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Uranium industry in Australia – not looking good

bull-uncertain-uraniumrecent steps by BHP to cuts of its uranium program — from the delay of the uranium production expansion plan at the Olympic Dam project to the selling of a large Yeelirrie deposit located in Western Australia.

Recent Ranger and Olympic Dam issues along with various problems related to notable Australian uranium projects like Angela/Pamela, Kintyre, Oban, Wiluna and Koongarra, amongst others, have also caused concerns about the future development dynamics of the local uranium industry.

Australia’s uranium industry hits turbulence Mining.com, Vladimir Basov | February 8, 2013 Recent news from Australia raises serious concerns about the future development of its domestic uranium industry. While established players are exiting the market, others are lining up to explore new areas and have made some positive moves.

Open-pit mining operations at Ranger mine were terminated at the end of November 2012.  Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA, business and costs | Leave a comment

Lawmakers of Southside Virginia urge Governor to resist pressure from uranium lobby

Southside anti-uranium legislators write to McDonnell By Julian Walker The Virginian-Pilot February 8, 2013 A sextet of Southside Virginia legislators have written Gov. Bob McDonnell asking him to resist uranium supporters who want him to move ahead with the development of new mining regulations despite the recent demise of legislation for that purpose.

“We strongly urge you not to follow that course,” reads the Feb. 6 letter to the governor, which notes “the General Assembly has concluded the risks are too great to approve lifting the moratorium on mining.”

The letter is signed by six Republicans: Sens. Frank Ruff of Mecklenburg County and Bill Stanley of Franklin County; and Dels. James Edmunds of Halifax County, Danny Marshall of Danville, Don Merricks of Pittsylvania County, and Tommy Wright of Lunenburg County.

“To ignore the overwhelming opposition to uranium mining that has been expressed by citizens and organizations across the Commonwealth does not fit with representative government” they wrote. “An issue as divisive as this should be dealt with by the legislative process.”

Last week, Sen. John Watkins withdrew his uranium legislation when it became clear he lacked the votes to get the bill past the Senate committee where it had been sent…..

Fighting the pro-uranium effort is a broad coalition of interested parties who want Virginia to maintain its 31-year mining moratorium.

They fear possible environmental fallout and public health hazards from the accidental release of mining waste, known as tailings, leftover from the milling process when uranium ore is separated from rock…… South Hampton Roads localities are among the groups that oppose mining out of concern that the accidental of tailings into waterways that feed local drinking water supplies could cause contamination. http://hamptonroads.com/2013/02/southside-antiuranium-legislators-write-mcdonnell

February 9, 2013 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

North Korea’s a worry – but regime may collapse from within

ALARM AT NORTH KOREA’S NUCLEAR THREAT – BUT THE REGIME MAY FALL FROM WITHIN, The Independent, 8 Feb 13,  “… there’s no need to head for the bunker just yet, if the Economist’s analysts have it right. They see one big green reason for hope – “Capitalism is seeping through the bamboo curtain”.

A new class of traders and merchants has the power to destabilise Mr Kim’s regime. But they’ll need help; and the West should don its saboteur goggles and start burrowing.

Here’s what the Economist advise: “taking every opportunity to undermine the regime…So outsiders should pay for North Koreans to travel and to acquire skills abroad, support the radio stations that broadcast into the country, back the church networks that supply documentaries and films and turn a blind eye to the smuggling networks and the traders.” http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/iv-drip/alarm-at-north-koreas-nuclear-threat–but-the-regime-may-fall-from-within-8486436.html

February 9, 2013 Posted by | general | 1 Comment

No need for nuclear – UK Greens spell it out

globalnukeNOanalysis using the government’s figures shows that we don’t need nuclear power to meet climate goals and keep the lights on.

with the energy bill set to deliver a backdoor subsidy for nuclear, truly sustainable renewables like wind, solar, waste digestion, wave and tidal are in danger of being sidelined once again

