I would like to point out that the accident resulted mainly in high radiation levels rather than a release of contamination. From the radiation levels reported by the press (at 1 km away), the general public received little, if any, radiation exposure, and no environmental contamination occurred (other than cleanup waste).<br>
I disagree with helmley's statement that "Nuclear plants has three redundant controls and safety measures. This means that when one system malfunction, the other two systems override the controls. The chance of accident is greatly reduce, but the risk (cost and consequences) is greater than other plants." <br>
Most nuclear systems I worked on used what is known as 2-of-3 coincidence logic in their protection schemes. This requires two of three alarm signals to cause a protective action. This way, a single failed alarm channel will neither cause nor prevent a protective action. This scheme is used to ensure both protection and plant operations are maximized without compromising one another.<br>
<br>