors spew carbon 14 along with huge quantities of hot water and steam that warm the planet and kill trillions of marine creatures. Their cooling towers kill countless birds. All American reactors (except Watts Bar) are more than 20 years old; some are more than 40.
Now the Trump-run Nuclear Regulatory Commission says it may simply stop inspecting these older reactors just as they most need it. They want owners to stop informing the public of mishaps just as they become more frequent and dangerous.
The terrifying escalation of reactor disasters has risen from the near-miss at Michigan's Fermi One (1966) to the melt-down at TMI (1979) to the mega-explosion at Chernobyl (1986) to the three melt-downs/four explosions at Fukushima.
After that 2011 disaster, NRC staff compiled upgrades to guard against another one. But the Trump Commission killed them all, leaving the fleet even more dangerous than before Fukushima.
When the next big reactor blows, industry hacks like Ann Coulter will be all over Fox explaining that radiation is good and that plutonium is pixie dust that really won't harm our kids.
But the ghastly death tolls at TMI, Chernobyl, and Fukushima say otherwise.
Based on the insane claim that nukes deserve "zero emission credits," the Supreme Court has cleared the way for still more of these insane bailouts.
Grassroots Solartopians are fighting back. Ohio's bailout has been held off for years, and may yet fail. They've petitioned California Governor Gavin Newsom to independently inspect Diablo Canyon.
They've also poured into the bankruptcy court, where FirstEnergy's inabilities are on global display alongside those of California's Pacific Gas & Electric, the money-losing behemoth that in 2010 killed eight people with badly maintained pipelines, then killed 80 more with badly maintained power lines that incinerated an entire ecosystem, including 12,000 structures.
The uncaring incompetence of this dying industry and its technology of death guarantee that unless these bailouts stop, far worse is yet to come.
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