http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/Story.asp?Article=237643&Sn=BNEW&IssueID=31269
Nuclear watch
Gulf Daily News 15 Dec 08 By GEOFFREY BEWMANAMA
PREVENTING terrorists from exploiting the nuclear power industry is the biggest challenge facing the Middle East, a top British official said yesterday. Defence Secretary John Hutton said effective international inspection and regulation of the developing sector would be crucial to maintain security and prevent almost certain disaster………………………….he expansion of civil nuclear power also increases the risk of sensitive technologies falling into the wrong hands or being applied for military purposes.
“Nuclear weapons proliferation in the Middle East would be a disaster for regional and global security.”…………….”Nuclear weapons proliferation is a first order security threat that must be dealt with now and not be brushed under the carpet.”
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/Story.asp?Article=237643&Sn=BNEW&IssueID=31269
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Jellyfish: The Jellyfish Are Coming
The jellyfish are coming
13 Dec 08 They are gelatinous, pulsating, tentacled, and sometimes deadly. And they seem to be appearing in ever-increasing swarms across the oceans of the world. In recent years, massive blooms of stinging jellyfish and jellyfish-like creatures have overrun……………And proving that jellyfish can be political animals, knots of jellyfish have done the work of anti-nuclear activists: they have disabled nuclear power plants by clogging intake pipes.
Jellyfish: The Jellyfish Are Coming
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, uranium, radioactive
Goin’ nukular : Sonoma Valley Sun
Goin’ nukular
– Sonoma Valley Sun December 12, 2008 “……………..The use of nuclear power in Europe and other parts of the world is used as reassurance that this form of energy production is safe, reliable and nonpolluting; this in spite of the toxicity of some of the most dangerous substances in the history of mankind.
Plutonium isotopes (the stuff of nuclear weapons), are a common byproduct of nuclear power reactors, as are many other toxic radioactive isotopes. The half-life of plutonium-239 is 24,000 years, which means that in that amount of time, half of the radioactive plutonium concerned would remain. In another 24,000 years, half of that remaining amount would remain, and so forth. In other words, it takes over 200,000 years for plutonium-239 to become fully non-radioactive. Plutonium-242 has a half-life of 376,000 years.
The toxicity of plutonium is enormous. If inhaled into the body, it remains in the lung, liver, bone and bone marrow tissue, where it generates cancerous mutations. Inhalation of as little as a few milligrams is inevitably fatal. Moreover, plutonium is a fissile material, which means it can be used to create a nuclear fission explosion. In the hands of people intent upon making a weapon, it constitutes a major threat to life, and an explosion used to incite terror would likely ignite dire unforeseen circumstances.
At present, the storage and security of fissile materials like plutonium is unresolved. Most “spent” reactor-grade radioactive materials are stored in deep pools of water at the nuclear power stations themselves. Their movement by rail or truck is so controversial and dangerous that protocols for their safe transport and storage remain undeveloped.
A recent EPA report indicates that any nuclear storage facility must be able to provide a secure and inviolable repository for one million years……………….Producing penetrable depositories of deadly substances therefore constitutes a moral failing of the highest order, and accordingly, “goin’ nukular” should be shelved forever.
Goin’ nukular : Sonoma Valley Sun
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
AFP: US refuses Marshalls bid to use aid for nuclear victims
US refuses Marshalls bid to use aid for nuclear victims
MAJURO (AFP) 12 Dec 08 — The US has refused a request by the Marshall Islands to use grant money to compensate victims of the American nuclear weapons testing programme in the western Pacific atoll nation, officials said.The US tested 67 nuclear weapons at Bikini and Enewetak atolls from 1946 to 1958 and a Nuclear Claims Tribunal was set up by the two governments to compensate those displaced or suffering health problems due to the tests.But the 150 million dollars the United States provided for paying settlements ran out three years ago and the US State Department has said there is no obligation to pay more.More than 22 million dollars remains unpaid for personal injury awards and about two billion dollars is outstanding for land damage awards made by the tribunal.