We don’t need nuclear power to meet climate goals and keep the lights on, Guardian UK, Natalie Bennett and Caroline Lucas by   8 February 2013  It would be a folly to think that there is no hope of tackling climate change without nuclear power Making the case for new nuclear this week, George Monbiot admitted that, what with the proposed nuclear waste dump in Cumbria being rejected and Centrica pulling out of new nuclear in the UK, the facts are not exactly working in his favour. But his argument raised two crucial questions. Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

Local solar energy making a huge difference in rural Argentina

In Renewable Energy in Rural Markets Project (PERMER)’s proposed scheme, photovoltaic or wind system are installed
for the user, who then pays for its operation and maintenance
dependent on their means.

 ”People have adapted well to technology and began to ask for solar panels instead of electricity lines,” 

there [ the province of Entre Riosall]  the rural schools and nearly 2,000 homes have solar panels.The impact is rewarding.

solar-Argentina

Renewable energy brings power to the rural corners of Argentina
http://www.renewableenergymagazine.com/article/renewable-energy-brings-power-to-the-rural-20130208
  Cooking, heating water, or the house during
winter, reading, listening to the radio, charging your phone, using
the computer, watching TV — most people take these activities for
granted in the 21st century, but for thousands of inhabitants in
Argentina’s remote rural communities without electricity it is a
challenge. Nearly 150,000 homes still do not have this basic service,
most of them in the northern part of the country.

Since 1999, the Renewable Energy in Rural Markets Project (PERMER) has
aimed to put an end to this situation. Supported by the World Bank and
the Global Environment Facility (GEF), the initiative connects homes
and schools to clean energy sources such as solar panels and
windmills.

So far, around 25,000 residential customers and nearly 2,000 schools
have been reached, and 300 solar thermal stoves, furnaces and water
heaters have been installed. Also 2,000 users in small, isolated
communities have benefited from small power systems (generation and
distribution networks). The project has also included almost 400
public buildings, such as health centers, community centers, as well
as Gendarmerie (Police force) and National Parks Administration’s
stations. Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | decentralised, SOUTH AMERICA | 1 Comment

Asdvanced nuclear missile being developed by India

India working on advanced nuclear missile Ft.com, By Victor Mallet in New Delhi  8 Feb 13High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3e1410e0-71e9-11e2-886e-00144feab49a.html#ixzz2KQm3xYXY

India is developing a new, long-range missile capable of delivering multiple nuclear warheads to different targets, a senior defence industry official said on Friday.

The missile, dubbed the Agni VI, would have a range of 5,500-6,000 kilometres, slightly farther than the already tested Agni V, but would also have so-called MIRV capability, according to defence analysts. Only a few countries have nuclear missiles with MIRV technology, which stands for Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicle…… http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3e1410e0-71e9-11e2-886e-00144feab49a.html#axzz2KQlwwnG5

February 9, 2013 Posted by | India, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Call to write to South Dakota lawmakers about uranium mining

sign-thisPlease write to every legislator on the Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee and let them know how disappointed you are in their lack of action and lack of protection for South Dakotans. Also, please encourage their support for a summer study to examine mining issues in the Black Hills:

Sen.Ewing@state.sd.usSen.Krebs@state.sd.us
Sen.Rampbelberg@state.sd.us
Sen.Lucas@state.sd.us (He does deserve thanks for speaking to the need to have immediate reporting of issues in SB 149. Please thank him for that, and for seconding a do-pass motion.)
Sen.Frerichs@state.sd.us (He does deserve thanks for moving SB 149 to do-pass. He also understands the need to have immediate reporting of issues. Please thank him!)
Sen.Vehle@state.sd.us (Please thank him for his expressed concern about the water, and encourage his further consideration of a summer study to examine these issues!)
Sen.Rhoden@state.sd.us
Sen.Omdahl@state.sd.us
Sen.Otten@state.sd.us

Flag-USASouth Dakota uranium mining bills – all deferred, Dakota Rural Action February 7, 2013 by  Over 20 people have traveled today to Pierre to testify on SBs 148-150. These three bills would restore adequate oversight to in situ leach uranium mining in South Dakota.

