Radioactive tritium leaking into Missouri River from Fort Calhoun nuclear plant
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Fort Calhoun Nuclear Plant: How Bad Can It Get?, Hawaii News Daily By Tom Burnett, 17 June 11 Radiation, at minimum in the form of tritium, and more likely other particles and radionuclides, are leaking into the Missouri River from theFort Calhoun nuclear generation plant in Nebraska. …… http://hawaiinewsdaily.com/2011/06/fort-calhoun-how-bad-can-it-get/
Japanese govt must deal with the justifiable fears of nuclear plant communities
Are earthquake-resistance capabilities of nuclear power plants, including surrounding facilities, adequate?
Local governments that host nuclear power plants are refusing to agree to the resumption of operations of reactors that have completed their routine inspections.
Government must address local anxieties over nuclear plants, Asahi Shimbun, 2011/06/18, The central government has to seriously listen to the voices of local governments and swiftly re-examine the standards for resumption of operations by taking into consideration the damages from the March 11 disasters.
What is needed in advancing work is close attention to “the worst case.” Up to now, operations of nuclear power plants were based on the assumption that “accidents do not occur.” As far as Fukushima is concerned, damage has been caused not only by the tsunami, but also the earthquake. Continue reading
Another nuclear crisis would wipe out investment in uranium
While currently abandonment of nuclear power remains an option limited to affluent countries, one more cataclysm may nail the coffin lid of the nuclear power industry shut for good…., as another nuclear debacle in the U.S. following in the wake 1979’s Three Mile Island accident will undoubtedly prove too much, even for Madison Ave.’s PR spin doctors. No NPPS have been built in the U.S. since Three Mile Island and should bad things happen at Ft. Calhoun, where the Missouri’s water’s are still rising, the global market for uranium fuel for NPPs worldwide is going to crater, beginning with the U.S.
Kazakhstan’s Uranium Industry Could Lose Its Luster, By. John Daily, OilPrice.com, 18 June 11-– What a difference a year and a tsunami make!
Western investors have been salivating over the post-Soviet space’s energy riches since the 1991 collapse of communism. While focusing on the Caspian’s hydrocarbon reserves other mineralogical riches awaited development as well, none more so than Kazakhstan’s vast uranium deposits. Continue reading
$10,000 ‘gifts’ for each lawmaker’s Paris jaunt, from Virginia Uranium
The trips, which are permissible under state law, are reported as gifts…..
Virginia Uranium Inc. picking up tab for trip to France for state lawmakers, Washington Post By Associated Press, : June 17 RICHMOND, Va. — A company that wants to mine a uranium deposit in Southside Virginia is picking up the tab for a trip to France by more than a dozen state legislators who will have a say in whether the state ends a ban on uranium mining. Continue reading
Some Japanese mothers rebel against complacency about Fukushima radiation
Japan has long been a country that values consensus – and thus it’s particularly trying for mothers who are speaking out against the very system that’s responsible for educating their children. Most have invested in their own dosimeters, as the local government is not providing daily radiation readings.

The Geiger Club: Mothers Bust Silent Radiation Consensus, WSJ, By Mariko Sanchanta, 18 June 11″…….Some, who were due in March or April, gave birth overseas or as far away from Tokyo as possible. Most expat wives and their young kids left Japan, leaving their husbands here. Continue reading
Ashok Parthasarathi on the myth of cheap, ‘clean’, nuclear energy
such waste disposal applies not only to nuclear electrocuting reactors but also the “tailings” from uranium mines and mills which produce the basic material for making the fresh uranium fuel rods that feed the reactors but also in the process of reprocessing the used or ‘spent’ fuel coming out of the reactors and containing the deadliest and most dangerous plutonium. Human ingestion of even one billionth of a gram of plutonium leads to death.
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Renewable energy is the future, not nuclear, Business Standard, Ashok Parthasarathi / June 19, 2011 There are recurring slippages in the timescales of setting up nuclear power plants, particularly imported ones. Inevitably, there are cost over-runs too.
Nuclear power is often referred to as a ‘clean’, safe, economically cost-effective and environmentally benign source of electric power. This is incorrect. It is not ‘clean’ because it generates large quantities of highly radioactive solid and liquid wastes. The liquid wastes can be treated to bring them to set levels and then discharged into the environment. However, even after extensive multi-level treatment, the solid wastes leave a considerable amount of residues of long-life nuclear isotopes.
These have first to be loaded into thick walled lead containers, the containers hermetically sealed by a special technique, ‘vitrified’ and then buried deep in hard rock cavities in shafts of disused metaliferous or coal mines, making sure that the shafts are free of water ingress. Such storage has to be for several decades. This whole process is technically demanding and expensive but has to be done to ensure human and ecological safety. Popular accounts of nuclear reactors seldom bring out these issues.