AFP: US refuses Marshalls bid to use aid for nuclear victims
Entergy reduces Vt Yankee reactor due ice storms | Industries | Industrials, Materials & Utilities | Reuters
Entergy reduces Vt Yankee reactor due ice storms
NEW YORK, Dec 12 (Reuters) – Entergy Corp (ETR.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) reduced the output of the 620-megawatt Vermont Yankee nuclear power station in Vermont due to snow and ice storms that have left more than 300,000 customers without power in New England, the company and local utilities said Friday.
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
This is Obama’s chance to leave the world a lasting legacy – Opinion – Editorial – General – The Canberra Times
This is Obama’s chance to leave the world a lasting legacy
12/12/2008 US President-elect Barack Obama has shown he has the power to change hearts and minds. Soon he’ll also have the power to render the planet dead and uninhabitable for the rest of time with just the press of a button.Despite the end of the Cold War, the United States still maintains a supersized arsenal of 10,000 nuclear warheads, more than half of them deployed, and about a quarter of them on hair-trigger alert. They come at a whopping cost of $US50 billion ($A76 billion) a year, roughly the amount needed to pay for universal health care for every US citizen.
Most of America’s nuclear weapons are hundreds of times more powerful than the two atom bombs that obliterated the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Each of them directly threatens global security and human survival. No doubt Barack Obama will find it more than a tad discomforting when, come January, he’s granted this incredible power. Unlike the last three Oval Office occupants, he believes that the world would be better off without nuclear weapons…………………..Commendably, the Australian Labor Party promised before last year’s federal election that in government it would ”drive the international agenda for a nuclear weapons convention”. But it hasn’t followed through, choosing instead to continue the usual mantra of countries with powerful nuclear-armed allies like the US: it’s too soon to be thinking about an abolition treaty……………This October, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon lauded the idea of a new treaty in his UN Day speech, and the Dalai Lama had earlier said that a nuclear weapons convention is ”feasible, necessary and increasingly urgent”. Indeed, if we’re to stop the spread of nuclear weapons and avert nuclear catastrophe elimination through a binding treaty is our only option. Now is the time to pursue it.
All countries have a legal obligation, under the Non-Proliferation Treaty and customary international law, to achieve nuclear disarmament. It cannot be postponed indefinitely. This is the ruling of the world’s highest court, the International Court of Justice……………………………History will judge Barack Obama, the next American leader, by his success or failure on this crucial issue. Ridding the planet of nuclear weapons the ultimate instruments of terror could be his single most important legacy.
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
EDITORIAL: A Jolt of Reality: More Radioactive Waste is Downside to Building Nuclear Power Plants
EDITORIAL: A Jolt of Reality: More Radioactive Waste is Downside to Building Nuclear Power Plants iStock December 11, 2008 Source: Beaver County Times)trackingBy Beaver County Times, Pa.Dec. 11–During the presidential campaign, Republican candidate John McCain pledged to build 45 nuclear reactors by 2030 to meet the nation’s energy needs.With just about everybody but the most ardent of global-warming deniers recognizing the negative impact that coal-fired plants are having on the environment, the proposal was appealing politically because it rolled energy independence and global warming into one package.It also was unrealistic…………….e major factor for going slow on nuclear power is disposing the radioactive waste it generates.
The United States has designated Yucca Mountain in Nevada as a proposed depository for spent fuel, but it is more than a decade away from being up and running, if it ever does at all.
It’s also important to remember that shipping spent fuel to Nevada would raise serious security and safety concerns.
It’s not just the disposal of spent fuel that presents a problem. As The Times reported on Sunday, facilities like the Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Station in Shippingport are having trouble disposing of low-level nuclear waste because a South Carolina landfill has stopped accepting it. (Until another disposal facility can be found, the waste is being stored on site.)
