Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?












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The question



Has there ever been a military combat going on around an active (running or in outage but not decommissioned) commercial nuclear power plant? Or dangerously near it? If yes, how did the plant and its personnel fare in such situation?



Why I ask



Let's assume for the scope of this question modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate given that the engineering has been done right and there is a whole cohort of very well trained personnel on-site at all times, well rested and with considerable resources on their hands. Things hard to get with an armed conflict like the recent Syrian war raging around. I can't seem to find any reference or a comprehensive article about this, hence this question.



Edit



Alex asks how far is near: as far or near as it gets for the plant operations to be affected. For example, if there was front a thousand kilometers away but all operators were drafted into military forces, the power plat would be affected. On the other hand, the 200 km distance in Ukraine is a point of debate under the question below, since the military action was feared to affect the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant, but in the end it didn't.



T.E.D. mentions nonoperational power plants being swept in conflict. As I'm interested in the operations being affected, nonoperational power plants are not considered.



LangLangC, Mike Scott and others wanted clarification on why only commercial and not military installations. The reasoning is that military installations are built for the purpose of a military conflict (either conducting or preventing it) and thus are built, supplied and run with an armed conflict in mind. Modern civilian nuclear power plants are built to withstand a certain level of a direct attack, but that is not what I ask about. Today we get reports on war in real time, with video and picture in high resolution, over WhatsApp, Facebook and similar, which means even under direct siege the civilian infrastructure works at least to a degree, hospitals are low on personnel and materials but still run, albeit a more basic service. Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care, but requirements for power supply may under circumstances override standard safety requirements. at the same time, it is impossible to run "a third of a nuclear power plant", but it is difficult to predict where the line is. I'm interested in instances of civil/commercial power station operations being affected, whether there at all was such an instance, and what lessons can be learned from it for a civilian not directly involved in operations but wanting an insight and understanding.










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    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – sempaiscuba
    20 hours ago










  • You say "Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care", but I'd invite you to consider large hydroelectric dams as well - the Tabqa dam was at risk recently in the Syrian civil war, and outside of conflict the Banqiao dam collapse killed 171,000 people.
    – llama
    13 hours ago










  • @llama The important difference is that when in a good shape and built with sound engineering, you can shut a hydroelectric power plant pretty quickly and leave it as it is with floodgates open. you can't do that with a nuclear power station, it needs to be manned and carefully operated a long time after you shut it down to prevent environmental damage and direct safety risks to the populace. Off course you can bomb the dam, but that is not what I ask about.
    – Pavel
    46 mins ago


















36














The question



Has there ever been a military combat going on around an active (running or in outage but not decommissioned) commercial nuclear power plant? Or dangerously near it? If yes, how did the plant and its personnel fare in such situation?



Why I ask



Let's assume for the scope of this question modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate given that the engineering has been done right and there is a whole cohort of very well trained personnel on-site at all times, well rested and with considerable resources on their hands. Things hard to get with an armed conflict like the recent Syrian war raging around. I can't seem to find any reference or a comprehensive article about this, hence this question.



Edit



Alex asks how far is near: as far or near as it gets for the plant operations to be affected. For example, if there was front a thousand kilometers away but all operators were drafted into military forces, the power plat would be affected. On the other hand, the 200 km distance in Ukraine is a point of debate under the question below, since the military action was feared to affect the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant, but in the end it didn't.



T.E.D. mentions nonoperational power plants being swept in conflict. As I'm interested in the operations being affected, nonoperational power plants are not considered.



LangLangC, Mike Scott and others wanted clarification on why only commercial and not military installations. The reasoning is that military installations are built for the purpose of a military conflict (either conducting or preventing it) and thus are built, supplied and run with an armed conflict in mind. Modern civilian nuclear power plants are built to withstand a certain level of a direct attack, but that is not what I ask about. Today we get reports on war in real time, with video and picture in high resolution, over WhatsApp, Facebook and similar, which means even under direct siege the civilian infrastructure works at least to a degree, hospitals are low on personnel and materials but still run, albeit a more basic service. Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care, but requirements for power supply may under circumstances override standard safety requirements. at the same time, it is impossible to run "a third of a nuclear power plant", but it is difficult to predict where the line is. I'm interested in instances of civil/commercial power station operations being affected, whether there at all was such an instance, and what lessons can be learned from it for a civilian not directly involved in operations but wanting an insight and understanding.










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – sempaiscuba
    20 hours ago










  • You say "Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care", but I'd invite you to consider large hydroelectric dams as well - the Tabqa dam was at risk recently in the Syrian civil war, and outside of conflict the Banqiao dam collapse killed 171,000 people.
    – llama
    13 hours ago










  • @llama The important difference is that when in a good shape and built with sound engineering, you can shut a hydroelectric power plant pretty quickly and leave it as it is with floodgates open. you can't do that with a nuclear power station, it needs to be manned and carefully operated a long time after you shut it down to prevent environmental damage and direct safety risks to the populace. Off course you can bomb the dam, but that is not what I ask about.
    – Pavel
    46 mins ago
















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36








36


3





The question



Has there ever been a military combat going on around an active (running or in outage but not decommissioned) commercial nuclear power plant? Or dangerously near it? If yes, how did the plant and its personnel fare in such situation?



Why I ask



Let's assume for the scope of this question modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate given that the engineering has been done right and there is a whole cohort of very well trained personnel on-site at all times, well rested and with considerable resources on their hands. Things hard to get with an armed conflict like the recent Syrian war raging around. I can't seem to find any reference or a comprehensive article about this, hence this question.



Edit



Alex asks how far is near: as far or near as it gets for the plant operations to be affected. For example, if there was front a thousand kilometers away but all operators were drafted into military forces, the power plat would be affected. On the other hand, the 200 km distance in Ukraine is a point of debate under the question below, since the military action was feared to affect the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant, but in the end it didn't.



T.E.D. mentions nonoperational power plants being swept in conflict. As I'm interested in the operations being affected, nonoperational power plants are not considered.



LangLangC, Mike Scott and others wanted clarification on why only commercial and not military installations. The reasoning is that military installations are built for the purpose of a military conflict (either conducting or preventing it) and thus are built, supplied and run with an armed conflict in mind. Modern civilian nuclear power plants are built to withstand a certain level of a direct attack, but that is not what I ask about. Today we get reports on war in real time, with video and picture in high resolution, over WhatsApp, Facebook and similar, which means even under direct siege the civilian infrastructure works at least to a degree, hospitals are low on personnel and materials but still run, albeit a more basic service. Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care, but requirements for power supply may under circumstances override standard safety requirements. at the same time, it is impossible to run "a third of a nuclear power plant", but it is difficult to predict where the line is. I'm interested in instances of civil/commercial power station operations being affected, whether there at all was such an instance, and what lessons can be learned from it for a civilian not directly involved in operations but wanting an insight and understanding.










share|improve this question















The question



Has there ever been a military combat going on around an active (running or in outage but not decommissioned) commercial nuclear power plant? Or dangerously near it? If yes, how did the plant and its personnel fare in such situation?



Why I ask



Let's assume for the scope of this question modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate given that the engineering has been done right and there is a whole cohort of very well trained personnel on-site at all times, well rested and with considerable resources on their hands. Things hard to get with an armed conflict like the recent Syrian war raging around. I can't seem to find any reference or a comprehensive article about this, hence this question.



Edit



Alex asks how far is near: as far or near as it gets for the plant operations to be affected. For example, if there was front a thousand kilometers away but all operators were drafted into military forces, the power plat would be affected. On the other hand, the 200 km distance in Ukraine is a point of debate under the question below, since the military action was feared to affect the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant, but in the end it didn't.



T.E.D. mentions nonoperational power plants being swept in conflict. As I'm interested in the operations being affected, nonoperational power plants are not considered.