But such waste disposal applies not only to nuclear electrocuting reactors but also the “tailings” from uranium mines and mills which produce the basic material for making the fresh uranium fuel rods that feed the reactors but also in the process of reprocessing the used or ‘spent’ fuel coming out of the reactors and containing the deadliest and most dangerous plutonium. Human ingestion of even one billionth of a gram of plutonium leads to death. So, all reprocessing plants are almost totally robotised.
Then there is the elaborate process and equipment involved in continuously cooling the ‘core’ of the reactor while the reactor is in operation. When an accident occurs, affecting the cooling system, as happened in two reactors of the Fukushima nuclear power in Japan in March, the core becomes so hot (2,000 degrees C) that the highly radioactive core melts and the molten core falls to the bottom of the reactor, punctures the heavy steel containment vessel and seeps into the reactor’s foundation and then into the ground beneath, contaminating any ground water present. All this is not a gory hypothetical scenario. It actually happened at Fukushima.
To steeply reduce the probability of such events, modern nuclear reactors have ‘traps’ at the base of the containment vessel, to prevent the kind of puncturing described above. Whether such ‘traps’ will be near-100 per cent effective, only time will tell.
It is well-known that because of the technology involved, nuclear power reactors are intrinsically highly capital-intensive. When one adds the protective technology and equipment, as well as the waste treatment technology and equipment described above, the capital costs go through the roof. Thus the capital cost of the ‘latest’ European Power Reactor (EPR) which the French firm Areva is to set up at Jaitapur in Maharashtra is around Rs 20 crore per Mw, compared to Rs 15 crore for solar power and Rs 6-7 crore per Mw for wind power. Such capital cost levels, in turn, take the cost of nuclear power to Rs 7-8 per KWh (or unit of power generated), making the reactors totally uneconomic.
Then there is the problem of recurring slippages in the time scales of setting up nuclear power plants, particularly imported ones. For example, the two 1,000 Mw Russian reactors coming up at Kudankulam in Tamil Nadu are already four years behind schedule, provided they are actually commissioned in 2011 and 2012, as the Nuclear Power Corporation claims they will be. The four Areva 1,650 Mw EPRs — one each in France and Finland, and two in China — are also four years behind schedule, with no firm commissioning dates indicated by Areva as of now.
As a result, the plant in Finland came close to being cancelled by the Finnish government about two years ago. This is despite all four, like the Kudankulam plant, being set up on a turnkey basis by the foreign suppliers involved. These time over-runs, which have for example taken the Kudankulam plants to a total construction time of 11 and 12 years, inevitably lead to huge cost over-runs as well.
Areva is now promising that the first two EPRs at Jaitapur will be commissioned in 2017-18. But what credence can we put on such promises, given Areva’s past record? This in turn makes NPCIL’s claim that it will have 20,000 Mw of nuclear power — 14,000 Mw indigenous and 6,000 Mw imported — by 2020, look like a pipe dream. As for its repeatedly announced plan of achieving 63,000 Mw by 2030, it is a laugh! To put these numbers in perspective, the current installed nuclear power generating capacity is around 5,000 Mw.
Contrast this state of affairs with that in renewable energy. In wind power we have an operating capacity of 16,000 Mw, the fourth largest in the world. Suzlon, our largest wind turbine manufacturer and project developer, added 4000 Mw last year. It is a Rs 22,000 crore company with subsidiaries in Europe and a production plant in China. As for solar energy, the 20,000 Mw by 2022 Nehru Solar Energy Plan is progressing well, with many foreign and local companies having committed to establish large grid-connected solar power plants of 100 Mw to 500 Mw capacity…http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/ashok-parthasarathi-renewable-energy-isfuture-not-nuclear/439598/
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No progress in USA’s dilemma about nuclear wastes
U.S. making little progress on nuclear waste issue, Battle Creek Enquirer 17 June 11 When Congress passed the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, most Americans thought the nation was on its way toward dealing with the spent radioactive fuel from nuclear power plants.
But nearly 30 years and about $15 billion later, little progress has been made.

Michigan Public Service Commissioner Greg White, speaking on behalf of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Comm-issioners, told a U.S. House subcommittee earlier this month that the nation is no closer to creating a central repository for nuclear waste than it was in the early 1980s……. Continue reading
Japan’s govt changes evacuation system, as “radiation hot spots” are found
places that are outside the evacuation zones but are feared to have concentrations of radiation due to geographical or weather conditions will be designated as “specific evacuation recommendation spots.”…….
Govt refines evacuation system, The Yomiuri Shimbun, 18 June 11 The government has decided to adopt a new system that would recommend evacuation from areas affected by radiation from the crisis-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant not by municipality but on a house-by-house basis. Continue reading
U.S. House Appropriations panel cuts funding for new nuclear weapons facility
The House Appropriations subcommittee that approves funding of the weapons complex, run by the National Nuclear Security Agency (NNSA), just whacked almost $500 million from the weapons program.
House panel whacks funding for nuclear complex, Washington Post, 18 June 11 By Walter Pincus Remember the ones demanded by Republican senators as the price for passage of the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) last December? Back then, senators succeeded in getting the Obama administration to pledge to spend billions more to upgrade the U.S. nuclear weapons complex and modernize the country’s stockpile of deployed weapons.
