Y'all do realize the steam from the hot radioactive rods is radioactive. And when the rods are uncovered they get hotter, so when water is introduced, they make steam.

The problem is getting water to the plant, then somehow containing the steam which if left unfettered will contaminate a large area. Think of steam heat in a house; the steam has to go someplace to condense, and in this case, it must be a closed protected system.

Next problem is that workers just can't be in there. They have to be in suits, and work in rather short shifts, or they get dead pretty quick.

So you have a plant that's basically in pieces, contaminated by radioactivity, and it can possibly blow up at any moment.

And not to mention that somehow the water was being split into component parts and that is an explosive risk - hydrogen and oxygen in an area makes a boom with a small spark capable of igniting it.

I know I wouldn't want the job of fixing this mess.