LangLangC, Mike Scott and others wanted clarification on why only commercial and not military installations. The reasoning is that military installations are built for the purpose of a military conflict (either conducting or preventing it) and thus are built, supplied and run with an armed conflict in mind. Modern civilian nuclear power plants are built to withstand a certain level of a direct attack, but that is not what I ask about. Today we get reports on war in real time, with video and picture in high resolution, over WhatsApp, Facebook and similar, which means even under direct siege the civilian infrastructure works at least to a degree, hospitals are low on personnel and materials but still run, albeit a more basic service. Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care, but requirements for power supply may under circumstances override standard safety requirements. at the same time, it is impossible to run "a third of a nuclear power plant", but it is difficult to predict where the line is. I'm interested in instances of civil/commercial power station operations being affected, whether there at all was such an instance, and what lessons can be learned from it for a civilian not directly involved in operations but wanting an insight and understanding.







war nuclear






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edited yesterday







Pavel

















asked yesterday









PavelPavel

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  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – sempaiscuba
    20 hours ago










  • You say "Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care", but I'd invite you to consider large hydroelectric dams as well - the Tabqa dam was at risk recently in the Syrian civil war, and outside of conflict the Banqiao dam collapse killed 171,000 people.
    – llama
    13 hours ago










  • @llama The important difference is that when in a good shape and built with sound engineering, you can shut a hydroelectric power plant pretty quickly and leave it as it is with floodgates open. you can't do that with a nuclear power station, it needs to be manned and carefully operated a long time after you shut it down to prevent environmental damage and direct safety risks to the populace. Off course you can bomb the dam, but that is not what I ask about.
    – Pavel
    46 mins ago
















  • 1




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – sempaiscuba
    20 hours ago










  • You say "Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care", but I'd invite you to consider large hydroelectric dams as well - the Tabqa dam was at risk recently in the Syrian civil war, and outside of conflict the Banqiao dam collapse killed 171,000 people.
    – llama
    13 hours ago










  • @llama The important difference is that when in a good shape and built with sound engineering, you can shut a hydroelectric power plant pretty quickly and leave it as it is with floodgates open. you can't do that with a nuclear power station, it needs to be manned and carefully operated a long time after you shut it down to prevent environmental damage and direct safety risks to the populace. Off course you can bomb the dam, but that is not what I ask about.
    – Pavel
    46 mins ago










1




1




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– sempaiscuba
20 hours ago




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– sempaiscuba
20 hours ago












You say "Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care", but I'd invite you to consider large hydroelectric dams as well - the Tabqa dam was at risk recently in the Syrian civil war, and outside of conflict the Banqiao dam collapse killed 171,000 people.
– llama
13 hours ago




You say "Nuclear power plants are the greatest risk to populace when run without the required care", but I'd invite you to consider large hydroelectric dams as well - the Tabqa dam was at risk recently in the Syrian civil war, and outside of conflict the Banqiao dam collapse killed 171,000 people.
– llama
13 hours ago












@llama The important difference is that when in a good shape and built with sound engineering, you can shut a hydroelectric power plant pretty quickly and leave it as it is with floodgates open. you can't do that with a nuclear power station, it needs to be manned and carefully operated a long time after you shut it down to prevent environmental damage and direct safety risks to the populace. Off course you can bomb the dam, but that is not what I ask about.
– Pavel
46 mins ago






@llama The important difference is that when in a good shape and built with sound engineering, you can shut a hydroelectric power plant pretty quickly and leave it as it is with floodgates open. you can't do that with a nuclear power station, it needs to be manned and carefully operated a long time after you shut it down to prevent environmental damage and direct safety risks to the populace. Off course you can bomb the dam, but that is not what I ask about.
– Pavel
46 mins ago












5 Answers
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Best example I know of is the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant. Its in Southern Ukraine, which unfortunately put it right within the area that the Russians "separatist rebel forces" wanted to use to carve themselves a corridor of Russian territory through Ukraine to Crimea in 2014.



I don't believe the city itself was directly attacked, but it was at one point only about 200KM from the fighting in Donesk, and some armed separatists did at one point reportedly try to take over the nuclear plant. It was enough of a concern that the residents started calling up and arming militias, setting up checkpoints, and digging trenches to defend the city.



enter image description here



In case you were wondering, this plant does in fact use a different (and safer) reactor design than the Chernobyl plant. However, it has more reactors than a typical nuclear plant (6), which means more chances for something to go wrong in a reactor.






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    We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
    – Chris H
    yesterday










  • This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
    – Pavel
    yesterday










  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






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    You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
    – gerrit
    23 hours ago






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    @gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
    – T.E.D.
    19 hours ago





















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The Ten-Day War, in 1990, was Slovenia's war of independence from Yugoslavia. During this war, at least a few battles took places within 10-20 km of the Krško Nuclear Power Plant, which had been operating since 1983. The map from Wikipedia shows at least three battles in the vicinity; below, I've annotated the map with the Krško plant's location. (Note the scale in the lower right.)



enter image description here



Unfortunately, I have been unable to find any online English-language sources on how (or whether) the Krško plant was affected by the fighting. A 2015 article in Nuclear Engineering International claims that the plant remained operational during the war, but doesn't provide much more info:




The battlefield map shows that engagement took place along the road passing a few kilometres from the plant. About 70 people were killed during the conflict. The station remained in operation and there is no information on the impact of the conflict on the plant safety or equipment, although it was clearly a stressful experience for the plant personnel.




The cited figure of 70 casualties is for the entire war, not just the nearby battles; the Ten-Day War was neither prolonged nor intense.






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    @Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






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    @Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
    – Mark
    yesterday






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    @T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
    – Pavel
    yesterday






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    @Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






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    @Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
    – Luaan
    21 hours ago



















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Dimona Nuclear Research center is not a commercial power plant but it is 50 miles from the border with Gaza, which is a permanent war zone.






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  • I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
    – reirab
    yesterday






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    @reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
    – Michael Seifert
    yesterday








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    I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






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    @reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
    – Alex
    yesterday





















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In 1981, Israel intentionally destroyed an Osiris-class research reactor. Basically, they flew in, bombed it to pieces, then flew away. While this was a just a sneak attack and not a part of protracted hostilities, it most certainly was an act of war.



Please read more about this on wikipedia.






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    It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






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    It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
    – reirab
    yesterday






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    @reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






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    @reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






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    @TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
    – reirab
    yesterday





















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Q Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?




Yes, quite a lot. And even one would have been one too many.



Directly attacked or "affected" active plants were found in Israel, Ukraine and Yugoslavia. Proving in every instance that supporting atomic power is an untenable position.





It seems irrelevant to focus on "commercial" and "active" reactors, as the real criteria for damage are more likely "contains radioactive material to be spread when hit". That would include pre-operational and post-operational reactors. Whether they are commercial or strictly military or research doesn't factor in case of catastrophe facilitated by a war.



We might have to define "war zone" further: if the US wages "war on terror", and considered itself under attack of the homeland (ie a war zone in 2001) – would that make all its nuclear installations count? And all those in or near the countries bombed or invaded?



In centuries gone by a "war zone" might have been precisely declared. Since we now seem to prefer asymmetrical warfare, this definition is no longer that useful. Mere proximity or distance to infantry fighting on the ground was no safe haven for for example Serbian, Afghan, or Yemeni people.



If not, we might still look at the map of atomic insanity to get a stricter measurement of reactors at risk of being targets:




enter image description here
via Carbon Brief (https://www.carbonbrief.org/mapped-the-worlds-nuclear-power-plants)




And correlate the dates of construction and "connectedness to the grid" with the list armed conflicts




List of wars 1945–1989
List of wars 1990–2002
List of wars 2003–present




This is a bit misleading, as the map above is not listing secret or formerly secret armament reactors, which all have to be counted in. Equally, "research reactors" can be tiny or really unnecessarily large – for real research. But it appears that regardless of size and therefore danger, facilities simply declared "for research" (like Egypt's, Libya's or North Korea's?) are just not listed.



For example the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center (aka "Dimona") was used by Israel to enrich enough fission material to construct bombs. This went online between 1962–1964 and obviously – that strip of land is awfully small – would be a quite vulnaerable target at least as early during 1973 Arab–Israeli War (Yom Kippur).



Since then it was repeatedly attacked. Iran is supposedly targeting it constantly, but Iraq actually launched rockets in 1991 at it and Hamas does so now. (Although with low accuracy, for now.)



The response to that was that Israel first stepped up air-defenses, a few times, and by now is said to have shut down the reactor. How the personnel reacted in all of those incidents is typically not reported. Since the plant wasn't really hit, they may have never learned of the danger when it was imminent, only later.



The same goes for India and Pakistan, at the latest in 1999, as India detonated "Smiling Buddha" in 1974 and Pakistan had equally enough installations to declare itself on-par with "Chagai-I" in 1998.
Supporters of nuclear power are cynical enough to discount the plants as endangered, as both countries have refrained from all-out-war and now have mobile bombs as well. That is of course wrongheadedly downplaying the reach of weapons available to both sides.



As the Korean War is not offiically really "over", just being an armistice, one might just look at the surroundings of the peninsula:




enter image description here




This is further complicated as internal struggles and civil wars could very easily turn a bit ugly if the plants get targeted.



