Public cut out of Yankee info: Rutland Herald Online
Public cut out of Yankee info
RUTLAND HERALD October 16, 2008By REP. SARAH EDWARDS In the midst of all the events occurring at Entergy Nuclear-Vermont Yankee over the past several months, you may be wondering why there have been no meetings or comments coming from the Vermont State Nuclear Advisory Panel (VSNAP). I can say that as an appointed legislative member of the panel, I am also concerned about this situation.One of the statutory obligations (Title 18,Ch.34, 1700) of the panel is to hold regular public meetings for the purpose of discussing issues relating to the present and future use of nuclear power, and advising the Legislature and the governor………………………………………There has been little or no communication from the department to VSNAP. The types of communiqués VSNAP has received from the department over the past several months are forwarded generic Nuclear Regulatory Commission messages such as “NRC Names New Resident Inspector at Palisades Nuclear Power Plant” and “NRC Schedules Meeting in Lynchburg To Discuss BWXT Nuclear Fuel Plant Performance.” Rarely, if ever, do we receive any update related to Vermont Yankee.
Public cut out of Yankee info: Rutland Herald Online
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Former officer hired to spy | theage.com.au
Former officer hired to spy
The Age Richard Baker and Nick McKenzie October 17, 2008 THE owners of Australia’s biggest uranium mines paid a former undercover Victoria Police officer to infiltrate environment and Aboriginal groups in Melbourne.The former police intelligence unit officer, known as Mehmet, was hired by North Ltd — before its takeover by Rio Tinto in late 2000 — and US nuclear and defence giant General Atomics to spy on Friends of the Earth, Jabiluka Action Group, Nuclear Free Australia, radio station 3CR and radical Melbourne bookstore Barricade Books.
Mehmet first infiltrated the Jabiluka Action Group and Friends of the Earth in 1998 as part of an undercover police operation. It is not known why police chose to infiltrate and monitor the groups, though both were involved in anti-uranium protests………………………………..Deputy Police Commissioner Simon Overland told The Age it was a breach of the Police Regulations Act for an officer to use a covert identity after leaving the force or to use information gathered in the course of official duties for private gain.
“It’s a criminal offence and we would take that very seriously………………………….
Friends of the Earth spokesman Cam Walker said there was no justification for police infiltration of the group in the late 1990s, especially as it was already holding regular meetings with the police intelligence unit at the time to discuss its campaigns.
Mr Walker said it was unethical for mining companies to pay the former undercover officer to continue to spy on groups opposed to uranium mining.
Former officer hired to spy | theage.com.au
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Economic climate ‘turning more businesses green’
Economic climate ‘turning more businesses green’
edie.net.news Businesses are still queuing up to reduce their energy use and carbon emissions despite the current economic downturn.One carbon management and offsetting firm has found that demand for its services is actually increasing despite dire warnings about the state of the economy.
Mike Rigby, director of CO2 Balance, told delegates at the Energy Solutions Expo – part of Working Buildings 2008 – in London, that more and more firms were seeking out his company’s help as a well to help them stand out from the competition.
“There’s quite a move to get a competitive edge at the moment,” he said.
Economic climate ‘turning more businesses green’
Tags: renewables
Renewable energy to be future cornerstone – Minister – The Irish Times – Thu, Oct 16, 2008
Renewable energy to be future cornerstone – Minister
Irish Times LORNA SIGGINS & GENEVIEVE CARBERY16 Oct 08RENEWABLE ENERGY and energy efficiency rather than nuclear power is the “cornerstone of our energy future”, Minister for Energy Eamon Ryan said last night.
Renewable energy would provide a sustainable and secure energy supply as well as creating jobs, Mr Ryan said ahead of a debate on nuclear energy at Trinity College Dublin last night.
The commitment to 40 per cent renewables by 2020 announced by Minister for the Environment John Gormley yesterday recognised the “economic opportunities and advantages we have as a country in the renewable area”.
Tags: renewables, nuclear
Pahrump Valley Times – Nye County’s Largest Newspaper Circulation
Nevada sues over radiation standards
Pahrumo Valley Times By STEVE TETREAULT
STEPHENS WASHINGTON BUREAU 15 Oct 08WASHINGTON — It was back to court for Nevada Friday when Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto filed a federal lawsuit asking judges to throw out new radiation limits for the Yucca Mountain project.
