Main content

Can We Learn to Live with Nuclear Power?

After the Fukushima disaster in Japan, the country is turning its reactors back on. But elsewhere the nuclear industry is in retreat.

In 2011, following a devastating tsunami, Japan’s Fukushima nuclear power station went into meltdown, leaking radiation. It was the most serious nuclear accident since Chernobyl. It appeared to send the nuclear power industry into retreat – and not just in Japan. Other nations had second thoughts too. Germany decided to phase out its nuclear reactors altogether. But now Japan has resumed nuclear power generation. At the heart of the 'nuclear wobble' of 2011 is the question of risk. Attitudes to, and understanding of, risk vary surprisingly between nations and cultures. But after one of the most shocking incidents in nuclear power's history, will we be able to cope with our fears? In other words, can we learn to live with nuclear power?

(Photo: A Czech Power plant. Credit: AP)

Available now

23 minutes

Last on

Sun 6 Sep 201513:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Tue 1 Sep 201502:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201503:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201504:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201505:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201506:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201512:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201513:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201516:06GMT
  • Tue 1 Sep 201521:06GMT
  • Sat 5 Sep 201523:06GMT
  • Sun 6 Sep 201502:06GMT
  • Sun 6 Sep 201504:06GMT
  • Sun 6 Sep 201513:06GMT

Podcast