Low-level waste consists of such things as resins used to clean water at power plants and material used to power equipment at university laboratories and hospitals. It differs from high-level nuclear waste such as fuel rods in that the volume and concentration of radioactive isotopes it contains is much lower.
EDITORIAL: A Jolt of Reality: More Radioactive Waste is Downside to Building Nuclear Power Plants
The Associated Press: DOE calls for bigger nuclear waste dump
DOE calls for bigger nuclear waste dump Associated Press By H. JOSEF HEBERT 10 Dec 08 – “……………………….The Yucca Mountain repository, with its statutory capacity limit, is nowhere near adequate for handling all the material expected to be generated by the country’s 104 commercial reactors before they are shut down, the department said.
Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said unless Congress removes the 77,000-ton limit on Yucca Mountain lawmakers will have to approve a search for a second repository. As many as nine potential waste sites had been looked at before Congress in 1987 declared that only the Nevada site should be considered…………………..Nearly 64,000 tons of reactor waste is now kept in cooling ponds and concrete storage canisters at commercial power plants, with about 2,200 tons being added every year. The Energy Department said Tuesday that power plants could generate as much as 143,000 tons over their extended operating life. The Yucca Mountain site also would have to accommodate defense-related reactor waste………………………
The department submitted an application for a permit to build and operate Yucca Mountain to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission earlier this year. The commission has four years to act on the proposal. If a permit is approved on schedule the Yucca site could begin taking waste by 2020.
Nevada officials have vigorously fought the Yucca project, arguing that the site is not the best place to put material that will remain highly radioactive for up to a million years.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has vowed to starve the project of funds.
The Associated Press: DOE calls for bigger nuclear waste dump
Nipawin Journal – Saskatchewan, CA
Revisiting nuclear power waste of time and resources I am very concerned about the possible nuclear reactor in Saskatchewan,……………………….Nipawin Journal Jacqueline Swiderski 11 Dec 08 There is no safe storage option for uranium products and wastes. Radium, radon gas, and polonium are highly radioactive byproducts. Storage methods are at best controversial and at worst responsible for death and a toxic legacy for generations.
Mining poses serious health risks. Radon gas is a known cancer-causing agent. Uranium mining can poison water sources. Reactors need a lot of water. They, too, can leak radioactive substances into both watersheds and ground water. We cannot even know until it is too late, because radioactivity cannot be detected by our senses. We cannot see it, smell it, hear it, or feel it. There is no such thing as clean nuclear power. All parts of the nuclear processes pose serious hazards.
The uranium industry and our politicians are trying to trick us by dangling jobs as a carrot to entice us into allowing a reactor. There is absolutely no value for people to be employed if the jobs cause their suffering and death. We as a society, can’t even remove oil from the tar sands without causing tremendous devastation to our earthly home. Oil sands wastes pose relatively passive and benign problems to the earth, compared to uranium.
Editorial: A chilling poser on nuke option
A chilling poser on nuke option Business Mirror, Philippines, 12 Dec 08 “………………………….The United States lost even more of what remained of its appetite for nuclear energy soon after September 11, 2001. The nuke threat America now faces comes not from a rival superpower, but from terrorist groups and even disgruntled kooks…………………..authorities have arrested an American suspected of trying to develop a nuke-spiked “dirty” bomb while there have been dozens of reported cases of attempted theft and sales of nuclear and radioactive material. Multinational forces have reportedly discovered a diagram for a nuclear device at an Al-Qaeda safe house in Kabul.The problem with nuclear power is that the ingredients required to generate electricity and those needed to manufacture a weapon are essentially the same.In a country whose authorities cannot be trusted to keep under detention some of Southeast Asia’s most notorious cross-border terrorists, anxiety over our ability to secure a nuclear plant from pilferage, sabotage and attack will persist…………………Foreign surveys say the Philippines is Asia’s most corrupt country and the second-most corrupt in the world.