Problem is, members of the House weren’t involved in the discussions.
Now, led by Republicans, lawmakers are cutting into the funds that the Obama administration had pledged for upgrades and modernization.
The House Appropriations subcommittee that approves funding of the weapons complex, run by the National Nuclear Security Agency (NNSA), just whacked almost $500 million from the weapons program. A slice of $100 million came out of a $200 million pot that is supposed to finance early steps in the coming year to build a new facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory….. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/checkpoint-washington/post/house-panel-whacks-funding-for-nuclear-complex/2011/06/15/AGPrLAXH_blog.html
US General’s advice on how to reduce spending on nuclear weapons
Brent Scowcroft’s Suggestion on the Nuclear Arsenal, HUFFINGTON POST, Rizwan Ladha, 17 June 11 For over sixty years, the United States has maintained a large and costly nuclear arsenal, composed of heavy bombers, submarine-launched missiles, and intercontinental missiles. But Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft thinks it’s time for a change.
In a talk Thursday at National Defense University, Gen. Scowcroft suggested that the U.S. nuclear force should be restructured, eliminating the air- and sea-based legs of the triad and only maintaining 1,000 to 1,500 single-warhead ICBMs. He argues this would provide a credible deterrent to adversaries, while guaranteeing security to U.S. allies……..http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rizwan-ladha/brent-scowcrofts-suggesti_b_879507.html
Exposure of 4 workers to high radiation
4 Workers Exposed to Strong Gamma Radiation in Southern Bulgaria Novinite.com, June 17, 2011,Four workers of the Gitava company, based near the Southern Bulgarian town of Stambolyiski, have been exposed to strong gamma radiation.
The accident happened on June 14 and a committee was subsequently assigned to investigate the matter, the Bulgarian Nuclear Regulation Agency announced.Gitava specializes in supplying and recharging gamma-ray therapeutic equipment for the treatment of cancer patients….. http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=129388
USA Senate hearing finds nuclear safety unsatisfactory
Fukushima-Daiichi showed us that we have to consider the possibility of multiple units at a single site, perhaps multiple spent fuel pools being affected at the same time.”
Commissioners also had no answers about how to fix backup power systems that continue to cool nuclear material in the event of a major power outage…….Amidst these less-than-inspiring answers, the NRC commissioners tried to downplay the possibility of similar events happening here anyhow…..
Cold Comfort at Senate Nuclear Safety Hearing, The Nation 17 june 11 George Zornick In the two months since the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant suffered a catastrophic breakdown during an earthquake and tsunami in Japan, what has the United States learned about nuclear safety? How are regulators working to prevent a similar disaster at one of America’s 104 nuclear power plants, about a quarter of which share the same design as Fukushima Daiichi? Continue reading
Indonesia turning away from nuclear power plans
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said, “What happened in Japan last March can happen in Indonesia because (the two countries’) geography is very much similar.”
He suggested that in pursuing its best energy mix, the world’s most populous Muslim country is willing to consider alternative sources of energy, such as geothermal, solar and hydroelectric power, while moving to limit the use of oil and coal as energy sources in the long run….
Indonesia cautious about nuclear option after Fukushima crisis Mainichi Daily News 18 June 11 TOKYO (Kyodo) –– Visiting Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono expressed strong reservations on Friday about proceeding with plans to build nuclear power plants in his earthquake- and tsunami-prone country, following Japan’s nuclear disaster triggered by a magnitude 9.0 quake and tsunami. Continue reading
AREVA struggles to cope with freeze on nuclear investment
Investors demand clear Areva strategy from new CEO– By Marie Maitre The replacement of Areva’s charismatic head by a top executive little known outside the company ends a drawn-out battle for the group’s top job but offers no clues on how Areva plans to overcome project delays after the Fukushima disaster. PARIS, June 17 (Reuters) – Investors called for clarity on Areva’s strategy for dealing with a global nuclear investment freeze on Friday after a power struggle at the French nuclear power plant maker led to the dismissal of its long-serving boss.
Areva’s thinly traded shares were down 2.2 percent at 25.81 euros by 0950 GMT, lagging France’s CAC-40 .FCHI blue chip index, which was up 0.1 percent….http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/17/areva-ceo-idUSLDE75G0K820110617
How humans are geo-engineering the planet
“…….Aren’t we too puny rival the great forces of nature that shape our planet? . But the facts show that we are fundamentally impacting planet Earth in unprecedented ways, and we’ve known about it for a century…..
we are well on the way to doubling CO2. In the past 100 years we have added almost 40 per cent, and warming that can only plausibly be attributed to a greenhouse effect is not only heating the atmosphere, but is also pumping heat into the oceans and the crust at a phenomenal rate.
How we’re geo-engineering the planet, Climate Spectator Mike Sandiford 16 June 11 Continue reading
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