nuclear-news

The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry Fukushima Chernobyl Mayak Three Mile Island Atomic Testing Radiation Isotope

antinuclear

Running on empty Beyond Nuclear Linda Gunter 26 Sept 08 With the retreat of the “Gang of 20” in the Senate last week – where a bill that would have included unlimited federal loan guarantees for nuclear energy was never introduced

– will the failing economy now spell the end of heavily subsidized nuclear energy expansion plans?

Not necessarily.

Although the push for unlimited loan guarantees has been staved off, the previously approved nuclear loan guarantees lurch forward. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 approved nuclear loan guarantees, and in December 2007, Congress and President Bush approved $18.5 billion in federal loan guarantees for new reactors (and an additional $2 billion for new uranium enrichment)………………………

DOE admitted this week that $18.5 billion would build just two new reactors. However, DOE seems poised, along with the nuclear power industry’s army of lobbyists, to continue to seek expanded, or even unlimited, nuclear loan guarantees..

For example, Platt’s reported this week that, given the crises on Wall Street, DOE’s assistant secretary for nuclear energy, Dennis Spurgeon, said that “government” (meaning taxpayers) may need to take on an even bigger role in financing the “nuclear renaissance.” ……………………….

Despite what’s being described as a financial “meltdown,” the real risk of meltdown – due to expanded nuclear power in this country propped up by multi-billion dollar taxpayer subsidies – is routinely ignored in the press.

All the more reason to remain vigilant lest the nuclear industry and its friends in government attempt quiet money grabs as part of the Wall Street bailout plans, or hidden in energy or climate bills.

Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | business and costs | Leave a comment

Sale of energy giant to French firm puts our future supply in jeopardy – Scotsman.com News

Sale of energy giant to French firm puts our future supply in jeopardy
News.scotsman.com : 26 September 2008The consequences of the government’s effectively pushing British Energy (BE) into the arms of the French state-owned EDF (your report, 25 September) are profound.
The United Kingdom, which was once at the forefront of civil nuclear technology, has handed over control of virtually its entire nuclear power industry not only to a foreign company, but one 80 per cent owned by a foreign government.


Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | politics | Leave a comment

Fire at Nuclear Plant Prompts Special Investigation | Occupational Health & Safety

Fire at Nuclear Plant Prompts Special Investigation

Occupational Health and Safety 25 Sept 08 The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is conducting a special inspection at the DC Cook Nuclear Power Station to review circumstances around a turbine generator fire and degradation of the fire suppression system. The two-unit plant is operated by American Electric Power and is located in Stevensville, Mich.

On Sept. 20, a malfunction in the Unit 1 turbine generator resulted in a fire and caused the operators to manually shut down the reactor.

Fire at Nuclear Plant Prompts Special Investigation | Occupational Health & Safety

Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | safety | Leave a comment

WXOW News 19 La Crosse, WI – News, Weather and Sports |Nuclear Trash

Nuclear Trash

BARNWELL, S.C. (AP) WXOW19 26 Sept 08 – Low-level radioactive waste is piling up at hospitals and research labs around the country, and that’s worrying experts who fear some of it could be stolen by terrorists and turned into dirty bombs.

The items include radioactive seeds the size of a grain of rice used for treating cancer. There are also pencil-thin nuclear tubes used in industrial gauges. And there’s an array of small capsules and pellets with medical and industrial uses.

For years, truckloads of material from 36 states have been shipped to a landfill in rural South Carolina. There, it was all sealed in concrete and buried.

But effective July 1st, the state ended nearly all disposal of radioactive material at the landfill. That’s left it piling up at the labs, universities, hospitals and businesses where it’s used.

State and federal authorities says the waste is monitored, but they acknowledge checks are infrequent. Government documents show that thousands of items have been lost.

WXOW News 19 La Crosse, WI – News, Weather and Sports |Nuclear Trash

Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | environment | Leave a comment

Fars News Agency :: US Seeking to Hijack IAEA to Pressure Iran

US Seeking to Hijack IAEA to Pressure IranTEHRAN (FNA)- Iranian Ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency Ali Ashgar Soltaniyeh said Washington is hijacking the UN nuclear watchdog for an anti-Iran campaign.
“Today, it was made clear to the Board of Governors that the original documents and even their duplications regarding alleged studies have not been presented to the International Atomic Energy Agency,” Soltaniyeh said on the sidelines of the IAEA Board of Governors meeting in Vienna on Monday.
During the meeting the IAEA chief had urged the Islamic Republic to be “transparent” and provide the agency with “credible assurances about the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran.” ……………………………The IAEA report confirmed that Iran has managed to enrich uranium-235 to a level ‘less than 5 percent.’ Such a rate is consistent with the construction of a nuclear power plant. Nuclear arms production, meanwhile, requires an enrichment level of above 90 percent.

The Vienna-based UN nuclear watchdog continues snap inspections of Iranian nuclear sites and has reported that all “declared nuclear material in Iran has been accounted for, and therefore such material is not diverted to prohibited activities.”

Fars News Agency :: US Seeking to Hijack IAEA to Pressure Iran

Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Australia’s radioactive migraine – On Line Opinion – 26/9/2008

Australia’s radioactive migraine

ON LINE opinion By Scott Ludlam 26 September 2008 When the Commonwealth Radioactive Waste Management Act 2005 was forced through the Senate, Labor accurately described it as, “extreme, arrogant, heavy-handed, draconian, sorry, sordid, extraordinary and profoundly shameful”.

Why? Because it wiped out Northern Territory laws prohibiting transport and storage of nuclear waste. The legislation also squashed Aboriginal heritage laws and the Native Title Act, overriding procedural fairness.

Amendments passed in 2006 explicitly stated that site nominations from Land Councils are valid even in the absence of consultation with Traditional Owners. These amendments were also opposed by the Greens and Labor opposition………………………………..Most importantly, we must ask why we are producing this waste at all. Yesterday we saw public acknowledgement that the research reactor in Sydney is still leaking, despite having been shutdown for 11 of the 14 months since it first opened. The first step in dealing with our 60-year radioactive migraine is to stop producing this waste in the first place, and divert the substantial resources consumed by this substandard facility into the many alternative technologies for producing radioisotopes.

…………………………Repealing this legislation will pave the way for a new approach to the management of Australia’s radioactive waste. The Territory Government, the Traditional Owners and the broader community across the NT were never asked if they wanted to host a dump for Australia’s most intractable waste. The Prime Minister must now be called to account: this was a very clear election promise, and it is time it was honoured.

Australia’s radioactive migraine – On Line Opinion – 26/9/2008

Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | wastes | Leave a comment

Uranium export value tipped to fall 8pc – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Uranium export value tipped to fall
ABC News 26 Sept 08 The value of Australia’s uranium exports is forecast to drop by 8 per cent or $60 million this financial year.The Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE) says that is because of a significant fall in spot prices, due to an increase in world production.

Tags: , , ,

September 26, 2008 Posted by | business and costs | Leave a comment