Have a look at this EDF website and their brochure on the design and building of the new Hinkley C Plant. Your fears, and that of others on the OOF, should be resolved by reading all the detail. No old technology, but bang up to date design.
Far from it Lizzie!
Pressurised Water Reactors have been around since the 1950's and indeed the 1979 nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in the US involved a Pressurised Water Reactor. I accept however that a 1950's PWR is a different beast to the modern European Pressurised Reactors that are proposed for Britain, but the principles remain the same in the same way that a 1950's Ford Prefect is very different to a 2013 Ford Focus, but they both have a steering wheel, 3 pedals and a lever!!

You might find this article from Wikipedia more enlightening than EDF's sales brochure. A sorry tale of construction delays and budget overuns involving EDF and Areva....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Pressurized_ReactorLike any heavy industry, nuclear power generation is subject to human error and systems failure, however the results of a major incident at a nuclear power plant can be rather more catastrophic.

Even a minor incident can have serious consequences...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_power_accidents_by_countryMy main problem with nuclear power remains the waste issue and the fact that we've yet to find a better way of dealing with it than burying it deep deep underground for future generations to find and deal with. Hopefully our Great great grandchildren will find a use for it....

Page 20 of EDF's sales brochure admits the UK still needs to find a long term solution for radioactive waste accumulated over past decades, but that the solution will be a 'Geological Storage Facility' (ie Bloody great Hole in the ground) and the government has yet to identify a suitable site....

So what the hell are they doing with all this stuff? Is it all lying around at Sellafield??

and they thought it was the Northern Lights over Cumbria!!

Finally it has been estimated that it will cost approximately £70 billion to decommission Britain's remaining nuclear power stations

and again one of the decommissioning methods is to encase the reactor in concrete and leave it until it is safe....
Sorry Lizzie but it'll take more than a slick brochure to convince me that nuclear power is the answer to our energy problems!
