USSRussia - just constructed and moved a floating nuclear power plant to the arctic town of Pevek. 
What could go Wrong?????
After a String of Nuclear Incidents, Russia Just Launched a Floating Nuclear Power Plant. Is It Safe?
After a String of Nuclear Incidents, Russia Just Launched a Floating Nuclear Power Plant. Is It Safe?
After a String of Nuclear Incidents, Russia Just Launched a Floating Nuclear Power Plant. Is It Safe?
https://time.com/5659769/russia-floating-nuclear-power/
By                        
                         Tara Law                                                                                                                               Updated: August 25, 2019 12:27 AM ET | Originally published: August 23, 2019                   
             
           
                                                 On Friday, an unusual kind of vessel set sail from  the Arctic city of Murmansk, Russia, for a destination in the country’s  far east––a floating nuclear power plant equipped with two reactors.
                 The vessel, dubbed the 
Akademik Lomonosov, is set to travel about 2,900 miles to the Arctic port town of Pevek, which has a population of about 
4,000 people,  where it will be loaded with nuclear fuel and put in place to provide  power to the region, according to Russia’s state nuclear corporation, 
ROSATOM.
                 Russia’s far east may just be the beginning. ROSATOM 
has said  that it’s in talks with potential customers for the floating power  unit, and sees “significant market potential” in Southeast Asia, Latin  America and Africa. The vessel’s reactors can generate 70 megawatts of  electric power and 50 gigacalories an hour of heat energy, according to  ROSATOM––enough to support a city of up to 100,00 people.
                 
Why are people worried about the floating nuclear power plant?
                                                                                                                                                       
                                                         A  view of Akademik Lomonosov, a floating nuclear power unit, its hull  painted at the Atomflot base; being part of a floating nuclear power  station, the vessel belongs to a new class of energy sources based on  Russian nuclear shipbuilding technologies.
                               Lev Fedoseyev—Lev Fedoseyev/TASS
                           
                       
                                                                     
                   
                 
                 However, the vessel has sparked concerns about safety  as a result of Russia’s tarnished nuclear record. Just this summer,  there were two deadly accidents involving Russian nuclear power. On July  1, 14 sailors 
were killed in a fire on the secretive 
Losharik nuclear submarine; then on Aug. 8, five scientists 
were killed when a missile test on Russia’s White Sea failed.
                                                                                                                                   The 
Kursk nuclear submarine sank  on the Barents Sea on Aug. 12, 2000, killing 118 people on board, and  scientists have recent found that an nuclear sub that sank in the  Barents Sea, the 
Komsomolets––which was lost in 1989––is emitting high levels of radiation.
                 Then there’s Chernobyl, the 1986 nuclear power station meltdown in the former Soviet Union that is perhaps the 
biggest and most famous civil nuclear disaster in history. It exposed potentially 
hundreds of thousands of people to radiation.
                 A high-profile HBO series, 
Chernobyl,  has renewed attention on the devastating consequences of a nuclear  accident––and the potential of political machinations that can get in  the way of public safety.
                 Environmental activist group Greenpeace has publicly raised concerns about the Russian nuclear power vessel. In an April 
blog post  titled, “The next Chernobyl may happen in the Arctic,” Konstantin Fomin  of Greenpeace called for the program to be brought to a halt.
                 “This is an example of how new technologies are put  into use without reflection on their safety,” Fomin wrote, adding,  “Greenpeace demands the abandonment of expensive and dangerous atomic  energy.”
                                                                          ROSATOM insists that the vessel is designed to be safe, and will not harm the environment, writing in a 
statement  that the vessel “is designed with a great margin of safety that exceeds  all possible threats and makes nuclear reactors invincible for tsunamis  and other natural disasters.”
                 News in Russia has mainly emphasized that that the  technology is new and innovative, and that it could help to provide  power to remote parts of the country.
                 “This is an absolute breakthrough in small nuclear  power,” said Pavel Ipatov, the director of special projects for a  section of ROSATOM’s nuclear power subsidiary, according to Russian news  service 
Vesti.ru. “Russia is the first country which has gotten this technology. It has very good prospects.”
                 
Is it actually safe?
                 In fact, putting nuclear reactors on ships is not  new. Nuclear reactors have been placed on ships, including to provide  propulsion, for more than 50 years. A World War II-era cargo ship, the 
SS Charles H. Cugle,  was converted into a nuclear power plant in the 1960s. It was used to  provide the U.S. Army with power. The vessel was stationed at the Panama  Canal Zone from 1968 to 1976, 
according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
                                                                                                                                   Robert Bean, an associate professor of nuclear  engineering at Purdue University, tells TIME that there is a different  set of concerns for nuclear reactors at sea than for reactors on land.  Reactors at sea must be protected from storms, and have differing  security concerns because they can be approached by other ships.
                 However, says Bean, the Russians are employing a type  of reactor that has been used for a long time on its ice-breaking  ships––the KLT-40S––and will be similar to the design of reactors the  Russians use in submarines. Bean says that the design is very similar  other reactors used around the world.
                 “I don’t see any reason why it’s less safe,” said  Bean. “At first look you go, whoa, it’s different. And that’s my  point––it’s different, but I don’t think that means it’s less safe.”
                 “It’s always possible that such a thing could happen.  However, every reactor is designed to try to prevent that, the  procedures are all designed to try to prevent that and when it does  happen––for example Fukishima––the very first thing once it was dealt  with, every other reactor in the world looked a their design and said,  what could we change, how would we make sure this never happens to us?”
                                                                                                                                   Steven Biegalski, the Chair of Nuclear and  Radiological Engineering and Medical Physics Program at Georgia  Institute of Technology, tells TIME that whether a nuclear reactor is  kept on a boat or on land, the priority is the same––making sure that  that the core is kept cool if it’s shut down.
                 “The nice thing is that if you submerge the whole  reactor system, including the reactor vessel, under water, it’s going to  get as much cooling as you can possibly want,” Biegalski says. “If you  put the reactor core in an Arctic Ocean off the coast of Russia, would  probably provide enough of a cooling sink that you don’t have to worry  about the reactor concerns.”
                 
What is the biggest concern?
                 However, Biegalski tells TIME that if there’s a  reason to be concerned about the reactor, it’s because Russia hasn’t  been open about its nuclear program and past accidents.
                 “It’s not a new concept, it’s something that has been  done in the past, and if done correctly can be done very safely and  without concerns,” Biegalski says. “I will say that I am concerned  currently about Russia’s transparency.”
                                                                                                                                   While he emphasizes that the design of the reactor is  very different than the Chernobyl reactor, he’s concerned that Russia  didn’t learn a big lesson after the 1986 disaster––that failing to  notify the international community quickly was “irresponsible.”
                 “It may not have allowed local governments and local  organizations to respond properly. It also means you may not get the  help that you could get in a timely manner, because there may be people  standing by to help that might not be there if you don’t ask them to  be,” Biegalski says.
                 He notes that the 
slow release of information after the most recent nuclear accident may be a warning sign.