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NT uranium royalties legislation goes before Federal Parliament – 04/12/2008

NT uranium royalties legislation goes before Federal ParliamentThursday, ABC Rural News 04/12/2008The Federal Government has introduced a bill to bring uranium royalties in line with other minerals in the Northern Territory.If passed, the Uranium Royalty (Northern Territory) Bill will see mining companies paying 18 per cent of profits, instead of rates determined on a case-by-case basis.It won’t apply to the Territory’s only uranium mine, Ranger, which already has its own rules for royalities.Michael Angwin, from the Australian Uranium Association, says the legislation is important because many other uranium projects are on the cards.”I think what it’s signalling is that the Federal Government recognises that the Northern Territory has a lot of Australia’s uranium that is worth developing, and one of the pieces of the regulatory and policy machinery which needs to be put in place is a royalties regime.”

NT uranium royalties legislation goes before Federal Parliament – 04/12/2008

December 4, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Niagara Gazette – Cleanup at western NY nuke site debated

Cleanup at western NY nuke site debated
NIAGARA GAZETTE Associated PressBy CAROLYN THOMPSON 3 Dec 08 BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) _ Federal energy officials wrestling with the decades-old question of what to do with the West Valley nuclear site are recommending a phased-in approach that would remove contaminated buildings and soil soon, while deferring for up to 30 years the larger question of whether all waste should be removed………………..allows time to further study whether the 3,300-acre site should be completely decontaminated or if buried waste should be closed in and the site managed for generations to come……
……….
it was already being challenged Tuesday by environmentalists, scientists and residents who said complete decontamination of the site 30 miles south of Buffalo is the only safe alternative given its erosion-prone geology.

The biggest concern is that radioactive waste will seep into nearby creeks, make its way into Lake Erie and Lake Ontario and contaminate drinking water supplies.

Niagara Gazette – Cleanup at western NY nuke site debated

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December 3, 2008 Posted by | wastes | Leave a comment

High Court Hears Argument On Power Plants : NPR

High Court Hears Argument On Power Plants
npr by Nina Totenberg

All Things Considered, December 2, 2008 · Utilities want the Supreme Court to reinstate a Bush administration regulation that was overturned by lower courts. The regulation allowed utilities to consider the cost of the cleanest technology and not install it if fails a cost-benefit analysis.

The U.S. Supreme Court hears an important environmental case Tuesday, testing whether utilities must use the best technology available to minimize harm to the nation’s waterways. At issue is the physical impact on fish and the financial impact on companies.

The nation’s 550 power plants use water — lots of water in some instances — that comes from lakes and rivers. Each day, more than 214 billion gallons of water is sucked into power plants across the country. That’s tens of trillions of gallons each year.

The water cools the steam used in the electric generating process. And all the fish and aquatic organisms in the water are killed in the process…………………………

For more than a quarter-century, industry has tried to put a cost-benefit overlay on environmental regulations.

In the past, that effort has often come a cropper in the courts. Now, with the Supreme Court’s new conservative composition, industry thinks it has a good shot at winning — and winning in a way that will affect all environmental regulations.

High Court Hears Argument On Power Plants : NPR

 

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December 3, 2008 Posted by | politics | Leave a comment

Schwarzenegger renews commitment to increasing renewable energy_English_Xinhua

Schwarzenegger renews commitment to increasing renewable energywww.chinaview.cn 2008-12-02  –LOS ANGELES, Dec. 1 (Xinhua) — California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger renewed his commitment on Monday to increasing the state’s renewable energy and reducing carbon emissions.

    The governor made the remarks when announcing the completion of California’s first of 150 planned commercial rooftop solar installations in Southern California.

    “Here in California, we are taking action to protect the environment by passing laws and setting standards and our companies and entrepreneurs are rising to the challenge,” said Schwarzenegger.

    The rooftop plan “is the nation’s largest solar installation program by a utility and it is just one example of how private companies are helping us reduce our emissions and meet our renewable energy goals,” he said.

    “Projects like this one show the world you can protect the environment and also pump up the economy, and I am proud to say it is happening right here in California.”

    Earlier this year, the governor participated in an event launching the plan to install photovoltaic technology to eventually cover two square miles (3.2 kilometers) of existing commercial roofs with 250 million megawatts (MW) of peak generating capacity……………………..As part of the state’s efforts to increase renewable energy, the governor’s Million Solar Roofs Plan, signed into law in 2006, will provide 3,000 megawatts of additional clean energy and reduce the output of greenhouse gases by 3 million tons, equivalent to taking 1 million cars off the road. Now known as the California Solar Initiative, the 3.3-billion-dollar incentive plan for homeowners and building owners who install solar electric systems will lead to 1 million solar roofs in California by 2017.