It is clear that the Senate committee is unwilling to stand in the way of development, even if it is permanently damaging and harmful, if it in any way prevents the “economic development” of the Black Hills.

Despite impassioned, moving speeches by long-time ranchers, experts, and lobbyists, the Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee dismissed all three bills.

The reasons the Senate committee voted down these bills are, point blank, wrong. Absolutely, whole-heartedly, wrong. In voting down SB 148, excuses about lack of funding and expanding government were made. If our water matters, we should allocate the funding. People, South Dakotas citizens, are asking for this. We are asking for the oversight. Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | ACTION | Leave a comment

South Dakota uranium decision a blow for the environment

Evidently, South Dakota lawmakers care more about foreign uranium companies than they do about their own citizens.

A tough day for uranium opponents, South Dakota Peace and Justce Center,   February 8, 2013 Yesterday was a tough day for those of us who want to keep South Dakota’s water safe for future generations. At 10:00 am, the Senate Agriculture & Natural Resources Committee held a hearing for Senate Bills 148149, and 150 to bolster state oversight of uranium mining (read more in our earlier post on the three bills). After hearing from ranchers, public health experts,  activists, lobbyists, and South Dakota citizens who will have to deal with the fallout from Powertech’s proposed Dewey-Burdock Project in Fall River County, the Committee promptly voted to defer all three bills, effectively killing them.

by   Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | politics, USA | Leave a comment

Little New Zealand stood up to nuclear bully USA

text-historyFlashback: When David stood up to Goliath stuff.co New Zealand, 9 Feb 13, The Dominion Post, TOM HUNT  ”,,,,,It may have soured our relationship with Washington and provided a dramatic end to a paradisiacal trip to Tokelau, but it certainly set Lange up as New Zealand’s David versus America’s Goliath.

N.ZealandFebruary 4, 1985 was the day the New Zealand Government backed overwhelming public anti-nuclear sentiment and effectively became officially nuclear free – even if legislation was still two years away.

”I felt so proud,” long-standing anti-nuclear protester Barney Richards said this week.

”We stood up against the most powerful nation in the world. And we had a major victory.”

He remembers a reporter travelling all the way from Britain ”to see for himself the little country that snubbed its nose to the world”. Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | history, New Zealand | 1 Comment

Exelon cutting down on nuclear reactor upgrade spending

Exelon cuts nuclear upgrade spending amid low gas prices, Reuters, 8 Feb 13, 02/08/2013Feb 7, 2013 11:27pm GMTFeb 7 (Reuters) – Low natural gas prices and slow economic growth forced U.S. power company Exelon Corp to cancel plans to spend $2.3 billion on capacity expansion at its nuclear power plants and other projects, Chief Executive Chris Crane said on Thursday. Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

Take peaceful protesters off police extremism database, lawyers tell court

Tuesday 29 January 2013

© independent.co.uk

Police forces should no longer be allowed to store the personal information of peaceful protesters on a domestic extremism database if they are not linked to any crimes, a court heard today.

Lawyers acting for 87-year-old John Catt, who has not been linked to any crimes at demonstrations he has attended, argued that police are maintaining a file on their client simply because his regular presence at protests, in contravention of his right to privacy.

The case has major implications for the way the police go about placing protest groups under surveillance in the future.

Tim Owen QC told the court that the police’s current approach means that students who peacefully march at demonstrations where others are involved in violence could end up on the extremism database because they “happen to be seen at another demonstration”.

He added that the effect of the police’s surveillance of regular, peaceful protesters was that they would come to expect to be placed on a database of domestic extremists.

And the court heard that the police had shown an “almost knee-jerk response” in presuming that anyone who turns up at a protest, regardless of what they do, “their name goes on the list”.

Shamik Dutta of Bhatt Murphy said: “The Court of Appeal will determine whether protesters forego the right to privacy if they engage in peaceful protest. If the appeal is successful, police forces will need to review the way in which they gather and retain information about protesters who have never committed any offence”.

