A deadly proposition – Las Vegas Sun
A deadly propositionFuture Nevadans at risk of getting cancer if Yucca Mountain becomes nuclear waste dump
Las Vegas Sun 6 Oct 08 The Bush administration believes there is nothing wrong with building a nuclear waste dump that could cause at least one of every 125 individuals who live nearby to contract cancer. But if you happen to be one of those residents, chances are you won’t be feeling good about the odds of getting that potentially fatal disease.
Unfortunately, those will be the odds of getting cancer for future residents who live in the vicinity of Yucca Mountain should that site 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas be turned into a dump for the nation’s high-level nuclear waste.
As reported by Lisa Mascaro on Thursday in the Las Vegas Sun, those are the odds that can be gleaned from the Environmental Protection Agency’s latest cancer risk standards for the proposed dump…………………………..Remember, too, that the cancer risk is in addition to the potential for catastrophic loss of life throughout the United States because of an accidental release of radioactive waste or a terrorist attack during transport to the dump. Let’s not forget the potential additional hazards for Nevadans should an accident caused by man or nature occur at the dump.
A deadly proposition – Las Vegas Sun
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Decision Delayed On Nuclear Waste Imports – Nashville News Story – WSMV Nashville
Decision Delayed On Nuclear Waste ImportsMaterial Would Be Shipped From Italy To Tenn. For Processing
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Nuclear Regulatory Commission said Monday it is delaying a decision on whether to allow EnergySolutions Inc. to import the largest-ever amount of nuclear waste into the U.S.The NRC said it will wait until a federal court decides whether an interstate compact can block disposal of the waste in Utah.The Salt Lake City-based company wants to bring the 20,000 tons of low-level waste from Italy through the ports of Charleston, S.C., or New Orleans for processing in Tennessee. After processing, about 1,600 tons would be disposed at the company’s dump in the western Utah desert.The proposal has drawn a record number of public comments — most in opposition to the plan.
Decision Delayed On Nuclear Waste Imports – Nashville News Story – WSMV Nashville
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Economy may disrupt candidates’ energy plans — Newsday.com
Economy may disrupt candidates’ energy plansBY newsday.com MARK HARRINGTON 6 Oct 08 – “………………………..paying for candidates’ wish lists, including new nuclear plants, wind farms and solar energy, may be hampered by a $10-trillion national debt that could grow by another $700 billion once the bailout package begins dispensing taxpayer cash……………………… The centerpiece of McCain’s plan is the construction of 45 nuclear power plants by 2030, at a cost of $6 billion per plant.
“The nuclear energy industry tells us they can’t borrow any money from Wall Street … unless the federal government underwrites those loans,” said Jerry Taylor, senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a conservative Washington think tank. But Taylor said that with so much money tied up in the bailout, the government would be hard-pressed to guarantee huge loans for the nuclear industry.
Economy may disrupt candidates’ energy plans — Newsday.com
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Barack Obama on the issues – Las Vegas Sun
Barack Obama on the issues
LAS VEGAS SUN 6 Oct 08 “……………………Nuclear PowerObama, whose home state of Illinois has 11 nuclear power facilities, said it might seem to be in the best interests of his state to ship out the nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain. However, the risks of transporting nuclear waste to another state poses an uncertain risk. Because a large amount of the spent fuel would likely travel by rail, it’s a serious concern for Chicago, which serves as the transportation hub of the country. Also, because Nevada elected officials have not wavered in their opposition, it could mean billions of more dollars are spent on the project without any results. For those reasons, Obama is opposed to making Yucca a permanent nuclear waste repository. He said a solution could be to find another state willing to serve as a repository, or finding regional repositories. “In short, the selection of Yucca Mountain has failed, the time for debate on this site is over, and it is time to start exploring new alternatives for safe, long-term solutions based on sound science.”
Barack Obama on the issues – Las Vegas Sun
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
It’s about time to kill off nuclear energy
A short-lived tyranny It’s about time to kill off nuclear energy
OCOLLY.COM By Brandon McVeyOpinion Columnist : October 06, 2008 Pop Quiz: what source of energy has received the most government subsidies since World War II, has a by-product that has remained dangerous for thousands of years, and is a major component of McCain’s energy proposal?What I’m talking about is nuclear energy — 1950’s energy of the future. Back then, it was thought that nuclear energy would be the radioactive wave that would carry the world into the atomic age, supplying nearly all of the world’s electricity and a significant portion of its commercial energy. Obviously, nuclear energy has failed to live up to this expectation.
