Travel alerts straight to your inbox:

Extreme Tourism: Nuclear Power Plants in Sweden

October 30, 2007 at 9:05 AM | 2 Comments

Now this is extreme tourism. We've discovered that tours to a nuclear plant in Sweden are all the rage for travelers in Scandinavia. Every year about 15,000 visitors stroll through the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant on the remote Baltic coast of Sweden.

Yes, this is the same place that has had a couple emergency shut-down scares in the past few years, but the tourists don't care. They traipse around the site with a dosimeter to measure radiation exposure. If your device fails to pick up any radiation readings while you're there (and that's what normally happens), an electronic voice announces "You're clean" as you leave.

When you think about all the tourists who swing by Chernobyl in Ukraine (there are heaps of them), perhaps visiting a place like Forsmark is actually a sensible kind of trip to make. That is, if you're into dangerous nuclear power plants.

Related Stories:
· Swedes Get a Buzz Visiting Nuclear Plants [Reuters]
· Sweden Travel coverage [Jaunted]
· Sweden Hotels [HotelChatter]

[Photo: maol]

2 Comments

  1. KnowNukes

    Jaunted Member
    November 1, 2007 at 9:41 AM




    Forsmark: A Dangerous Nuclear Plant??

    From The Swedish National Society for Road Safety:

    http://www.ntf.se/english/default.asp

    The number of fatalities in traffic in 1996, 1997 and 1998 was constant at around 540 and the number for 1999 and 2000 increased to 570-590.

    How many people died at that dangerous nuclear plant in Sweden?  I'd say from the statistics above that tourism is more dangerous than nuclear power in Sweden.

    How about some objectivity in your article, or do catchy headlines mean more to you than accuracy?

  1. pbb

    Jaunted Editor
    November 1, 2007 at 10:34 AM




    I must admit...

    We do like catchy headlines.

    With its well-publicized safety issues, Forsmark is more dangerous than most nuclear power plants, which in general are exceedingly safe. So it's a dangerous power plant, not a dangerous destination, which I think this post makes clear.

    [ Parent ]

Leave a Comment

Not yet a member? Click here to become a member.
Already a member? Login below:

Nickname:

Password:

Send us a tip