As is the case with the conflicts in Ukraine, which make also some indisputably Russian reactors "near" a zone of conflict. The Washington posts counts 15 Ukrainian reactors alone in this war zone.




“You need to make sure you have enough security that so bad guys don’t do what the tsunami did to Fukushima — cutting off the power and disabling the backup power to start a meltdown,” Bunn says. Most nuclear plants have so much security that terrorists look elsewhere, “at a dam or a chemical plant instead,” he says. (Nukes of Hazard)




This affected the operational situation in Ukrainian plants:




The situation in Ukraine is very a serious concern. The country has 15 reactors operating at four nuclear power plants. Ukraine is proud of its nuclear capacity, but its new circumstances make then a cause for anxiety.
Three stations (South Ukraine, Rovno, and Khmelnitsky) are situated in the western side of the country and are not part of this discussion. The largest plant in Europe, Zaporozhe with its six 1000 MW VVER-1000 reactors, lies about 200 km from the combat zone.
Thermal energy supplies and networks in Ukraine have suffered during the war. Five large thermal power plants near Donbass now operate at reduced output and are periodically in outage due to lack of coal. A hit on the unit transformer at the Lugansk power plant resulted in a blaze which put the plant out of action, blacking out a large region. Towns and villages with a total population of about 700,000 had no power, including the major industrial centre of Lugansk.

Easily accessible power grids have had frequent damage. Power lines, transformers and substations have all been hit by shelling and there have been many cases of intentional damage to electrical infrastructure. The tragic deaths of grid personnel who were shot while inspecting and repairing equipment is a black page in the history of the Ukrainian energy industry. However, during the conflict station staff have continued to work despite the threat to life and limb and through these terrible circumstances thermal energy plants have continued to generate electricity.
Kovynev, 2015




In the age of intercontinental missiles one has to count really every single last one of nuclear reactors near a potential war zone.



In recent years, we have added rhetoric of "heroic deeds being worthwhile", from quite a few sides. The means not only big rockets or errant shells are a threat. As those plants are all at least possibly quite dirty bombs in fixed positions, a small truck driven by one mad man or madam was and still is sufficient. Motivations for such an action are handed out by the dozens nowadays.



In fact some mad men are really convinced that connecting such things to "the grid" not only means simple powerlines, but electronic communications as well. Things like Stuxnet make the Vulnerability of nuclear plants to attack just so much easier, not even requiring any physical presence at all.




Military attacks



Nuclear reactors become preferred targets during military conflict and, over the past three decades, have been repeatedly attacked during military air strikes, occupations, invasions and campaigns:




  • On 25 March 1973, before its completion, the Atucha I Nuclear Power Plant in Argentina was temporarily captured by the People's Revolutionary Army who stole a FMK-3 submachine gun and three .45 caliber handguns. When they retired they had a confrontation with the police, injuring two police officers.

  • In September 1980, Iran bombed the Al Tuwaitha nuclear complex in Iraq, in Operation Scorch Sword, which was a surprise IRIAF (Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force) airstrike carried out on 30 September 1980, that damaged an almost complete nuclear reactor 17 km south-east of Baghdad, Iraq.

  • In June 1981, Operation Opera was an Israeli air strike that completely destroyed Iraq's Osirak nuclear research facility.

  • Between 1984 and 1987, Iraq bombed Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant six times.

  • In 1991, the U.S. bombed three nuclear reactors and an enrichment pilot facility in Iraq.

  • In 1991, Iraq launched Scud missiles at Israel's Dimona nuclear power plant.

  • In September 2007, Israel bombed a Syrian reactor under construction.




Given the expert opinion of Alexey Kovynev in Nuclear plants in war zones (2015), he also lists:





  • Yugoslavia, ten-day war

  • The Iran-Iraq war

  • Bombing of nuclear reactors in Iraq

  • Destruction of reactor in Syria

  • Indo-Pakistani conflicts

  • Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

  • Ukrainian conflict






If already accused of "writing an essay", I can do that as well then:




Q … modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate…




is pro-nuke-energy misconception. "Nuclear safety" can be summarised elegantly with just a few words: there is none.






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    Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
    – sempaiscuba
    yesterday






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    Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 7




    the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
    – chrylis
    yesterday






  • 7




    Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
    – axsvl77
    yesterday






  • 18




    This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
    – hobbs
    yesterday











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5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes








5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









40














Best example I know of is the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant. Its in Southern Ukraine, which unfortunately put it right within the area that the Russians "separatist rebel forces" wanted to use to carve themselves a corridor of Russian territory through Ukraine to Crimea in 2014.



I don't believe the city itself was directly attacked, but it was at one point only about 200KM from the fighting in Donesk, and some armed separatists did at one point reportedly try to take over the nuclear plant. It was enough of a concern that the residents started calling up and arming militias, setting up checkpoints, and digging trenches to defend the city.



enter image description here



In case you were wondering, this plant does in fact use a different (and safer) reactor design than the Chernobyl plant. However, it has more reactors than a typical nuclear plant (6), which means more chances for something to go wrong in a reactor.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4




    We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
    – Chris H
    yesterday










  • This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
    – Pavel
    yesterday










  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 1




    You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
    – gerrit
    23 hours ago






  • 1




    @gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
    – T.E.D.
    19 hours ago


















40














Best example I know of is the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant. Its in Southern Ukraine, which unfortunately put it right within the area that the Russians "separatist rebel forces" wanted to use to carve themselves a corridor of Russian territory through Ukraine to Crimea in 2014.



I don't believe the city itself was directly attacked, but it was at one point only about 200KM from the fighting in Donesk, and some armed separatists did at one point reportedly try to take over the nuclear plant. It was enough of a concern that the residents started calling up and arming militias, setting up checkpoints, and digging trenches to defend the city.



enter image description here



In case you were wondering, this plant does in fact use a different (and safer) reactor design than the Chernobyl plant. However, it has more reactors than a typical nuclear plant (6), which means more chances for something to go wrong in a reactor.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4




    We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
    – Chris H
    yesterday










  • This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
    – Pavel
    yesterday










  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 1




    You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
    – gerrit
    23 hours ago






  • 1




    @gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
    – T.E.D.
    19 hours ago
















40












40








40






Best example I know of is the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant. Its in Southern Ukraine, which unfortunately put it right within the area that the Russians "separatist rebel forces" wanted to use to carve themselves a corridor of Russian territory through Ukraine to Crimea in 2014.



I don't believe the city itself was directly attacked, but it was at one point only about 200KM from the fighting in Donesk, and some armed separatists did at one point reportedly try to take over the nuclear plant. It was enough of a concern that the residents started calling up and arming militias, setting up checkpoints, and digging trenches to defend the city.



enter image description here



In case you were wondering, this plant does in fact use a different (and safer) reactor design than the Chernobyl plant. However, it has more reactors than a typical nuclear plant (6), which means more chances for something to go wrong in a reactor.






share|improve this answer














Best example I know of is the Zhaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant. Its in Southern Ukraine, which unfortunately put it right within the area that the Russians "separatist rebel forces" wanted to use to carve themselves a corridor of Russian territory through Ukraine to Crimea in 2014.



I don't believe the city itself was directly attacked, but it was at one point only about 200KM from the fighting in Donesk, and some armed separatists did at one point reportedly try to take over the nuclear plant. It was enough of a concern that the residents started calling up and arming militias, setting up checkpoints, and digging trenches to defend the city.



enter image description here



In case you were wondering, this plant does in fact use a different (and safer) reactor design than the Chernobyl plant. However, it has more reactors than a typical nuclear plant (6), which means more chances for something to go wrong in a reactor.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









T.E.D.T.E.D.