Schwarzenegger renews commitment to increasing renewable energy_English_Xinhua

December 1, 2008 Posted by | ENERGY | , | Leave a comment

Brantford Expositor – Ontario, CA

The ethics of energy
THE EXPOSITOR By KELLYGASCOIGNE (Canada) 2 Dec 08 “…………………The ethics behind a government’s energy policy can mean a huge change in the impact we are having on the environment and the economy………………………….Nuclear energy produces a large amount of electricity but, at every stage of production, has huge risks. The mining of radioactive materials to power nuclear plants causes waste products to pollute nearby communities. If problems strike — terrorism, natural disaster, a plant malfunction — nuclear power is very dangerous. Look at the effects of Chernobyl.

Even if a nuclear plant functions perfectly during its 30 to 40 year life-span, the radioactive materials being processed must be disposed of as radioactive waste. Eventually, the plant itself becomes radioactive waste. So although nuclear power provides a huge amount of energy while a plant is running, it is prohibitively expensive to build and then dispose of and is environmentally dangerous. Economically nuclear power is very costly……………we are still paying for the debt created by Ontario’s nuclear power plants built years ago. Check out your electricity bill. The “debt retirement charge” on your bill, refers to our repayment of the $35-million overrun……………………… the current plan for the Ontario government is to commit $40 billion to new and expanded nuclear plants.

What would our province’s energy mix look like if instead that $40 billion was spent on alternative, “green” energy production and on conservation? This ethical decision seems clear. For our health now and for many future generations to come alternative energy sources need to be taken seriously.

When the Ontario government is considering buy-outs to help Ontario’s manufacturing sector, maybe ethics should be a part of their decision making and the jobs created should be green jobs. Short-sighted planning is not ethical leadership.

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Brantford Expositor – Ontario, CA

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | , , , | Leave a comment

Panel debates bombing Iran nuclear sites

Panel debates bombing Iran nuclear sites
FinalCall.com News By Ali GharibUpdated Dec 1, 2008, – WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) – At this year’s National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations meeting, much of the focus was on the Arab Middle East’s ethnic Persian neighbor to the east: Iran.

A question-and-answer session of a panel on Iraq and Iran in late October was a microcosm of the chatter around Washington all year long about the ebbing and flowing likelihood of a potential U.S. bombing run against alleged secret Iranian nuclear sites.

No one on the panel—a collection of a statesman, military brass, and experts—thought an attack on Iran was imminent, or even would likely happen in a longer view, but that did not stop the debate about the merits and drawbacks of a U.S. strike.

Panel debates bombing Iran nuclear sites

December 1, 2008 Posted by | weapons and war | , , , | Leave a comment

$1.9 billion push behind wind power | theage.com.au

$1.9 billion push behind wind power

  • The Age Mathew Murphy
  • December 2, 2008

SPANISH wind giant Union Fenosa will spend more than $1.9 billion developing five wind farms in Victoria and two in NSW, in a deal set to create 265 jobs in the initial stages.

Union Fenosa will develop a 130-megawatt, 68-turbine wind farm at Ryan Corner and a 60MW, 31-turbine wind farm in Hawkesdale, both in Moyne Shire in Victoria’s west, as well as a 92MW, 46-turbine farm in Crookwell in NSW. All have received planning approval.

The second phase will include further development of wind farms in western Victoria, with Tarrone, Berrybank and Darlington proposed as potential sites, although these are yet to receive planning approval. The last of the seven projects is at Paling Yards in NSW…………………………….

Trade Minister Simon Crean said the investment, facilitated by Austrade, would double Australia’s wind generation.

“The electricity produced by the first three wind farms in phase one would supply the annual consumption of 186,000 households,” he said.

“On completion in 2013, the seven wind farms will represent an additional 850 megawatts of generation capacity to Australia’s existing wind generation capacity of 824 megawatts.”

Clean Energy Council chief executive Matthew Warren said the investment was “what we can expect once the Government eventually passes its renewable energy target, but that passage is crucial if we are to see deployment of clean-energy technologies.”

$1.9 billion push behind wind power | theage.com.au

December 1, 2008 Posted by | ENERGY | , | Leave a comment

iafrica.com | technology | news | science Climate change heats up

Climate change heats up iafrica.com  By: Marlowe Hood 1 Dec 08 “………………………..

Arctic meltdown……………..When the reflective ice surface retreats, the Sun’s radiation — heat — is absorbed by open water rather than bounced back into the atmosphere, creating a vicious circle of heating.

