The last major extreme solar storm <extreme geomagnetic disturbances
(GMD)> that wiped out the electric grid was 1921.

All Nuclear power plants are dependent on the electrical grid to keep them
from melting down. Only 1 week of stored fuel is kept on site, assuming
the electrical there can be made to work to use it, and without
electricity to get more fuel we have 400 Chernobyl/Fukushima's ALL AT
ONCE. In a week.

The Government and Nuclear industry have no plans beyond 1 weeks fuel, and
they want to build 100 MORE Nuclear facilities now.

All for a few dollars more profit, for an even fewer number of people.

http://truth-out.org/news/item/7301-400-chernobyls-solar-flares-electromagnetic-pulses-and-nuclear-armageddon

Four Hundred Chernobyls: Solar Flares, Electromagnetic Pulses and Nuclear
Armageddon

There are nearly 450 nuclear reactors in the world, with hundreds more
being planned or under construction. There are 104 of these reactors in
the United States and 195 in Europe. Imagine what havoc it would wreak on
our civilization and the planet's ecosystems if we were to suddenly
witness not just one or two nuclear meltdowns, but 400 or more! How likely
is it that our world might experience an event that could ultimately cause
hundreds of reactors to fail and melt down at approximately the same time?
I venture to say that, unless we take significant protective measures,
this apocalyptic scenario is not only possible, but probable.

Consider the ongoing problems caused by three reactor core meltdowns,
explosions and breached containment vessels at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi
facility and the subsequent health and environmental issues. Consider the
millions of innocent victims who have already died or continue to suffer
from horrific radiation-related health problems ("Chernobyl AIDS,"
epidemic cancers, chronic fatigue, etcetera) resulting from the Chernobyl
reactor explosions, fires and fallout. If just two serious nuclear
disasters, spaced 25 years apart, could cause such horrendous
environmental catastrophes, it is hard to imagine how we could ever hope
to recover from hundreds of similar nuclear incidents occurring
simultaneously across the planet. Since more than one-third of all
Americans live within 50 miles of a nuclear power plant, this is a serious
issue that should be given top priority.[1]

In the past 152 years, Earth has been struck by roughly 100 solar storms,
causing significant geomagnetic disturbances (GMD), two of which were
powerful enough to rank as "extreme GMDs." If an extreme GMD of such
magnitude were to occur today, in all likelihood, it would initiate a
chain of events leading to catastrophic failures at the vast majority of
our world's nuclear reactors, similar to but over 100 times worse than,
the disasters at both Chernobyl and Fukushima. When massive solar flares
launch a huge mass of highly charged plasma (a coronal mass ejection, or
CME) directly toward Earth, colliding with our planet's outer atmosphere
and magnetosphere, the result is a significant geomagnetic disturbance.

The last extreme GMD of a magnitude that could collapse much of the US
grid was in May of 1921, long before the advent of modern electronics,
widespread electric power grids, and nuclear power plants. We are, mostly,
blissfully unaware of this threat and unprepared for its consequences. The
good news is that relatively affordable equipment and processes could be
installed to protect critical components in the electric power grid and
its nuclear reactors, thereby averting this
"end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it" scenario. The bad news is that even
though panels of scientists and engineers have studied the problem, and
the bipartisan Congressional electromagnetic pulse (EMP) commission has
presented a list of specific recommendations to Congress, our leaders have
yet to approve and implement any significant preventative measures.

Most of us believe that an emergency like this could never happen, and
that, if it could, our "authorities" would do everything in their power to
prevent such an apocalypse. Unfortunately, the opposite is true. "How
could this happen?" you might ask.

Nuclear Power Plants and the Electric Power Grid

Our current global system of electrical power generation and distribution
("the grid"), upon which our modern lifestyles are utterly dependent, is
extremely vulnerable to severe geomagnetic storms, which tend to strike
our planet on an average of approximately once every 70 to 100 years. We
depend on this grid to maintain food production and distribution,
telecommunications, Internet services, medical services, military defense,
transportation, government, water treatment, sewage and garbage removal,
refrigeration, oil refining, gas pumping and all forms of commerce.

Unfortunately, the world's nuclear power plants, as they are currently
designed, are critically dependent upon maintaining connection to a
functioning electrical grid, for all but relatively short periods of
electrical blackouts, in order to keep their reactor cores continuously
cooled so as to avoid catastrophic reactor core meltdowns and fires in
storage ponds for spent fuel rods.

If an extreme GMD were to cause widespread grid collapse (which it most
certainly will), in as little as one or two hours after each nuclear
reactor facility's backup generators either fail to start, or run out of
fuel, the reactor cores will start to melt down. After a few days without
electricity to run the cooling system pumps, the water bath covering the
spent fuel rods stored in "spent-fuel ponds" will boil away, allowing the
stored fuel rods to melt down and burn [2]. Since the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) currently mandates that only one week's supply of backup
generator fuel needs to be stored at each reactor site, it is likely that,
after we witness the spectacular nighttime celestial light show from the
next extreme GMD, we will have about one week in which to prepare
ourselves for Armageddon.
<snip>

The balance of the article is found here:
http://truth-out.org/news/item/7301-400-chernobyls-solar-flares-electromagnetic-pulses-and-nuclear-armageddon





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