73.8k10162300




73.8k10162300








  • 4




    We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
    – Chris H
    yesterday










  • This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
    – Pavel
    yesterday










  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 1




    You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
    – gerrit
    23 hours ago






  • 1




    @gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
    – T.E.D.
    19 hours ago
















  • 4




    We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
    – Chris H
    yesterday










  • This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
    – Pavel
    yesterday










  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 1




    You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
    – gerrit
    23 hours ago






  • 1




    @gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
    – T.E.D.
    19 hours ago










4




4




We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
– Chris H
yesterday




We differ in our interpretation of 200km but this probably is the best example. My reading of the armed group that approached the city near the plant was something closer to civil disorder than warfare, but sources in English aren't clear.
– Chris H
yesterday












This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
– Pavel
yesterday




This seems like the answer to me, if nothing worse comes up. The comments are quite informative as well.
– Pavel
yesterday












Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– T.E.D.
yesterday




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– T.E.D.
yesterday




1




1




You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
– gerrit
23 hours ago




You could add a source for the photo (I suspect you are not the author).
– gerrit
23 hours ago




1




1




@gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
– T.E.D.
19 hours ago






@gerrit - I did add the source. Its the hyperlink in the sentence right on top of the photo. Click it, you will see the photo (and the caption tanderson reported), and a whole bunch of supporting textual material.
– T.E.D.
19 hours ago













37














The Ten-Day War, in 1990, was Slovenia's war of independence from Yugoslavia. During this war, at least a few battles took places within 10-20 km of the Krško Nuclear Power Plant, which had been operating since 1983. The map from Wikipedia shows at least three battles in the vicinity; below, I've annotated the map with the Krško plant's location. (Note the scale in the lower right.)



enter image description here



Unfortunately, I have been unable to find any online English-language sources on how (or whether) the Krško plant was affected by the fighting. A 2015 article in Nuclear Engineering International claims that the plant remained operational during the war, but doesn't provide much more info:




The battlefield map shows that engagement took place along the road passing a few kilometres from the plant. About 70 people were killed during the conflict. The station remained in operation and there is no information on the impact of the conflict on the plant safety or equipment, although it was clearly a stressful experience for the plant personnel.




The cited figure of 70 casualties is for the entire war, not just the nearby battles; the Ten-Day War was neither prolonged nor intense.






share|improve this answer



















  • 6




    @Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
    – Mark
    yesterday






  • 1




    @T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 1




    @Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
    – Luaan
    21 hours ago
















37














The Ten-Day War, in 1990, was Slovenia's war of independence from Yugoslavia. During this war, at least a few battles took places within 10-20 km of the Krško Nuclear Power Plant, which had been operating since 1983. The map from Wikipedia shows at least three battles in the vicinity; below, I've annotated the map with the Krško plant's location. (Note the scale in the lower right.)



enter image description here



Unfortunately, I have been unable to find any online English-language sources on how (or whether) the Krško plant was affected by the fighting. A 2015 article in Nuclear Engineering International claims that the plant remained operational during the war, but doesn't provide much more info:




The battlefield map shows that engagement took place along the road passing a few kilometres from the plant. About 70 people were killed during the conflict. The station remained in operation and there is no information on the impact of the conflict on the plant safety or equipment, although it was clearly a stressful experience for the plant personnel.




The cited figure of 70 casualties is for the entire war, not just the nearby battles; the Ten-Day War was neither prolonged nor intense.






share|improve this answer



















  • 6




    @Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
    – Mark
    yesterday






  • 1




    @T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 1




    @Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
    – Luaan
    21 hours ago














37












37








37






The Ten-Day War, in 1990, was Slovenia's war of independence from Yugoslavia. During this war, at least a few battles took places within 10-20 km of the Krško Nuclear Power Plant, which had been operating since 1983. The map from Wikipedia shows at least three battles in the vicinity; below, I've annotated the map with the Krško plant's location. (Note the scale in the lower right.)



enter image description here



Unfortunately, I have been unable to find any online English-language sources on how (or whether) the Krško plant was affected by the fighting. A 2015 article in Nuclear Engineering International claims that the plant remained operational during the war, but doesn't provide much more info:




The battlefield map shows that engagement took place along the road passing a few kilometres from the plant. About 70 people were killed during the conflict. The station remained in operation and there is no information on the impact of the conflict on the plant safety or equipment, although it was clearly a stressful experience for the plant personnel.




The cited figure of 70 casualties is for the entire war, not just the nearby battles; the Ten-Day War was neither prolonged nor intense.






share|improve this answer














The Ten-Day War, in 1990, was Slovenia's war of independence from Yugoslavia. During this war, at least a few battles took places within 10-20 km of the Krško Nuclear Power Plant, which had been operating since 1983. The map from Wikipedia shows at least three battles in the vicinity; below, I've annotated the map with the Krško plant's location. (Note the scale in the lower right.)



enter image description here



Unfortunately, I have been unable to find any online English-language sources on how (or whether) the Krško plant was affected by the fighting. A 2015 article in Nuclear Engineering International claims that the plant remained operational during the war, but doesn't provide much more info:




The battlefield map shows that engagement took place along the road passing a few kilometres from the plant. About 70 people were killed during the conflict. The station remained in operation and there is no information on the impact of the conflict on the plant safety or equipment, although it was clearly a stressful experience for the plant personnel.




The cited figure of 70 casualties is for the entire war, not just the nearby battles; the Ten-Day War was neither prolonged nor intense.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









Michael SeifertMichael Seifert

1,278617




1,278617








  • 6




    @Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
    – Mark
    yesterday






  • 1




    @T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 1




    @Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
    – Luaan
    21 hours ago














  • 6




    @Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
    – T.E.D.
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
    – Mark
    yesterday






  • 1




    @T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 1




    @Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 4




    @Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
    – Luaan
    21 hours ago








6




6




@Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
– T.E.D.
yesterday




@Pavel - You likely know more than I about this, but I understand a nuclear reactor isn't something you can go unplug from the wall if there's trouble.
– T.E.D.
yesterday




4




4




@Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
– Mark
yesterday




@Pavel, it takes a while to shut a nuclear reactor down: even after you've inserted the control rods to stop the primary reaction, you still need to keep the cooling pumps running for a week or two until the secondary decay heat dies down. Starting a reactor back up is also a slow process.
– Mark
yesterday




1




1




@T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
– Pavel
yesterday




@T.E.D. You don’t unplug it from the wall, but you can transition the high power chain reaction to something more controllable (low power state, chain reaction shut down etc) which would be, for me, a logical thing to do. At least in Europe nuclear reactors are transitioned to low power for much less scary reasons than an armed conflict virtually at the gates (for example out-of-spec vibration on the turbine, which doesn’t affect niclear safety, although it is overall bad for business).
– Pavel
yesterday




1




1




@Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
– Pavel
yesterday




@Mark of course it does. But look at the operationsl history: commissioned in 1983, still strugling for long term operational license in 1989, and being transitioned (to low reactor output or full outage) 70 times druring that period for various safety and operational reasons. The conflict took place in 1990. It is much better to defend or hand over a nuclear power plant in low power or in outage - business and integrity of the machine still at risk, but at much lower one than at sustained full thermal output of the reactor.
– Pavel
yesterday




4




4




@Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
– Luaan
21 hours ago




@Pavel I suspect part of the reason is that nobody really wants to damage the nuclear plant in a firefight. Conventional warfare is about acquiring territory and/or capital, and destroying the very things you're fighting for isn't really good strategy; and that's even before considering international political fallout. If you're the separatists responsible for destroying an NPP, UN probably isn't going to be very nice to you about your claims. Accidental damage is relatively unlikely, since the buildings are usually highly resilient. Fanatics like ISIS are a much bigger threat, of course.
– Luaan
21 hours ago











14














Dimona Nuclear Research center is not a commercial power plant but it is 50 miles from the border with Gaza, which is a permanent war zone.






share|improve this answer





















  • I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    @reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
    – Michael Seifert
    yesterday








  • 2




    I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
    – Alex
    yesterday


















14














Dimona Nuclear Research center is not a commercial power plant but it is 50 miles from the border with Gaza, which is a permanent war zone.






share|improve this answer





















  • I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    @reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
    – Michael Seifert
    yesterday








  • 2




    I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
    – Alex
    yesterday
















14












14








14






Dimona Nuclear Research center is not a commercial power plant but it is 50 miles from the border with Gaza, which is a permanent war zone.






share|improve this answer












Dimona Nuclear Research center is not a commercial power plant but it is 50 miles from the border with Gaza, which is a permanent war zone.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered yesterday









AlexAlex

26.6k151100




26.6k151100












  • I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    @reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
    – Michael Seifert
    yesterday








  • 2




    I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
    – Alex
    yesterday




















  • I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    @reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
    – Michael Seifert
    yesterday








  • 2




    I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
    – Alex
    yesterday


















I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
– reirab
yesterday




I don't think I'd personally call Dimona a 'war zone.' Be'ersheva is half that distance to Gaza and I wouldn't call it a 'war zone,' either, even if the occasional Hamas terrorist launches a rocket in that direction. That said, perhaps the situation was different during one of the many wars in the region. It would be interesting to see maps of how close hostile forces actually got to Dimona during, for example, the Yom Kippur War.
– reirab
yesterday




2




2




@reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
– Michael Seifert
yesterday






@reirab: Two MiGs (either Soviet or Egyptian, sources vary) flew over the facility shortly before the Six-Day War, but I suspect the OP is more interested in ground forces.
– Michael Seifert
yesterday






2




2




I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
– Pavel
yesterday




I don't care that much about the type of military force involved, but I'm mainly interested in civilian nuclear operation. Dimona is, IIRC highly classified operation with a mainly military purpose. I've edited the question to address the recurring question about why I'm not interested in primarily military nuclear operations.
– Pavel
yesterday




3




3




@reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
– Alex
yesterday






@reirab: I did not claim that Dimona in in the war zone. And in the question it was not defined what "near" means. Anyway, it is much closer to the war Zone than the Ukrainian station in Zaporizhzhia.
– Alex
yesterday













12














In 1981, Israel intentionally destroyed an Osiris-class research reactor. Basically, they flew in, bombed it to pieces, then flew away. While this was a just a sneak attack and not a part of protracted hostilities, it most certainly was an act of war.



