The article analyses the energy efficiency and environmental friendliness of nuclear power plants and wind power plants in the conditions of intensive population growth and, as a result, the growth of electricity needs, taking into account the negative impact on the environment not only during the construction of energy facilities, but also during operation and disposal after the end of the term operation It is emphasized that in the process of society development wind generators were initially used only for grinding grain, pumping water, for draining swamps, for expanding agricultural land, etc., and only later, due to the shortage of energy resources, they began to be used to generate electricity. In parallel with this, such scientists as Petro Kapitsa, Serhii Vavilov, Igor Kurchatov, Mykola Dolezal and others were engaged in the development of nuclear energy. As a result, in 1954, the world's first atomic power plant with a capacity of 5 MW was built in the city of Obninsk. It was such a revolutionary breakthrough in electricity that wind energy was abandoned. From that moment, the number of reactors began to grow rapidly, reaching 438 in 2002. But starting in 1969, accidents began to occur at the nuclear power plant one after the other. There have been 22 landmark accidents, including Chornobyl in Ukraine in 1986. No less devastating was the accident in 2011 at the Oganawa and Fukushima 1 nuclear power plants in Japan. After the Chornobyl accident in 1986, humanity again remembered wind generators, which seemed ecological. But in the process of operation, it became clear that they also have their shortcomings. But, as time has shown, most of them can be eliminated by improving the actual wind generators and their optimal location in wind farms. Because all accidents at nuclear power plants are due to the fault of service personnel, atomic power can become accident-free with the introduction of modern smart technologies. Thus, both nuclear and wind power plants should develop, complementing each other to counter russia's military aggression.
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