The radiation exposure standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency will fail to protect Nevadans “from cancer-causing radioactive contamination” if nuclear waste is buried at the site, Masto said……………………..The new EPA standard once again fails to protect the health and safety of Nevada citizens, and the environment,” said Masto. “EPA has obviously worked closely with DOE to adjust its radiation standard in an attempt to steamroll this project through licensing, but has failed to protect Nevadans from cancer-causing radioactive contamination.
“DOE’s own data shows that water infiltration will corrode nuclear waste packages and radioactivity will inevitably leak into Nevada’s groundwater, delivering lethal doses of radiation to the public and irreparably contaminating the groundwater.
“Instead of working to protect the health and safety of Nevadans and striving to find reasonable solutions to the nation’s nuclear waste problem, EPA and DOE are ignoring science in favor of a project which presents unacceptable risks to the public and presents American taxpayers with a $90 billion dollar liability they can ill afford,” she concluded…………………….The Nevada lawsuit challenges the EPA setting separate “near term” and “long term” radiation limits for people who may live near the repository site thousands of years into the future.
Pahrump Valley Times – Nye County’s Largest Newspaper Circulation
Tags: nuclear
A president with an energy plan – Los Angeles Times
A president with an energy plan
Neither nuclear nor ‘clean coal’ will solve the crisis.
Los Angeles Times, Editorial 15 Oct 08 “,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,meeting our energy challenges will remain among the most important concerns of the next president.That’s why it’s doubly disappointing that neither Barack Obama nor John McCain has a responsible energy plan. In pandering to voters in swing states, both have backed dangerous, dirty energy sources in contradiction of their own principles……………………………………there’s “safe nuclear,” a phrase as oxymoronic as “clean coal” that both candidates like to toss around. Nuclear waste remains toxic for millenniums, and no one has figured out a sufficiently permanent way of storing it. McCain’s plan to build 45 nuclear plants by 2030 is either disingenuous or naive. Because the nation’s existing plants are crumbling, they will have to be decommissioned as fast as new ones can be built, making it unlikely that there would be a net increase in nuclear power even if McCain’s goal could be met. Moreover, private investors have no interest in building nuclear plants unless they receive generous subsidies and taxpayer-backed loans, yet the Congressional Budget Office considers such loans so risky that “well above 50%” of them would default. Nuclear power isn’t just environmentally irresponsible, it’s fiscally irresponsible…………………………….Our power supply might never be completely clean, but we’ve barely scratched the surface of what could be done to improve energy efficiency and raise the share of renewable power. Clean power would create jobs for American workers and innovations that could be sold around the world, while greater efficiency would lower consumers’ energy bills by cutting demand………………………………Obama and McCain are both well informed about environmental matters, and either would be a vast improvement over Bush. But the next president needs to be more than knowledgeable. He needs to have the political courage to demand change — and possibly even sacrifice. Obama has shown little of this kind of courage so far, but McCain has shown still less.
A president with an energy plan – Los Angeles Times
Tags: nuclear
Australia, Insurance and Transport, Regulation Of Direct Offshore Foreign Insurers – Further Developments – Deacons – 15/10/2008, Insurance
Australia: Regulation Of Direct Offshore Foreign Insurers – Further Developments
mondaq.com 15 October 2008
Article by Leisa Mikkelsen – “…………………………………….Unless an exemption applies, it will be an offence for a DOFI to carry on insurance business in Australia without being authorised under the Insurance Act and thereby become subject to Australia’s prudential regime.
The Government has now formulated a number of limited exemptions. These are effected in the Insurance Amendment Regulations 2008 (Cth) which amends the Insurance Regulations 2002 (Cth). The changes were implemented on 1 July 2008 to coincide with the Amending Act……………………………The second exemption is for ‘atypical risks’. Atypical risks are defined in the Regulations to be policies which provide cover for loss or liability arising from the hazardous properties of nuclear fuel, material or waste,
Tags: nuclear
Ritter: Colo. renewable energy jobs total 90,000 – Examiner.com
Ritter: Colo. renewable energy jobs total 90,000
NATIONAL EXAMINER Oct 14, 2008 DENVER (Map, News) – Gov. Bill Ritter says the growth in renewable energy and energy efficiency that his administration has promoted is paying off economically, having generated about 90,000 jobs in Colorado.Those are the preliminary figures from a new state study that says those industries have generated about 40,000 jobs directly and 50,000 indirectly, Ritter announced Tuesday during a renewable energy conference.