Please read more about this on wikipedia.






share|improve this answer

















  • 9




    It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 13




    It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 5




    @reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 3




    @TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
    – reirab
    yesterday


















12














In 1981, Israel intentionally destroyed an Osiris-class research reactor. Basically, they flew in, bombed it to pieces, then flew away. While this was a just a sneak attack and not a part of protracted hostilities, it most certainly was an act of war.



Please read more about this on wikipedia.






share|improve this answer

















  • 9




    It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 13




    It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 5




    @reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 3




    @TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
    – reirab
    yesterday
















12












12








12






In 1981, Israel intentionally destroyed an Osiris-class research reactor. Basically, they flew in, bombed it to pieces, then flew away. While this was a just a sneak attack and not a part of protracted hostilities, it most certainly was an act of war.



Please read more about this on wikipedia.






share|improve this answer












In 1981, Israel intentionally destroyed an Osiris-class research reactor. Basically, they flew in, bombed it to pieces, then flew away. While this was a just a sneak attack and not a part of protracted hostilities, it most certainly was an act of war.



Please read more about this on wikipedia.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered yesterday









axsvl77axsvl77

4,56922055




4,56922055








  • 9




    It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 13




    It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 5




    @reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 3




    @TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
    – reirab
    yesterday
















  • 9




    It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 13




    It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 3




    @reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 5




    @reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
    – TemporalWolf
    yesterday






  • 3




    @TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
    – reirab
    yesterday










9




9




It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
– Pavel
yesterday




It was indeed a military action, but the facility was still under construction and there are valid reasons to believe it was not even built as civilian power generation station. I'm interested in civilian nuclear power operation being affected by conflict.
– Pavel
yesterday




13




13




It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
– reirab
yesterday




It was definitely not a civilian (or any sort of) power generation station. You don't need 93% enriched Uranium for power generation. The claimed purpose of the reactor was for research, not nuclear power.
– reirab
yesterday




3




3




@reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
– TemporalWolf
yesterday




@reirab "Baghdad reiterated a previous statement that the French atomic reactor was designed for research and for the eventual production of electricity.". Just because HEU isn't generally used to generate power doesn't mean it's incapable of doing so: case in point US naval reactors(page 26): "use uranium enriched to at least 93%... a U.S. submarine reactor core contains an average of 200 kg of U-235 enriched to 97.3%"
– TemporalWolf
yesterday




5




5




@reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
– TemporalWolf
yesterday




@reirab There is a whole class of reactors, fast neutron reactors which use HEU, up to and including weapons-grade. There are real-life, currently running civilian power stations running on weapons-grade plutonium of this design. The design is also advantageous from a nuclear waste perspective. The claim that there "[t]he only valid reasons..." is not accurate. Although I still think this answer stands, even if the OP has since clarified to exclude it.
– TemporalWolf
yesterday




3




3




@TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
– reirab
yesterday






@TemporalWolf That's an experimental reactor. OP's original question asked only about "commercial nuclear power plants." The question itself hasn't changed at all. The edit just added an explanation for why OP wasn't asking about military facilities or other non-civilian-power-plant reactors, since people kept posting answers about other stuff.
– reirab
yesterday













-3















Q Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?




Yes, quite a lot. And even one would have been one too many.



Directly attacked or "affected" active plants were found in Israel, Ukraine and Yugoslavia. Proving in every instance that supporting atomic power is an untenable position.





It seems irrelevant to focus on "commercial" and "active" reactors, as the real criteria for damage are more likely "contains radioactive material to be spread when hit". That would include pre-operational and post-operational reactors. Whether they are commercial or strictly military or research doesn't factor in case of catastrophe facilitated by a war.



We might have to define "war zone" further: if the US wages "war on terror", and considered itself under attack of the homeland (ie a war zone in 2001) – would that make all its nuclear installations count? And all those in or near the countries bombed or invaded?



In centuries gone by a "war zone" might have been precisely declared. Since we now seem to prefer asymmetrical warfare, this definition is no longer that useful. Mere proximity or distance to infantry fighting on the ground was no safe haven for for example Serbian, Afghan, or Yemeni people.



If not, we might still look at the map of atomic insanity to get a stricter measurement of reactors at risk of being targets:




enter image description here
via Carbon Brief (https://www.carbonbrief.org/mapped-the-worlds-nuclear-power-plants)




And correlate the dates of construction and "connectedness to the grid" with the list armed conflicts




List of wars 1945–1989
List of wars 1990–2002
List of wars 2003–present




This is a bit misleading, as the map above is not listing secret or formerly secret armament reactors, which all have to be counted in. Equally, "research reactors" can be tiny or really unnecessarily large – for real research. But it appears that regardless of size and therefore danger, facilities simply declared "for research" (like Egypt's, Libya's or North Korea's?) are just not listed.



For example the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center (aka "Dimona") was used by Israel to enrich enough fission material to construct bombs. This went online between 1962–1964 and obviously – that strip of land is awfully small – would be a quite vulnaerable target at least as early during 1973 Arab–Israeli War (Yom Kippur).



Since then it was repeatedly attacked. Iran is supposedly targeting it constantly, but Iraq actually launched rockets in 1991 at it and Hamas does so now. (Although with low accuracy, for now.)



The response to that was that Israel first stepped up air-defenses, a few times, and by now is said to have shut down the reactor. How the personnel reacted in all of those incidents is typically not reported. Since the plant wasn't really hit, they may have never learned of the danger when it was imminent, only later.



The same goes for India and Pakistan, at the latest in 1999, as India detonated "Smiling Buddha" in 1974 and Pakistan had equally enough installations to declare itself on-par with "Chagai-I" in 1998.
Supporters of nuclear power are cynical enough to discount the plants as endangered, as both countries have refrained from all-out-war and now have mobile bombs as well. That is of course wrongheadedly downplaying the reach of weapons available to both sides.



As the Korean War is not offiically really "over", just being an armistice, one might just look at the surroundings of the peninsula:




enter image description here




This is further complicated as internal struggles and civil wars could very easily turn a bit ugly if the plants get targeted.



As is the case with the conflicts in Ukraine, which make also some indisputably Russian reactors "near" a zone of conflict. The Washington posts counts 15 Ukrainian reactors alone in this war zone.




“You need to make sure you have enough security that so bad guys don’t do what the tsunami did to Fukushima — cutting off the power and disabling the backup power to start a meltdown,” Bunn says. Most nuclear plants have so much security that terrorists look elsewhere, “at a dam or a chemical plant instead,” he says. (Nukes of Hazard)




This affected the operational situation in Ukrainian plants:




The situation in Ukraine is very a serious concern. The country has 15 reactors operating at four nuclear power plants. Ukraine is proud of its nuclear capacity, but its new circumstances make then a cause for anxiety.
Three stations (South Ukraine, Rovno, and Khmelnitsky) are situated in the western side of the country and are not part of this discussion. The largest plant in Europe, Zaporozhe with its six 1000 MW VVER-1000 reactors, lies about 200 km from the combat zone.
Thermal energy supplies and networks in Ukraine have suffered during the war. Five large thermal power plants near Donbass now operate at reduced output and are periodically in outage due to lack of coal. A hit on the unit transformer at the Lugansk power plant resulted in a blaze which put the plant out of action, blacking out a large region. Towns and villages with a total population of about 700,000 had no power, including the major industrial centre of Lugansk.

Easily accessible power grids have had frequent damage. Power lines, transformers and substations have all been hit by shelling and there have been many cases of intentional damage to electrical infrastructure. The tragic deaths of grid personnel who were shot while inspecting and repairing equipment is a black page in the history of the Ukrainian energy industry. However, during the conflict station staff have continued to work despite the threat to life and limb and through these terrible circumstances thermal energy plants have continued to generate electricity.
Kovynev, 2015




In the age of intercontinental missiles one has to count really every single last one of nuclear reactors near a potential war zone.



In recent years, we have added rhetoric of "heroic deeds being worthwhile", from quite a few sides. The means not only big rockets or errant shells are a threat. As those plants are all at least possibly quite dirty bombs in fixed positions, a small truck driven by one mad man or madam was and still is sufficient. Motivations for such an action are handed out by the dozens nowadays.



In fact some mad men are really convinced that connecting such things to "the grid" not only means simple powerlines, but electronic communications as well. Things like Stuxnet make the Vulnerability of nuclear plants to attack just so much easier, not even requiring any physical presence at all.




Military attacks



Nuclear reactors become preferred targets during military conflict and, over the past three decades, have been repeatedly attacked during military air strikes, occupations, invasions and campaigns:




  • On 25 March 1973, before its completion, the Atucha I Nuclear Power Plant in Argentina was temporarily captured by the People's Revolutionary Army who stole a FMK-3 submachine gun and three .45 caliber handguns. When they retired they had a confrontation with the police, injuring two police officers.

  • In September 1980, Iran bombed the Al Tuwaitha nuclear complex in Iraq, in Operation Scorch Sword, which was a surprise IRIAF (Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force) airstrike carried out on 30 September 1980, that damaged an almost complete nuclear reactor 17 km south-east of Baghdad, Iraq.

  • In June 1981, Operation Opera was an Israeli air strike that completely destroyed Iraq's Osirak nuclear research facility.

  • Between 1984 and 1987, Iraq bombed Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant six times.

  • In 1991, the U.S. bombed three nuclear reactors and an enrichment pilot facility in Iraq.

  • In 1991, Iraq launched Scud missiles at Israel's Dimona nuclear power plant.

  • In September 2007, Israel bombed a Syrian reactor under construction.




Given the expert opinion of Alexey Kovynev in Nuclear plants in war zones (2015), he also lists:





  • Yugoslavia, ten-day war

  • The Iran-Iraq war

  • Bombing of nuclear reactors in Iraq

  • Destruction of reactor in Syria

  • Indo-Pakistani conflicts

  • Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

  • Ukrainian conflict






If already accused of "writing an essay", I can do that as well then:




Q … modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate…




is pro-nuke-energy misconception. "Nuclear safety" can be summarised elegantly with just a few words: there is none.






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
    – sempaiscuba
    yesterday






  • 17




    Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 7




    the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
    – chrylis
    yesterday






  • 7




    Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
    – axsvl77
    yesterday






  • 18




    This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
    – hobbs
    yesterday
















-3















Q Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?




Yes, quite a lot. And even one would have been one too many.



Directly attacked or "affected" active plants were found in Israel, Ukraine and Yugoslavia. Proving in every instance that supporting atomic power is an untenable position.





It seems irrelevant to focus on "commercial" and "active" reactors, as the real criteria for damage are more likely "contains radioactive material to be spread when hit". That would include pre-operational and post-operational reactors. Whether they are commercial or strictly military or research doesn't factor in case of catastrophe facilitated by a war.



We might have to define "war zone" further: if the US wages "war on terror", and considered itself under attack of the homeland (ie a war zone in 2001) – would that make all its nuclear installations count? And all those in or near the countries bombed or invaded?



In centuries gone by a "war zone" might have been precisely declared. Since we now seem to prefer asymmetrical warfare, this definition is no longer that useful. Mere proximity or distance to infantry fighting on the ground was no safe haven for for example Serbian, Afghan, or Yemeni people.



If not, we might still look at the map of atomic insanity to get a stricter measurement of reactors at risk of being targets:




enter image description here
via Carbon Brief (https://www.carbonbrief.org/mapped-the-worlds-nuclear-power-plants)




And correlate the dates of construction and "connectedness to the grid" with the list armed conflicts




List of wars 1945–1989
List of wars 1990–2002
List of wars 2003–present




This is a bit misleading, as the map above is not listing secret or formerly secret armament reactors, which all have to be counted in. Equally, "research reactors" can be tiny or really unnecessarily large – for real research. But it appears that regardless of size and therefore danger, facilities simply declared "for research" (like Egypt's, Libya's or North Korea's?) are just not listed.



For example the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center (aka "Dimona") was used by Israel to enrich enough fission material to construct bombs. This went online between 1962–1964 and obviously – that strip of land is awfully small – would be a quite vulnaerable target at least as early during 1973 Arab–Israeli War (Yom Kippur).



Since then it was repeatedly attacked. Iran is supposedly targeting it constantly, but Iraq actually launched rockets in 1991 at it and Hamas does so now. (Although with low accuracy, for now.)



The response to that was that Israel first stepped up air-defenses, a few times, and by now is said to have shut down the reactor. How the personnel reacted in all of those incidents is typically not reported. Since the plant wasn't really hit, they may have never learned of the danger when it was imminent, only later.



The same goes for India and Pakistan, at the latest in 1999, as India detonated "Smiling Buddha" in 1974 and Pakistan had equally enough installations to declare itself on-par with "Chagai-I" in 1998.
Supporters of nuclear power are cynical enough to discount the plants as endangered, as both countries have refrained from all-out-war and now have mobile bombs as well. That is of course wrongheadedly downplaying the reach of weapons available to both sides.



As the Korean War is not offiically really "over", just being an armistice, one might just look at the surroundings of the peninsula:




enter image description here




This is further complicated as internal struggles and civil wars could very easily turn a bit ugly if the plants get targeted.



As is the case with the conflicts in Ukraine, which make also some indisputably Russian reactors "near" a zone of conflict. The Washington posts counts 15 Ukrainian reactors alone in this war zone.




“You need to make sure you have enough security that so bad guys don’t do what the tsunami did to Fukushima — cutting off the power and disabling the backup power to start a meltdown,” Bunn says. Most nuclear plants have so much security that terrorists look elsewhere, “at a dam or a chemical plant instead,” he says. (Nukes of Hazard)




This affected the operational situation in Ukrainian plants:




The situation in Ukraine is very a serious concern. The country has 15 reactors operating at four nuclear power plants. Ukraine is proud of its nuclear capacity, but its new circumstances make then a cause for anxiety.
Three stations (South Ukraine, Rovno, and Khmelnitsky) are situated in the western side of the country and are not part of this discussion. The largest plant in Europe, Zaporozhe with its six 1000 MW VVER-1000 reactors, lies about 200 km from the combat zone.
Thermal energy supplies and networks in Ukraine have suffered during the war. Five large thermal power plants near Donbass now operate at reduced output and are periodically in outage due to lack of coal. A hit on the unit transformer at the Lugansk power plant resulted in a blaze which put the plant out of action, blacking out a large region. Towns and villages with a total population of about 700,000 had no power, including the major industrial centre of Lugansk.

Easily accessible power grids have had frequent damage. Power lines, transformers and substations have all been hit by shelling and there have been many cases of intentional damage to electrical infrastructure. The tragic deaths of grid personnel who were shot while inspecting and repairing equipment is a black page in the history of the Ukrainian energy industry. However, during the conflict station staff have continued to work despite the threat to life and limb and through these terrible circumstances thermal energy plants have continued to generate electricity.
Kovynev, 2015




In the age of intercontinental missiles one has to count really every single last one of nuclear reactors near a potential war zone.



In recent years, we have added rhetoric of "heroic deeds being worthwhile", from quite a few sides. The means not only big rockets or errant shells are a threat. As those plants are all at least possibly quite dirty bombs in fixed positions, a small truck driven by one mad man or madam was and still is sufficient. Motivations for such an action are handed out by the dozens nowadays.



In fact some mad men are really convinced that connecting such things to "the grid" not only means simple powerlines, but electronic communications as well. Things like Stuxnet make the Vulnerability of nuclear plants to attack just so much easier, not even requiring any physical presence at all.




Military attacks



Nuclear reactors become preferred targets during military conflict and, over the past three decades, have been repeatedly attacked during military air strikes, occupations, invasions and campaigns:




  • On 25 March 1973, before its completion, the Atucha I Nuclear Power Plant in Argentina was temporarily captured by the People's Revolutionary Army who stole a FMK-3 submachine gun and three .45 caliber handguns. When they retired they had a confrontation with the police, injuring two police officers.

  • In September 1980, Iran bombed the Al Tuwaitha nuclear complex in Iraq, in Operation Scorch Sword, which was a surprise IRIAF (Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force) airstrike carried out on 30 September 1980, that damaged an almost complete nuclear reactor 17 km south-east of Baghdad, Iraq.