“We had always known that the Arctic was going to respond first,” said Mark Serreze of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado. “What has us puzzled is that the changes are even faster than we would have thought possible,” he said by phone………………………

Rising oceans New data on the rate at which oceans might rise has also caused consternation.

“The most recent IPCC report was prior to … the measurements of increasing mass loss from Greenland and Antarctica, which are disintegrating much faster than IPCC estimates,” said climatologist James Hansen, head of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York.

Unlike the Arctic ice cap, which floats on water, the world’s two major ice sheets — up to three kilometres thick — sit on land.

Runaway sea level rises, Hansen said, would put huge coastal cities and agricultural deltas in Bangladesh, Egypt and southern China under water, and create hundreds of millions of refugees.

The IPCC’s most recent assessment “did not take into account the potential melting of Greenland, which I think was a mistake,” said Watson, the former IPCC chairman.

Were Greenland’s entire ice block to melt, it would lift the world’s sea levels by almost seven metres, while western Antarctica’s ice sheet holds enough water to add six metres…………………………Atmospheric issues The accelerating concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and signs of the planet’s dwindling ability to absorb them, are also causing some scientists to lose sleep…………………..

One potential source of both gases is frozen tundra in the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions, where temperatures have risen faster than anywhere else on Earth.

“The amount of carbon that is locked up in permafrost that could be released into the atmosphere is just about on a par with the atmospheric load the world has right now,” said Serreze.

These higher concentrations of greenhouse gases come at a time when Earth’s two major “carbon sinks” — forests and especially oceans — are showing signs of saturation.

iafrica.com | technology | news | science Climate change heats up

December 1, 2008 Posted by | climate change, environment | | Leave a comment

APCDF A-Cap Denies Connection to Nuclear Waste Project [interview]

A-Cap Denies Connection to Nuclear Waste Project  (Botswana) Dec 01, 2008 (Mmegi/The Reporter/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX)   — Developers of uranium mines in Serule and Letlhakane, A-Cap Resources of Australia have distanced themselves from the nuclear waste facility that will be built at Pilikwe in Tswapong soon.

The nuclear waste facility is being mooted by the Department of Radiation in the Ministry of Communications, Science and Technology, and environmental impact assessment has already started with the various stakeholders including the villagers at Pilikwe and the surrounding areas.

A-Cap Resources CEO, Andrew Tunks based in Australia, says that although A-Cap plans to start mining in Serule and Letlhakane in 2011, they will not be using the Pilikwe facility but they will develop their own environmental plan.

“Of course we will have storage facilities for any dangerous waste, chemical or water.

The quantification of these hazards is an important part of the environmental study that A-Cap must undertake and submit to the government to get a license to develop the mine………………Botswana, unlike other countries who mine Uranium and produce radio active waste, does not have its own National Nuclear Agency to guide..in …. vital operations. .

APCDF A-Cap Denies Connection to Nuclear Waste Project [interview]

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

AFP: Climate change fight could create many jobs: aid experts

Climate change fight could create many jobs: aid experts9 hours ago DOHA (AFP)  1 Dec 08 — Aid specialists support a claim by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon that efforts to adapt to climate change could create “millions of jobs” if enough funding is available.”There is huge potential,” particularly in developing countries, according to Poonam Ahluwalia, president of Youth Employment Summit, a US-based group which specialises in the creation of sustainable employment for young people.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

The YES campaign, funded by the US government aid programme, Microsoft and Levi Strauss, aims to create two million green employment opportunities by 2012.

“We can no longer view addressing the climate crisis, poverty eradication efforts, and providing employment opportunities for youth in developing countries as separate from each other,” Ahuwalia said.

Dan Timms, senior spokesman for Oxfam, said the organisation is already implementing many climate change adaptation projects which will maintain existing low-energy occupations or create sustainable new jobs.

AFP: Climate change fight could create many jobs: aid experts

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

DALIY TRIUMPH-Pollution (I)

Triumph Newspapers (Nigeria) ZHUL-HAJJ 4, 1429 A.H.
MONDAY
  DECEMBER 1, 2008.
The development of nuclear science introduced radioactive contamination, which can remain lethally radioactive for hundreds of thousands of years. Lake Karachay, named by the Worldwatch Institute as the “most polluted spot” on earth, served as a disposal site for the Soviet Union thoroughout the 1950s and 1960s. Second place may go to the to the area of Chelyabinsk U.S.S.R. (see reference below) as the “Most polluted place on the planet”.
Nuclear weapons continued to be tested in the Cold War, sometimes near inhabited areas, especially in the earlier stages of their development. The toll on the worst-affected populations and the growth since then in understanding about the critical threat to human health posed by radioactivity has also been a prohibitive complication associated with nuclear power. …………the potential for disaster suggested by incidents such as those at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl pose a lingering specter of public mistrust. One legacy of nuclear testing before most forms were banned has been significantly raised levels of background radiation.

