Nuclear Reactor Power Plants Can Violently Explode - A Nuclear Industry Cover-up
Research has proven that nuclear power plants are explosions waiting to detonate, and has shown that the next nuclear power plant explosion is expected before 2039. During the past ten years, this research has further proven that such explosions are preventable. However, an industry-wide cover-up thwarts explosion prevention at nuclear power plants.
Explosions at Three Mile Island (TMI), Fukushima, and other smaller nuclear plant explosions shared a common, preventable cause. Flammable hydrogen exploded when compressed and heated by water that was added too fast during accident conditions. In fact, Fukushima explosions could have been prevented if the U.S government had not lied to us about TMI explosions. That is, the U.S. government downplayed several nuclear reactor system explosions by falsely claiming that fires ignited, rather than admitting that explosions detonated in nuclear reactor systems and a nuclear reactor containment building. Specifically, Fukushima explosions could have been stopped by adding water slower to nuclear reactors if technology had not been stymied by this U.S. cover-up. Today, with new technology in hand, the nuclear power plant explosion cover-up continues.
Government regulators and officials continue to lie to us. The President of the American Nuclear Society refuses to print any new safety information to stop nuclear power plant explosions. The Chairman of the U.S Nuclear Regulatory Commission provided false information when he refused to implement new safety procedures and safety equipment to stop nuclear power plant explosions. Several of the so-called protectors of nuclear safety refuse to respond at all. These organizations include the U.S. Secretary of Energy, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the Nuclear Energy Agency, Japanese nuclear energy regulators, and Japanese nuclear plant operators. This six-year research project has been completely voluntary, since the U.S. Department of Energy decided that nuclear reactor safety does not apply to the U.S. fleet of nearly 100 nuclear power plants. By their continued deceit, these organizations risk the next, approaching nuclear power plant explosions.