  • In June 1981, Operation Opera was an Israeli air strike that completely destroyed Iraq's Osirak nuclear research facility.

  • Between 1984 and 1987, Iraq bombed Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant six times.

  • In 1991, the U.S. bombed three nuclear reactors and an enrichment pilot facility in Iraq.

  • In 1991, Iraq launched Scud missiles at Israel's Dimona nuclear power plant.

  • In September 2007, Israel bombed a Syrian reactor under construction.




Given the expert opinion of Alexey Kovynev in Nuclear plants in war zones (2015), he also lists:





  • Yugoslavia, ten-day war

  • The Iran-Iraq war

  • Bombing of nuclear reactors in Iraq

  • Destruction of reactor in Syria

  • Indo-Pakistani conflicts

  • Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

  • Ukrainian conflict






If already accused of "writing an essay", I can do that as well then:




Q … modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate…




is pro-nuke-energy misconception. "Nuclear safety" can be summarised elegantly with just a few words: there is none.






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
    – sempaiscuba
    yesterday






  • 17




    Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 7




    the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
    – chrylis
    yesterday






  • 7




    Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
    – axsvl77
    yesterday






  • 18




    This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
    – hobbs
    yesterday














-3












-3








-3







Q Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?




Yes, quite a lot. And even one would have been one too many.



Directly attacked or "affected" active plants were found in Israel, Ukraine and Yugoslavia. Proving in every instance that supporting atomic power is an untenable position.





It seems irrelevant to focus on "commercial" and "active" reactors, as the real criteria for damage are more likely "contains radioactive material to be spread when hit". That would include pre-operational and post-operational reactors. Whether they are commercial or strictly military or research doesn't factor in case of catastrophe facilitated by a war.



We might have to define "war zone" further: if the US wages "war on terror", and considered itself under attack of the homeland (ie a war zone in 2001) – would that make all its nuclear installations count? And all those in or near the countries bombed or invaded?



In centuries gone by a "war zone" might have been precisely declared. Since we now seem to prefer asymmetrical warfare, this definition is no longer that useful. Mere proximity or distance to infantry fighting on the ground was no safe haven for for example Serbian, Afghan, or Yemeni people.



If not, we might still look at the map of atomic insanity to get a stricter measurement of reactors at risk of being targets:




enter image description here
via Carbon Brief (https://www.carbonbrief.org/mapped-the-worlds-nuclear-power-plants)




And correlate the dates of construction and "connectedness to the grid" with the list armed conflicts




List of wars 1945–1989
List of wars 1990–2002
List of wars 2003–present




This is a bit misleading, as the map above is not listing secret or formerly secret armament reactors, which all have to be counted in. Equally, "research reactors" can be tiny or really unnecessarily large – for real research. But it appears that regardless of size and therefore danger, facilities simply declared "for research" (like Egypt's, Libya's or North Korea's?) are just not listed.



For example the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center (aka "Dimona") was used by Israel to enrich enough fission material to construct bombs. This went online between 1962–1964 and obviously – that strip of land is awfully small – would be a quite vulnaerable target at least as early during 1973 Arab–Israeli War (Yom Kippur).



Since then it was repeatedly attacked. Iran is supposedly targeting it constantly, but Iraq actually launched rockets in 1991 at it and Hamas does so now. (Although with low accuracy, for now.)



The response to that was that Israel first stepped up air-defenses, a few times, and by now is said to have shut down the reactor. How the personnel reacted in all of those incidents is typically not reported. Since the plant wasn't really hit, they may have never learned of the danger when it was imminent, only later.



The same goes for India and Pakistan, at the latest in 1999, as India detonated "Smiling Buddha" in 1974 and Pakistan had equally enough installations to declare itself on-par with "Chagai-I" in 1998.
Supporters of nuclear power are cynical enough to discount the plants as endangered, as both countries have refrained from all-out-war and now have mobile bombs as well. That is of course wrongheadedly downplaying the reach of weapons available to both sides.



As the Korean War is not offiically really "over", just being an armistice, one might just look at the surroundings of the peninsula:




enter image description here




This is further complicated as internal struggles and civil wars could very easily turn a bit ugly if the plants get targeted.



As is the case with the conflicts in Ukraine, which make also some indisputably Russian reactors "near" a zone of conflict. The Washington posts counts 15 Ukrainian reactors alone in this war zone.




“You need to make sure you have enough security that so bad guys don’t do what the tsunami did to Fukushima — cutting off the power and disabling the backup power to start a meltdown,” Bunn says. Most nuclear plants have so much security that terrorists look elsewhere, “at a dam or a chemical plant instead,” he says. (Nukes of Hazard)




This affected the operational situation in Ukrainian plants:




The situation in Ukraine is very a serious concern. The country has 15 reactors operating at four nuclear power plants. Ukraine is proud of its nuclear capacity, but its new circumstances make then a cause for anxiety.
Three stations (South Ukraine, Rovno, and Khmelnitsky) are situated in the western side of the country and are not part of this discussion. The largest plant in Europe, Zaporozhe with its six 1000 MW VVER-1000 reactors, lies about 200 km from the combat zone.
Thermal energy supplies and networks in Ukraine have suffered during the war. Five large thermal power plants near Donbass now operate at reduced output and are periodically in outage due to lack of coal. A hit on the unit transformer at the Lugansk power plant resulted in a blaze which put the plant out of action, blacking out a large region. Towns and villages with a total population of about 700,000 had no power, including the major industrial centre of Lugansk.

Easily accessible power grids have had frequent damage. Power lines, transformers and substations have all been hit by shelling and there have been many cases of intentional damage to electrical infrastructure. The tragic deaths of grid personnel who were shot while inspecting and repairing equipment is a black page in the history of the Ukrainian energy industry. However, during the conflict station staff have continued to work despite the threat to life and limb and through these terrible circumstances thermal energy plants have continued to generate electricity.
Kovynev, 2015




In the age of intercontinental missiles one has to count really every single last one of nuclear reactors near a potential war zone.



In recent years, we have added rhetoric of "heroic deeds being worthwhile", from quite a few sides. The means not only big rockets or errant shells are a threat. As those plants are all at least possibly quite dirty bombs in fixed positions, a small truck driven by one mad man or madam was and still is sufficient. Motivations for such an action are handed out by the dozens nowadays.



In fact some mad men are really convinced that connecting such things to "the grid" not only means simple powerlines, but electronic communications as well. Things like Stuxnet make the Vulnerability of nuclear plants to attack just so much easier, not even requiring any physical presence at all.




Military attacks



Nuclear reactors become preferred targets during military conflict and, over the past three decades, have been repeatedly attacked during military air strikes, occupations, invasions and campaigns:




  • On 25 March 1973, before its completion, the Atucha I Nuclear Power Plant in Argentina was temporarily captured by the People's Revolutionary Army who stole a FMK-3 submachine gun and three .45 caliber handguns. When they retired they had a confrontation with the police, injuring two police officers.

  • In September 1980, Iran bombed the Al Tuwaitha nuclear complex in Iraq, in Operation Scorch Sword, which was a surprise IRIAF (Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force) airstrike carried out on 30 September 1980, that damaged an almost complete nuclear reactor 17 km south-east of Baghdad, Iraq.

  • In June 1981, Operation Opera was an Israeli air strike that completely destroyed Iraq's Osirak nuclear research facility.

  • Between 1984 and 1987, Iraq bombed Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant six times.

  • In 1991, the U.S. bombed three nuclear reactors and an enrichment pilot facility in Iraq.

  • In 1991, Iraq launched Scud missiles at Israel's Dimona nuclear power plant.

  • In September 2007, Israel bombed a Syrian reactor under construction.




Given the expert opinion of Alexey Kovynev in Nuclear plants in war zones (2015), he also lists:





  • Yugoslavia, ten-day war

  • The Iran-Iraq war

  • Bombing of nuclear reactors in Iraq

  • Destruction of reactor in Syria

  • Indo-Pakistani conflicts

  • Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

  • Ukrainian conflict






If already accused of "writing an essay", I can do that as well then:




Q … modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate…




is pro-nuke-energy misconception. "Nuclear safety" can be summarised elegantly with just a few words: there is none.






share|improve this answer















Q Has there ever been an instance of an active nuclear power plant within or near a war zone?




Yes, quite a lot. And even one would have been one too many.



Directly attacked or "affected" active plants were found in Israel, Ukraine and Yugoslavia. Proving in every instance that supporting atomic power is an untenable position.





