Eh già... una centrale nucleare è molto delicata e il semplice abbandono genera grossi rischi.
Anche senza tirargli un missile addosso. Se fai scappare quelli che ci lavorano, chi ci metti a gestire il tutto?
da: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-60617145
If an accident were to occur, it wouldn't be quite like the one that occurred at Chernobyl in 1986. There, the graphite in the core caught fire and, because it burned for 10 days, the radioactive smoke was lifted high into the atmosphere and spread widely around Europe.
The reactors in Ukraine do not contain graphite, so are unlikely to catch fire or spread radioactivity widely.
What would really happen if a fire broke out or a bomb did get dropped directly at the plant or in the cooling units? - Maria
If there was a fire inside the reactor building, it would be instantly extinguished by the automatic safety systems. The reactor buildings themselves are fairly robust, so the nuclear fuel should be quite safe in there.
An explosion would only occur if there was a nuclear meltdown, which could be caused by the electricity supply to the site AND the back-up generators being damaged. If this happened to an operating nuclear power plant, then there could be an explosion like the one that happened Fukushima.
At Zaporizhzhya, the reactors are being put into a "shutdown", which means a nuclear meltdown could not happen.