Social Sciences, asked by himaniadhikari, 1 year ago

about man made disaster (nuclear disaster)plzzzz help me​

Answers

Answered by davidsarah108
1

Answer:

A report released by the Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission has concluded that the Japanese nuclear accident and meltdown last year could and should have been prevented.

The exhaustive 641-page report was sharply critical of the Japanese government and plant operator's claims that the accident was the unavoidable result of an unpredictable double-disaster of a severe earthquake followed by a tsunami. In fact, the report noted that given the high number of earthquakes in Japan (and the well-known association of tsunamis with earthquakes), much more could have been done. Basic safety measures were ignored, backup systems were not implemented and government regulators who were charged with enforcing safety standards did not follow through.

Explanation:

Fukushima is the second preventable nuclear crisis in history. Though sometimes considered a technological failure, the nuclear meltdown at Russia's Chernobyl power plant was a man-made disaster caused by human error. In 1986, a group of scientists intentionally deactivated several safety systems in order to test a cooling system at reactor 4. The experiment failed, leading to the worst nuclear accident of all time. There are several psychological and social factors common to both Chernobyl and Fukushima.

Answered by RashiMishra009
1

Answer:

See, man made disasters happens due to man and not naturally like bomb blasts, riots, etc.

Talking about nuclear blasts, they are arranged and done on a large scale and sometimes in a chain in order to produce terror in the hearts and minds of people. This leds to breaking of brotherhood.

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