In the United States, no nuclear power plants have been built since the late 1970s. For private investors, the costs of building, maintaining and decommissioning a nuclear power plant overrun each other. Simply put, nuclear energy is a value destroyer that has only been proliferated by billing the American taxpayer. The modern initiatives for nuclear power still fail to recognize many of the flaws of the energy source.
Although electricity produced through nuclear power has been competitive, this price is not representative of all the costs along the nuclear energy value chain. …………………………..we shouldn’t delude ourselves about nuclear.
Maintaining nuclear reactors can be expensive, yet necessary for the reactor to be stable and safe.
Unfortunately, when the companies that manage such nuclear reactors already work with thin profit margins, safety problems can be ignored until the plant has to shut down to address them.
The Union of Concerned Scientists has recorded on its Web site that an outage at a nuclear power plant which lasted more than a year has occurred 51 times at 41 different reactors. While in the 1960s and 1970s the plants were closed primarily for damage recovery, since 1996 all the year-long outages were for safety restoration…………………………There is no agreed-upon method for storing the wastes for 10,000 years, much less 240,000. Currently, many nuclear power plants in the U.S. store these wastes in deep water pools or dry concrete casks. Sabotage, terrorist attacks or earthquakes at one of these sites could release significant amounts of radioactive materials into the troposphere, contaminating large areas for decades……………………………..
America seems to be entering an era of socialistic corporatism. The measures for supporting nuclear energy are much akin to the $700 billion bailout of the financial sector. The government has visibly become an instrument for insuring private profit at public cost.
In reality, nuclear energy in this country is just a zombie kept alive by massive government subsidies.
It’s about time to kill off nuclear energy
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
NT intervention unconstitutional, elders tell court | The Australian
NT intervention unconstitutional, elders tell court
THE AUSTRALIAN Nicola Berkovic | October 03, 2008KEY aspects of the Northern Territory intervention, including the federal Government’s five-year takeover of Aboriginal townships, were unconstitutional, the High Court heard yesterday.
Traditional land owner Reggie Wurridjal and his sister Joy Garlbin, from Maningrida in western Arnhem Land, and the township’s Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation, have mounted a challenge to the intervention launched last year by the Howard government.
They say the forced five-year lease of their land amounted to an acquisition of their property rights and the commonwealth failed to do so on “just terms” as required by the Constitution.
Bawinanga chairman Peter Danaja, who was part of a delegation that travelled to Canberra for the hearing yesterday, said the intervention had “completely stripped” traditional owners of their land rights………………………………The NT Government has intervened in the case to support the group’s argument that the commonwealth must acquire NT property on just terms.
NT intervention unconstitutional, elders tell court | The Australian
Tags: indigenous, aboriginal
Tax Credit Extension Ensures Strong Future for Solar Industry – MarketWatch
Tax Credit Extension Ensures Strong Future for Solar Industry Clear Skies Solar to Benefit from Tax Credit Extension
NEW YORK, Oct 06, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) –Market Watch a leading provider of renewable energy solar solutions, commends Congress for resurrecting the tax credit package that will serve as the lifeblood for the renewable energy industry in the United States. The renewable energy tax credits are seen as a critical step towards bringing the U.S. closer to becoming a progressive leader in the renewable energy industry and competing with the many foreign countries who already have sophisticated renewable energy programs.
Tax Credit Extension Ensures Strong Future for Solar Industry – MarketWatch
Tags: renewables
Perth Independent Media Centre
Proposed Alice Springs Uranium Mine a “Travesty
Perth Indymedia October 6, 2008 – The NT Government has granted miners Cameco & Paladin the right to explore the Angela and Pamela uranium deposits – 25 kilometres south of Alice Springs. The decision prompted two protests over the weekend involving hundreds of people, setting the stage for major confrontation between the uranium mining industry and the wider community.
Perth Independent Media Centre
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
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