Increased investment in UK renewable energy creating jobs
Renewable energy creating mass opportunities for manufacturing » Conveying News, 25 May 2010, Britain’s manufacturing industries will benefit greatly from the transition to renewable and sustainable energy sources.That is according to the Renewable Energy Centre, which states that increased investment in the sector is creating employment opportunities and cross-industry business.”Undoubtedly with more renewables being planned and implemented, a new set of skills and manufacturing opportunities come with it which, in turn, can only have a positive effect on the British economy,” a spokesperson said.They went on to say that it is vital the new government continues to support the industry in order to ensure it is given room to grow and embrace the opportunities available for expansion.According to targets set out in the Low Carbon Transition Plan, a report from the Department of Energy and Climate Change, 1.2 million people are to be emplyed in ‘green jobs’ by 2020.
Falsifying records – a world wide feature of the nuclear industry
Then there’s the cover-up, deception and fraud. Workers at the UK’s Sellafield nuclear facility falsified safety records. Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power Company falsified safety records. Falsified records. Falsified records. Falsified records. Falsified records.
More nuclear history repeating | Greenpeace International, 4 June 2010, The news coming out about nuclear power can read merely like a series of isolated, unconnected events. But if you read the nuclear news often, as we do, patterns start to form.A story from one part of the world is horribly similar to another from somewhere else. The nuclear industries around the world seem to have a shared behaviour that emerges when you take a step back. Continue reading
Occupational health danger at Hanford nuclear facility
Workers … may develop chronic beryllium disease, an incurable and often debilitating lung disease, if they breath in fine particles of the metal
Hanford workers need more prevention against berylium disease, Yakima Herald By ANNETTE CARYTRI 3 June 2010, RICHLAND, Wash. — Hanford needs to do more to prevent chronic beryllium disease in its workers, moving more quickly and aggressively to implement a new protection program, according to the report on a three-month investigation released Wednesday. Continue reading
Australian Aboriginals’ legal challenge to planned nuclear waste dump
Aboriginal group challenges planned nuclear dump in court, Sydney Morning Herald LINDSAY MURDOCH DARWIN, June 4, 2010 ABORIGINAL traditional owners have initiated a Federal Court legal challenge to plans by the federal government to build Australia’s first national radioactive waste dump near Tennant Creek, in the Northern Territory. Continue reading
Oyster Creek nuclear plant ordered to clean up radioactive water leak
N.J. orders Oyster Creek nuclear plant to beef up water monitoring after leak, NJ.com, By Brian T. Murray/The Star-LedgerJune 03, 2010, he state Department of Environmental Protection invoked the state’s “Spill Act” today, ordering the Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station to drill new test wells, increase monitoring on existing wells and review its data on tritium contamination around the Lacey Township plant. The tests are part of a new monitoring plan ordered by DEP Commissioner Bob Martin, who has been pushing Exelon Generation Co., the Illinois-based owner of the electrical generating facility, to expedite a cleanup of the tritium pollution discovered more than a year ago……. Continue reading
Uranium mining and polonium: remember Litvinenko
Roxby’s radioactive risk, The Independent Weekly. HENDRIK GOUT04 Jun, 2010 “…….Litvinenko was a high-ranking Soviet intelligence operative who turned against the KGB over a range of political assassinations he said had been carried out by the spy agency.He was then murdered, almost certainly by a former KGB colleague acting – so Litvinenko alleged before he died – on the implicit orders of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The murder weapon was polonium-210, a radioactive metalloid and one of the most toxic elements known to science – a quarter of a million times more toxic than cyanide. A particle weighing less than one-hundredth of one microgram (about the weight of a single scale on a butterfly’s wing) is a lethal dose. Continue reading
Pakistan’s nuclear weapons arsenal
Pakistan has 60 nuclear warheads, Gulf Times, 4 June 2010, Pakistan has at least 60 nuclear warheads and with two new plutonium reactors nearing completion in Khushab in Punjab, its weapons grade plutonium production will jump seven-fold, according to the latest figures released by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. “Our conservative estimates are that Pakistan has 60 warheads and can produce 100 nuclear weapons at short notice,” the SIPRI report released this week in its latest annual report. The report claimed that Pakistan is developing an air-launched cruise missile Ra’ad and has also carried out four tests of its land-launched subsonic cruise missile Babar.
Gulf Times – Qatar’s top-selling English daily newspaper – Pakistan/Afghanistan
Full body scanning linked to skin cancer
How flying can harm your health | mytraveladventure.com.au 4 June 2010, Full-body scanner cancer link Some scientists fear radiation from the controversial “naked” full-body airport scanners has been dangerously underestimated and could increase the risk of skin cancer.University of California biochemist David Agard says that unlike other scanners, the radiation from these devices is delivered at low energy beam levels, with most of the dose concentrated in the skin and underlying tissue.David Brenner, the head of Columbia University’s Centre for Radiological Research, says the radiation dose to the skin is actually 20 times higher than the official estimate.The devices are scheduled to be rolled out across Australia next year How flying can harm your health | mytraveladventure.com.au
Burma starting on the road to nuclear weapons
Report says Burma is taking steps toward nuclear weapons program By Joby Warric Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, June 4, 2010 Burma has begun secretly acquiring key components for a nuclear weapons program, including specialized equipment used to make uranium metal for nuclear bombs, according to a report that cites documents and photos from a Burmese army officer who recently fled the country.
The smuggled evidence shows Burma’s military rulers taking concrete steps toward obtaining atomic weapons, according to an analysis co-written by an independent nuclear expert. But it also points to enormous gaps in Burmese technical know-how and suggests that the country is many years from developing an actual bomb.
The analysis, commissioned by the dissident group Democratic Voice of Burma, concludes with “high confidence” that Burma is seeking nuclear technology, and adds: “This technology is only for nuclear weapons and not for civilian use or nuclear power.”
Report says Burma is taking steps toward nuclear weapons program
Uncertain future for industry related to nuclear power
Loan to Sheffield Forgemasters being reviewed – minister LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) – A loan granted by Britain’s last government to a steelworks company to help it build a manufacturing facility for the nuclear industry is under review, the new business minister said on Thursday. Continue reading
Vermont Yankee’s history of nuclear problems and radiation leaks
Latest leak at Vermont Yankee didn’t occur “overnight” | Vtdigger.org, by Anne Galloway on June 1, 2010, Vermont Yankee is leaking radioactive liquid again — two months after the first two leaks found at the plant in January were repaired.Larry Smith, spokesman for Vermont Yankee, made the announcement on Saturday.The original leaks of tritium, a radioactive isotope, were discovered at the 680-megawatt nuclear power plant in Vernon on Jan. 7.
The latest leak comes on the heels of other problems for the 38-year-old reactor on the banks of the Connecticut River. Continue reading
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