Ritter: Colo. renewable energy jobs total 90,000 – Examiner.com
Tags: renewables
Report: Ecoconsciousness can help win wars | csmonitor.com
Report: Ecoconsciousness can help win wars
By Mark Clayton| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor/ October 14, 2008 edition – “………………US Army commanders typically overlook environmental concerns in plans for operations overseas, says a new RAND Corporation study
The conclusion: The US Army succeeds better when it’s a deeper shade of green……………………..
Commissioned by the Army Environmental Policy Institute (AEPI), the study examined the role environmental considerations and issues play in the Army’s “contingency operations” – long-term missions abroad that may involve conflict.
By being sensitive to environmental concerns, US Army can win hearts and minds of populace, but its record is spotty so far.
The RAND study refers only briefly to depleted uranium rounds. Past Monitor reports have found that using DU-tipped weapons to destroy enemy armor creates radioactive dust – as it has in Bosnia and in Iraq – that threatens soldiers and civilians. Some US veterans claim they were contaminated by DU residue.
Report: Ecoconsciousness can help win wars | csmonitor.com
Tags: nuclear
Old dog, nuke tricks | Gristmill: The environmental news blog | Grist
Environment America says McCain’s nuclear expansion would be ‘an economic disaster’
BVGrist by Kate Sheppard 14 Oct 2008Environment America today released a new report looking at the environmental implications of John McCain’s plan to build 45 new nuclear reactors by 2030, and 100 over time. Their report concludes that McCain’s plan would be “an economic and environmental disaster.”
Environment America, which has endorsed Democrat Barack Obama in the presidential election, found that the 45 reactors would cost taxpayers $315 billion, because most of the funding would have to come from taxpayer-backed federal loans. They also found that expanding the nuclear industry would create less than a quarter of the 700,000 that McCain promised in the first presidential debate. And since the Nuclear Energy Institute, the industry’s trade association, estimates that it takes about 10 years to bring a new nuclear power plant online, it would do little for short-term energy concerns. Nuclear power is also resource-intensive — 45 nuclear power plants would use between 200 billion to 350 billion gallons of water per year. And, of course, there are the outstanding concerns about safety, storage, and disposal…………………………..
Their report concludes that McCain’s nuclear plan “fails to take advantage of cleaner, cheaper alternatives” like wind and solar, which “can deliver more energy much sooner than building new nuclear power plants, and create more jobs at a lower cost to taxpayers — without the risks.”
Old dog, nuke tricks | Gristmill: The environmental news blog | Grist
Tags: nuclear
NRC gets earful in hearing on VY problems – Boston.com
NRC gets earful in hearing on VY problems
boston.com October 14, 2008 BRATTLEBORO, Vt.—Officials from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission tried on Tuesday to reassure local residents that recent problems with the cooling towers at the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant are not symptomatic of the rest of the plant…………………..
NRC officials held a press briefing followed by a public meeting Tuesday to share their findings about sagging and leaking that occurred in the cooling towers in July. The session followed last week’s release of an NRC inspection report giving Vermont Yankee a mild scolding for how it had responded to earlier problems in the towers………………….The NRC drew the same sort of skepticism from Rep. Sarah Edwards, P-Brattleboro, who attended Tuesday’s session.
“I felt it was important to show up because I don’t feel that what the public says has much impact or really has been heard,” she said. She complained that when they come to public hearings in Vermont, federal regulators often seem to be going through the motions. “It’s a box they have to check off.”
NRC gets earful in hearing on VY problems – Boston.com
Tags: nuclear
Rio looks to rebuild confidence | smh.com.au
Rio looks to rebuild confidence
Sydney Morning HeraldJamie Freed October 15, 2008 RIO Tinto’s chief executive, Tom Albanese, will today attempt to shore up market confidence in the miner’s decision to reject a hostile bid from BHP Billiton amid a worsening outlook for key commodities.
