big-time. i mean, six atmospheres worth of pressure as in all the steam that's caused moves up the generator and out through the seem valves. >> all the steam here goes out here. >> huge amounts of pressure like the amount of pressure behind a dam at a water hydro plant. that's going to just turn this. >> from here on in, this is just normal energy production. you can do this with coal, gas. you're turning turbines, creating electricity. >> the problem is the water coming in from the ocean to cool this steam back to water to condense it, that water stopped because the power stopped. the backup generator stopped. the batteries stopped eventually. >> and they got flooded. the backup power got flooded by the tsunami. >> the earthquake didn't hurt this plant. it did shut it down, normally shut it down. the tsunami flooded the backup and the backup and the backup and a number of things cascaded from there and that's where we are now. the rods -- >> we do have plants that do this, plants more modern. this brings us to the stream