SunPower to Build Largest Solar Power Tracking System in Australia – MarketWatch
SunPower to Build Largest Solar Power Tracking System in Australia Market Watch BELMONT, Australia,
12/11/2008
Sun Power Corporation a manufacturer of high-efficiency, solar cells, solar panels, and solar systems, today announced an agreement to build a 505-kilowatt solar power installation for Horizon Power, a government-owned company providing power to remote and regional communities and resource operations in Western Australia. The ground-mounted installation will be located on two sites in Marble Bar and Nullagine, in the east Pilbara region of Western Australia, and will be the largest solar tracking system in Australia……….
“Western Australia is one of the best locations on Earth to capture the power of the sun,” said Bob Blakiston, managing director of SunPower Australia. “The SunPower systems that we build on these sites will maximize the clean, renewable solar power generated for Horizon Power and the communities the company serves.”SunPower will install SunPower solar tracking technology on the sites, which will maximize the solar plant’s energy delivery, while optimizing land use and reducing related costs.
SunPower to Build Largest Solar Power Tracking System in Australia – MarketWatch
I’ll take West Australian native land: Barnett | The Australian
I’ll take West Australian native land: Barnett THE AUSTRALIAN Amanda O’Brien, WA political reporter | December 11, 2008 WEST Australian Premier Colin Barnett has used a speech to 500 business leaders to reveal he will forcibly acquire land from Aboriginal people in the Kimberley to provide a site for a major gas-processing precinct…………..Kimberley Land Council executive director Wayne Bergman said the announcement was heavy-handed and objectionable and he was seeking legal advice………………
“It’s no surprise that the most disadvantaged people are being put further under pressure for big business. It’s been a consistent message from the Premier.”
Mr Barnett told the business audience that his Government would be “unashamedly pro-development”. It would be a theme in everything he did.
I’ll take West Australian native land: Barnett | The Australian
Mining boom&squo;s last echo | Herald Sun
Mining boom’s last echo
December 11, 2008 12:00am
THE September quarter could well go down in history as the final chapter of the commodities boom,……………….Among those that suffered large slides were nickel (down 63 per cent to $355 million), diamonds (down 30 per cent to $110 million), petroleum products (down 17 per cent to $199 million) and uranium (down 13 per cent to $148 million).
Family to sue govt over radioactive home – Breaking News – National – Breaking News
Family to sue govt over radioactive home
The Age 11 Dec 08 The owner of a Sydney property riddled with radioactive waste says he has no choice but to sue the NSW government after it failed to honour a commitment to buy the home.
Peter Vassiliou bought the Hunters Hill property in 2001, after being told the health department had cleared the site of contamination from a uranium smelter used in the 1910s.
Concerns about radiation levels at homes on Nelson Parade were raised again earlier this year, prompting a parliamentary inquiry…………………..the waterfront home in Sydney’s north is reported to have cost $4.65 million.”Our house is basically unliveable now. We’ve really got nowhere to live,” Mr Vassiliou said
It found sections of the street needed to be remediated – especially the Vassiliou property at number 11 – before the area would be safe for residential occupation.
Family to sue govt over radioactive home – Breaking News – National – Breaking News
Australian nuclear research group acquires two cyclotrons – Related Stories – SNM SmartBrief
Australian nuclear research group acquires two cyclotronsSNM SmartBrief | 12/11/2008The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organization has installed two cyclotrons that will produce short-lived radiopharmaceuticals used in PET scanners to diagnose and treat cancer and other diseases. “The twin cyclotron facility will ensure there is a duplication of quality systems and processes to guarantee delivery of these important radiopharmaceuticals to hospitals and research facilities at the required dose,” an ANSTO spokeswoman said. St. George and Sutherland Shire Leader (Australia) (12/11)
Australian nuclear research group acquires two cyclotrons – Related Stories – SNM SmartBrief
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