Without going into a discussion of Chernobyl, no, I don't think the ones who were supposed to be running the show there did a good job. Certainly there were many acts of self-sacrificing heroism there, but the emergency wasn't well managed. Discarding multiple instruments that were registering off the scale instead of facing the notion that yes, the radiation was off the scale is not doing a good job.Simon_Jester wrote:The Chernobyl workers, once things started going wrong, did pretty much everything they could think of and took a lot of personal risks to limit the damage.
I'm sure we'll see the same here. Many acts of heroic self-sacrifice and some people failing to keep track of what they should have been paying attention to. Days of stress and exhaustion certainly could be a significant factor in failing to keep track of the current pile of shit that is hitting the fan. Judgment starts to break down in a matter of hours under high stress, these people have been under monumental stress for days.
In analyzing such an event it's not simply enough to say "they fucked up" - you look into WHY they fucked up. If exhaustion, stress, lack of proper food or rest, insufficient personnel to deal with the emergency were factors you must take that into account next time, one way or another. Maybe more personnel need to be available to deal with emergencies. Maybe they need to stock valium for the work crews to keep them calm (that's at least half joke, by the way - I'm sure there are better things to use than valium anyhow if pharmaceuticals did become a reasonable option for stress reduction).
Things we learned from Chernobyl were graphic reactors can blow up and leave a terrible mess, and you really should have better radiation detectors on hand. Things we might learn from this: after 3-4 days people start neglecting important shit while trying to deal with three nuclear reactors that are threatening to melt down. If that is the case then we must design safety systems to account for human limitations. Maybe it's a simple as designating a crews to simply watch certain potential danger spots and do nothing else while others battle on going problems.
For sure, though, NO ONE at Fukushima could possibly have been functioning at true normal efficiency and effectiveness, not after what they've been through since Friday. Yes, absolutely I think that's a factor here, and we better keep it in mind for next time. Remember how easy it is to armchair quarterback from halfway around the world.
ETA: We are not the ones being irradiated.