The Indiana Century Podcast
The United States Navy has operated nuclear reactors for 70 years. Hundreds of submarines and aircraft carriers. Thousands of reactor years of operation. Zero reactor accidents. Zero meltdowns. Zero releases of radioactive material that caused harm to the public. That record is not luck. It is the result of a safety culture built from scratch by Admiral Hyman Rickover, a culture so powerful that every Navy nuclear veteran carries it for life. In this episode, host Kory sits down with Ken Hull, a fellow Navy nuclear veteran from the USS New Mexico. Ken served as a shutdown reactor operator and qualified Engineering Watch Supervisor. Today, he works as an instrumentation and controls technician at the Crane Clean Energy Center, the former Three Mile Island plant that is being restarted. They discuss what makes Navy nuclear safety culture different. The three pillars: conservative design, relentless training, and questioning attitude. The Swiss cheese model where enough small failures lead to disaster, and why the Navy treats small things like big things so big things never happen. The containment system that protected the public even during the Three Mile Island partial meltdown. The difference between Navy and commercial nuclear. And why small modular reactors that are factory built and standardized like Navy reactors are the future. Ken also shares his perspective on data centers, state ownership versus corporate control, and why he would love to see a nuclear reactor back in his home state of Indiana. The featured book is "Admiral Rickover and the Nuclear Navy" by Francis Duncan, the definitive history of the man who invented the gold standard. Show Notes Featured Book: Admiral Rickover and the Nuclear Navy by Francis Duncan Guest: Ken Hull, former Navy nuclear operator, USS New Mexico; Reactor I&C Tech at Crane Clean Energy Center. Topics: Navy nuclear safety culture, small modular reactors, Three Mile Island restart, spent fuel storage, containment systems, fast reactors, state owned infrastructure, Host Community Fee, ICC Energy Corps IndianaCentury.carrd.co [https://indianacentury.carrd.co/] Subscribe wherever you get podcasts. IndianaCentury.org
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