After the release of Rio’s quarterly report this afternoon, he will also be required to address concerns his company will not meet its target of $US7 billion ($10.4 billion) of additional asset sales by the end of the year because of poor market conditions…………………………Rio’s uranium subsidiary, Energy Resources of Australia, yesterday lowered its annual production guidance from a previous range of 5400 to 5900 tonnes to a level “expected to approach” 5400 tonnes.
Bloomberg.com: Australia & New Zealand
Paladin Says Crunch May Scupper Some Uranium Projects By Jesse RiseboroughOct. 15 (Bloomberg) — Paladin Energy Ltd., the Australian company producing uranium in Namibia, said the global credit crisis will delay or scupper planned industry projects, cutting supplies of the nuclear fuel.“The impact of the credit tightness on the supply side of the uranium business will probably cause the deferral or cancellation of some planned uranium projects,” Perth-based Paladin said today in a statement.The worst U.S. financial crisis since the Great Depression has made banks more reluctant to lend money, raising global borrowing costs. JPMorgan Chase & Co. last week cut its uranium price forecast through to 2010, citing the potential for the freeze to slow nuclear power project development.The credit crunch will also “reduce the money available for exploration companies, which will only exacerbate the supply- demand imbalance in the future,” Paladin said.
Paladin dropped 3 cents, or 13 percent to A$2.27 at 10:23 a.m. Sydney time on the Australian stock exchange. It’s dropped 67 percent this year.
October 12, 2008
Black Day Observed Against Nuclear Deal
People’s Democracy October 12, 2008 ON the day she arrived in India to seal the strategic, uneven relationship with the country, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice faced black-flag protests from people across the country demanding her to go back. The protestors also warned the love-blind prime minister Manmohan Singh not to mortgage India’s sovereignty to US imperialism by signing the India-US nuclear deal. The protests were held under the aegis of CPI(M), CPI, TDP, JD(S), Forward Bloc and RSP.
As Condoleezza Rice and Indian foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee were meeting in the palatial Hyderabad House to – in the words of Rice herself –“to talk about the next steps in the US-India relationship” hundreds of protestors marched on their meeting venue from the nearby Mandi House. Shouting loud slogans Jo Bush ke saath hai, woh desh ka dushman hai (The one who is with Bush is an enemy of the nation), Desh se gaddhaari nahi chalegi (We will not allow this betrayal of nation) the protestors led by leaders Sitaram Yechury (CPI-M), D Raja (CPI), Mysoora Reddy (TDP), Devarajan (Forward Bloc) and others marched towards Hyderabad House. About a kilometre from the venue of India-US talks, on Kasturba Gandhi Marg, the police erected huge barricades and stopped the protestors……………………..Warning Manmohan Singh about the fate that befell those heads of governments of UK, Italy, Australia, Japan etc who befriended George Bush, Sitaram Yechury asserted that the people of India will deliver a greater blow in the coming elections. He said that this struggle to save our nation from the clutches of US imperialism would be intensified in the coming days all over the country.
Tags: nuclear
newsobserver.com | Nuclear power: the negatives
Nuclear power: the negatives
Oct 14, 2008CARY – Proponents of nuclear power speak of a “nuclear renaissance.” The facts show that rather than a renaissance, we face a nuclear apocalypse, heralded by, instead of the traditional four horsemen, five horsemen: cost, proliferation, risk, waste, and water consumption. Consider them individually: Consider them individually:
COST. In spite of early claims that nuclear power would be “too cheap to meter,” nuclear power started out expensive, requiring large subsidies and loan guarantees from the government, and it has stayed that way. A preliminary estimate for two new 1,000 megawatt nuclear plants proposed by Progress Energy in Florida is $17 billion, and that cost is likely to grow as required revisions to Westinghouse’s AP-1000 advanced reactor design add years to the time before those reactors will be ready for use.
An industry estimate puts the cost of new nuclear power at 14c per kilowatt-hour, and rising — higher than all other sources of energy except solar, whose cost is falling.
Potential financiers of nuclear power remain leery — cost and potential safety problems make the risks of new nuclear power too high.
newsobserver.com | Nuclear power: the negatives
Tags: nuclear
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