rmw,
If A fast fuel is comparable to pure alcohol and a thermal fuel is comparable to 80 proof gin. Which one, if thrown into a fireplace is more likely to burn the house down?Knowing that a mixture of alcohol and water will not burn if it contains less than 50% alcohol (less than 100 proof) it is not likely that a glass of gin could ever set the house on fire. There is a much greater probability that a fire could start in the house if a glass of pure alcohol is thrown into the fireplace.
My point is that I don't need an engineer to design a fire detection, sprinkler, and alarm system for my house if I only plan to throw a glass of gin into the fireplace. If you play with flammable liquids it is just a matter of time before you set the house on fire. The engineered systems may save the house but water and smoke damage will take some effort to clean up. The problem is that nuclear "smoke" damage can make a 10 mile region uninhabitable for hundreds of years.
electricpete,
Your right - It wasn't a truck every minute it was a truck every day for commercial spent fuel.
For commercial spent fuel: It would take approximately 1 truck every day for the next ten years to move 50,0000 tons of spent fuel from 72 sites in 33 different states across the country. This assumes a legal weight truck can hold about 27,000 lbs of spent fuel and not exceed the legal gross weight limit of 80,000 lbs.
Source for amount of spent fuel is
If you want to count all radioactive shipments by truck it is one truck every hour based on a 99,700 shipments described in the excerpts below from:
"It is estimated that 99,700 trips by truck will be required from 72 of the nuclear power plants alone, with an additional 16,240 coming from the Hanford facility, and another 2,460 from Idaho National Engineering. Thousands of more trips would be required for the 57 additional sites."