DALIY TRIUMPH-Pollution (I)

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Area veterans’ benefits records were mishandled : News-Record.com : Greensboro, North Carolina

Area veterans’ benefits records were mishandledSunday, news-record.com November 30 (updated 7:13 am)By Lex Alexander Winston-Salem’s Department of Veterans Affairs regional office is among at least 41 VA offices nationwide that improperly placed papers in bins to be shredded, records show………………..The papers were described in an Oct. 23 VA conference call as “critical,” meaning the documents were necessary for veterans’ claims to be properly adjudicated. Improper adjudication could keep veterans or their survivors from getting money to which they are entitled……………………

If VA documents were destroyed improperly, it wouldn’t be the first time.

In 1987, a federal court fined the VA $115,000 for purging records of service members who had been exposed to radiation in Japan after World War II and in postwar nuclear tests.

Area veterans’ benefits records were mishandled : News-Record.com : Greensboro, North Carolina

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Foes slam nuclear waste plan | www.tennessean.com | The Tennessean

Foes slam nuclear waste planOak Ridge is among recycling-site optionsBy Anne Paine • THE TENNESSEAN • November 27, 2008

A Bush administration project aimed at reprocessing nuclear waste in a global sharing arrangement is bringing opposition that’s not always from anti-nuclear advocates as public hearings come to Oak Ridge and Paducah next week.

Both of those locations are potential receiving sites for what could be domestic and foreign waste. In the case of Oak Ridge, at least part of the highly radioactive materials could travel through Nashville……………………….

“If you ‘recycle’ plutonium, it doesn’t help at all,” said Professor Frank von Hippel, of the Program on Science and Global Security at Princeton University.

“You still have huge amounts of plutonium in the spent fuel, and you’ve created a lot of new waste streams.”

Von Hippel, unlike some critics of what’s called the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership, is anti-reprocessing but not anti-nuclear.

Foes slam nuclear waste plan | www.tennessean.com | The Tennessean

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Codes for Armageddon: A new president to hold nuclear launch ‘football’ — baltimoresun.com

Codes for Armageddon: A new president to hold nuclear launch ‘football’ Baltimore Sun 30 Nov 08 By David Wood November 30, 2008 “…………………………What awaits the new commander in chief is the weighty responsibility of defending the United States – and a nasty brew of nuclear weapons problems that range from the threat of terrorist attacks to potential new regional and superpower arms races. Iran and North Korea are rushing headlong toward building nuclear arsenals. And the main arms reduction treaty with Russia expires next year.
Those known challenges arise from an unruly world thrown into deeper turmoil by the global financial crisis, a world in which nuclear technology spreads like wildfire and almost 10,000 nuclear weapons could be on alert at any given time.

The risk of nuclear war will grow during the next 20 years, U.S. intelligence officers concluded last week…………….with Obama’s first peek inside the ever-present briefcase. The secure phone nestled inside will connect him to the nuclear command centers at the Pentagon, Colorado Springs and “Site R,” the bunkered emergency command center just over the Maryland border near Blue Ridge Summit, Pa. Through them, the president can reach the 1,300 U.S. strategic nuclear weapons always on alert……………. “The most sober and startling I ever heard,” Ronald Reagan said after his first briefing on the nuclear options – so disturbing that it helped launch him on a quest to abolish nuclear weapons altogether.

Obama has outlined an ambitious plan of tackling many of these issues…………………………The increased nuclear activity “naturally increases the risk that nuclear material could be diverted to make nuclear weapons,” IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei told the United Nations. This year alone, the IAEA has investigated 250 incidents involving the loss or theft of nuclear or radioactive material. Much of it is never recovered, he said.

Codes for Armageddon: A new president to hold nuclear launch ‘football’ — baltimoresun.com

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Simmering nuclear pot awaits Obama – UPI.com

Simmering nuclear pot awaits Obama UPI.com Nov. 30, 2008  WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (UPI) — Analysts are warning that Barack Obama will take over controls of the U.S. nuclear arsenal at a time when the threat of a nuclear war is expected to increase.

Observers say that along with the current spike in tensions between India and Pakistan, the incoming president will have to deal with the expiration of a key arms reduction pact with the Russians next year along with the budding nuclear programs in North Korea and Iran………………..Obama, who has been getting regular intelligence briefings since his election this month, will take over the “football,” the codes that authenticate a nuclear launch order, as soon as he is sworn in on Jan. 20.

Simmering nuclear pot awaits Obama – UPI.com

December 1, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment