Sunday, June 15, 2008

What Movie May Have Helped Shape The Energy Policy Of This Nation

The Three Mile Island accident was the most significant in the history of the American
commercial nuclear power generating industry. Living in Pennsylvania at the time of the
accident, I remember it as if it was yesterday. It began on Wednesday,the 28TH of March 1979.It took local, state and federal officals five days to decide what to do with the residents of local communities.

But on March 16th of that same year,just 12 days before this incident at Three Mile Island in
Pennsylvania, a new movie "The China Syndrome" had benn realised.

The China Syndrome is a thriller film which tells the story of a reporter and cameraman who discover safety coverups at a nuclear power plant. It stars Jane Fonda, Jack Lemmon, Michael Douglas, Scott Brady, James Hampton, Peter Donat, Richard Herd, and Wilford Brimley.

Basically the storyline of this movie is about a reporter who finds what appears to be a cover-up
of safety hazards at a nuclear power plant. TV news reporter Kimberly Wells (Fonda) and her
cameraman Richard Adams (Douglas) visit the Ventana nuclear power plant outside Los Angeles as part of a series of news reports on energy production. While viewing the control room from an
observation room, the plant goes through a reactor SCRAM. Shift supervisor Jack Godell (Lemmon) notices what he believes to be an unusual vibration during the SCRAM. Checking their gauges, the control room staff finds that water levels in the reactor core have risen to high levels; they begin opening relief valves in an effort to prevent too much water from damaging the plant.
Eventually Godell takes matter into his own hands and ends up dead after being shot by members of the local swat team after he took over the control room.

The implication that the company's security people are willing to kill to silence a whistleblower echoes allegations made about the death of Karen Silkwood, who died in a 1974 automobile accident while on her way to meet with a reporter to disclose nuclear power safety violations.

In the film, a physicist says that the China Syndrome would render "an area the size of
Pennsylvania" permanently uninhabitable. It resulted, however, in no deaths or injuries to
plant workers or members of the nearby community.

However, following the event, the number of reactors under construction declined every year
from 1980 to 1998. The TMI accident, along with the release of this movie, had a psychological
effect on the nation. Before the accident, 70 percent of the general public approved of nuclear
power. After it, support for nuclear power across the country fell to about 50 percent, where it
remained for decades.

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