It seems irrelevant to focus on "commercial" and "active" reactors, as the real criteria for damage are more likely "contains radioactive material to be spread when hit". That would include pre-operational and post-operational reactors. Whether they are commercial or strictly military or research doesn't factor in case of catastrophe facilitated by a war.



We might have to define "war zone" further: if the US wages "war on terror", and considered itself under attack of the homeland (ie a war zone in 2001) – would that make all its nuclear installations count? And all those in or near the countries bombed or invaded?



In centuries gone by a "war zone" might have been precisely declared. Since we now seem to prefer asymmetrical warfare, this definition is no longer that useful. Mere proximity or distance to infantry fighting on the ground was no safe haven for for example Serbian, Afghan, or Yemeni people.



If not, we might still look at the map of atomic insanity to get a stricter measurement of reactors at risk of being targets:




enter image description here
via Carbon Brief (https://www.carbonbrief.org/mapped-the-worlds-nuclear-power-plants)




And correlate the dates of construction and "connectedness to the grid" with the list armed conflicts




List of wars 1945–1989
List of wars 1990–2002
List of wars 2003–present




This is a bit misleading, as the map above is not listing secret or formerly secret armament reactors, which all have to be counted in. Equally, "research reactors" can be tiny or really unnecessarily large – for real research. But it appears that regardless of size and therefore danger, facilities simply declared "for research" (like Egypt's, Libya's or North Korea's?) are just not listed.



For example the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center (aka "Dimona") was used by Israel to enrich enough fission material to construct bombs. This went online between 1962–1964 and obviously – that strip of land is awfully small – would be a quite vulnaerable target at least as early during 1973 Arab–Israeli War (Yom Kippur).



Since then it was repeatedly attacked. Iran is supposedly targeting it constantly, but Iraq actually launched rockets in 1991 at it and Hamas does so now. (Although with low accuracy, for now.)



The response to that was that Israel first stepped up air-defenses, a few times, and by now is said to have shut down the reactor. How the personnel reacted in all of those incidents is typically not reported. Since the plant wasn't really hit, they may have never learned of the danger when it was imminent, only later.



The same goes for India and Pakistan, at the latest in 1999, as India detonated "Smiling Buddha" in 1974 and Pakistan had equally enough installations to declare itself on-par with "Chagai-I" in 1998.
Supporters of nuclear power are cynical enough to discount the plants as endangered, as both countries have refrained from all-out-war and now have mobile bombs as well. That is of course wrongheadedly downplaying the reach of weapons available to both sides.



As the Korean War is not offiically really "over", just being an armistice, one might just look at the surroundings of the peninsula:




enter image description here




This is further complicated as internal struggles and civil wars could very easily turn a bit ugly if the plants get targeted.



As is the case with the conflicts in Ukraine, which make also some indisputably Russian reactors "near" a zone of conflict. The Washington posts counts 15 Ukrainian reactors alone in this war zone.




“You need to make sure you have enough security that so bad guys don’t do what the tsunami did to Fukushima — cutting off the power and disabling the backup power to start a meltdown,” Bunn says. Most nuclear plants have so much security that terrorists look elsewhere, “at a dam or a chemical plant instead,” he says. (Nukes of Hazard)




This affected the operational situation in Ukrainian plants:




The situation in Ukraine is very a serious concern. The country has 15 reactors operating at four nuclear power plants. Ukraine is proud of its nuclear capacity, but its new circumstances make then a cause for anxiety.
Three stations (South Ukraine, Rovno, and Khmelnitsky) are situated in the western side of the country and are not part of this discussion. The largest plant in Europe, Zaporozhe with its six 1000 MW VVER-1000 reactors, lies about 200 km from the combat zone.
Thermal energy supplies and networks in Ukraine have suffered during the war. Five large thermal power plants near Donbass now operate at reduced output and are periodically in outage due to lack of coal. A hit on the unit transformer at the Lugansk power plant resulted in a blaze which put the plant out of action, blacking out a large region. Towns and villages with a total population of about 700,000 had no power, including the major industrial centre of Lugansk.

Easily accessible power grids have had frequent damage. Power lines, transformers and substations have all been hit by shelling and there have been many cases of intentional damage to electrical infrastructure. The tragic deaths of grid personnel who were shot while inspecting and repairing equipment is a black page in the history of the Ukrainian energy industry. However, during the conflict station staff have continued to work despite the threat to life and limb and through these terrible circumstances thermal energy plants have continued to generate electricity.
Kovynev, 2015




In the age of intercontinental missiles one has to count really every single last one of nuclear reactors near a potential war zone.



In recent years, we have added rhetoric of "heroic deeds being worthwhile", from quite a few sides. The means not only big rockets or errant shells are a threat. As those plants are all at least possibly quite dirty bombs in fixed positions, a small truck driven by one mad man or madam was and still is sufficient. Motivations for such an action are handed out by the dozens nowadays.



In fact some mad men are really convinced that connecting such things to "the grid" not only means simple powerlines, but electronic communications as well. Things like Stuxnet make the Vulnerability of nuclear plants to attack just so much easier, not even requiring any physical presence at all.




Military attacks



Nuclear reactors become preferred targets during military conflict and, over the past three decades, have been repeatedly attacked during military air strikes, occupations, invasions and campaigns:




  • On 25 March 1973, before its completion, the Atucha I Nuclear Power Plant in Argentina was temporarily captured by the People's Revolutionary Army who stole a FMK-3 submachine gun and three .45 caliber handguns. When they retired they had a confrontation with the police, injuring two police officers.

  • In September 1980, Iran bombed the Al Tuwaitha nuclear complex in Iraq, in Operation Scorch Sword, which was a surprise IRIAF (Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force) airstrike carried out on 30 September 1980, that damaged an almost complete nuclear reactor 17 km south-east of Baghdad, Iraq.

  • In June 1981, Operation Opera was an Israeli air strike that completely destroyed Iraq's Osirak nuclear research facility.

  • Between 1984 and 1987, Iraq bombed Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant six times.

  • In 1991, the U.S. bombed three nuclear reactors and an enrichment pilot facility in Iraq.

  • In 1991, Iraq launched Scud missiles at Israel's Dimona nuclear power plant.

  • In September 2007, Israel bombed a Syrian reactor under construction.




Given the expert opinion of Alexey Kovynev in Nuclear plants in war zones (2015), he also lists:





  • Yugoslavia, ten-day war

  • The Iran-Iraq war

  • Bombing of nuclear reactors in Iraq

  • Destruction of reactor in Syria

  • Indo-Pakistani conflicts

  • Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

  • Ukrainian conflict






If already accused of "writing an essay", I can do that as well then:




Q … modern commercial nuclear power plants (CANDU, PWR, BWR of generation II plus all of gen III and newer) are usually reasonably safe to operate…




is pro-nuke-energy misconception. "Nuclear safety" can be summarised elegantly with just a few words: there is none.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









LangLangCLangLangC

21.5k370115




21.5k370115








  • 7




    Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
    – sempaiscuba
    yesterday






  • 17




    Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 7




    the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
    – chrylis
    yesterday






  • 7




    Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
    – axsvl77
    yesterday






  • 18




    This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
    – hobbs
    yesterday














  • 7




    Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
    – sempaiscuba
    yesterday






  • 17




    Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
    – Pavel
    yesterday






  • 7




    the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
    – chrylis
    yesterday






  • 7




    Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
    – axsvl77
    yesterday






  • 18




    This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
    – hobbs
    yesterday








7




7




Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
– sempaiscuba
yesterday




Comments are not the place for a debate on the merits or otherwise of nuclear power.
– sempaiscuba
yesterday




17




17




Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
– Pavel
yesterday




Yes, niceness of nuclear energy is off topic here, I almost stopped reading the answer at the atomic insanity. The section called military attacks lists almost exclusively military installations which are a natural target for an attack, the first listed has was not operation alt the time and thus the case doesn't inform us about what problems arise while running a power station with war raging about. armament reactors which all have to be count in - they don't, as is explicitly stated in the question. I'm sorry, all in all this looks more like a rant to me than an answer to the question.
– Pavel
yesterday




7




7




the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
– chrylis
yesterday




the real criteria for damage: This isn't what the OP asked for. A sensible interpretation of the question is "was there a place where the staff could have evacuated leaving the plant to fail for lack of supervision?"
– chrylis
yesterday




7




7




Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
– axsvl77
yesterday




Towards the end this answer is ok. Just need to remove the subjective language.
– axsvl77
yesterday




18




18




This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
– hobbs
yesterday




This is a deliberate attempt to fail to answer the question, while writing an essay.
– hobbs
yesterday


















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