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4 answers

maybe because no companies have a nuclear reactor that will need future graduates there, besides the government cannot afford to finance one reactor and also the citizens will be against the construction of one due to safety reasons. it is cheaper to expand the capabilities of dams and geothermal plants. so, where will the graduates go?

2007-08-05 06:39:27 · answer #1 · answered by jesem47 3 · 0 0

You are right. The Philippine Government should offer it to those who have the brains for it. They could make it a government to government thing. Arrange it with the U.S. or with any other friendly government with nuclear facilities. Take in exchange students, who might like to study in turn geo-thermal possibilties in some of our localities.

The Philippine scholars for Nuclear engineering could come back here then, and may be study the inactive Bataan Nuclear Plant, make it workable.

Who can say? If radioactive sources are discovered and can be mined, then we
would need people who are knowledgeable, and these scholars who came back could be the backbone of this new industry.

Go for it!

2007-08-05 07:39:26 · answer #2 · answered by Aref H4 7 · 0 0

nuclear engineering is in quite low call for, you in certainty have 2 significant activity strategies: a ability agency or the militia. no longer too many Universities supply it for an straightforward reason, engineering is palms on, having your very own nuclear facility isn't low-value whether it does not have a real reactor. that's an exceedingly specific facility that in basic terms a small team of scholars can use, it is not any longer comparatively low-value for many universities to offer this methodology.

2016-10-09 06:18:48 · answer #3 · answered by dawber 4 · 0 0

I think because they don't want to be bothered by USA

2007-08-05 00:26:55 · answer #4 · answered by Luay14 6 · 0 0

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