Mr Catt’s lawyers did not argue against police officers placing protesters under surveillance where they thought there was a risk of disorder, but said that there was no reason to keep the information gathered once it became plain that the subject was not linked to any crime, either as a perpetrator or as a witness; as they said was the case with their client.

Keeping the dossier, they argued, was in contravention of his right to privacy.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission and Liberty have both been given permission to intervene. John Wadham, General Counsel of the ECHR, said: “We accept the need for there to be measures to ensure the safety of the public , but these need to be proportionate. The right to protest peacefully in public is a core human right and any measures that restrict this right should be subject to proper scrutiny.

“The Commission is concerned that the retention of material on this database, and the inadequate safeguards for its proper use and deletion, are an unlawful breach of the right to freedom of speech and freedom of protest. The police now need to take measures to ensure that the information they hold does not contravene the law.”

Mr Catt, who has been heavily involved with the Smash EDO campaign – among others, is appealing an earlier High Court ruling, which allowed police to keep photographs and other personal information belonging to him on the National Domestic Extremism Database. Last year, Mr Justice Irwin said that protesters registering their feelings in public had no reasonable expectation of privacy.

The first case followed the refusal of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) to permanently delete all the data retained about Mr Catt, who found 66 entries about him had been made on the National Domestic Extremism Database, including one about his appearance.

His appeal is being heard in the High Court by the Master of the Rolls Lord Dyson, Lord Justice Patten and Lord Justice Tomlinson and continues tomorrow.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/take-peaceful-protesters-off-police-extremism-database-lawyers-tell-court-8471634.html

Retention of personal information on state database contravenes peaceful protesters’ human rights

Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

New Code Protects Big Brother Britain

Friday, February 8, 2013

Mick Meaney, Contributor
Activist Post

A new code of practice will be introduced under the guise of forcing authorities to comply with a set of principles called ”surveillance by consent”.

On the face of it, it seems like a good move, but look just beneath the surface and we soon discover it does little to slow down the growth of the surveillance state; and, in some cases, even protects Big Brother.

Authorities that breach the code will not face sanctions, and it only applies to a fraction of the UK’s 4 million CCTV cameras.
A new watchdog will be created, The new Surveillance Camera Commissioner, but will have absolutely no powers of enforcement or inspection.

Emma Carr, deputy director of privacy and civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch, said:

We have repeatedly warned that the public will not have confidence in a part-time regulator who has no powers, no legally binding rules and isn’t even able to take action against organisations breaking the law. 

For the new system to cover only a tiny fraction of CCTV cameras, not even those in school lavatories, it is clearly a disappointment to the wide range of people concerned that in many areas CCTV in Britain has got out of hand that the new system is largely a box-ticking exercise with no consequences for people who ignore it.

However, police will have to place warning signs at the roadside of major routes, informing motorists they are being watched on CCTV.

http://www.activistpost.com/2013/02/new-code-protects-big-brother-britain.html

February 9, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Exclusive NDAA Coverage: Call to Action with Chris Hedges

Published on Feb 7, 2013

Abby Martin Breaks the Set on all Things NDAA
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EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin takes an in depth look at the lawsuit against the National Defense Authorization Act’s indefinite detention clause, starting with a short look at just how many people actually know about it. Abby then talks to one of the plaintiffs spearheading the lawsuit, Tangerine Bolen, about how the suit came to be, and why the corporate media has not picked up the story, Abby also talks to former whistleblower, Jesselyn Radack, about the extent and reach of the NDAA as it applies to journalists, activists and whistleblowers. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with journalist, author and lead plaintiff in the case against indefinite detention, Chris Hedges, about the historical precedent the NDAA lawsuit sets, and why every American should care.

February 9, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Chris Hedges: NDAA Lawsuit Update

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Published on Feb 7, 2013

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Sierra Adamson interviews Chris Hedges at the hearing for the second court of appeals in the Hedges v Obama NDAA lawsuit. Hedges explains what has happened in the lawsuit to date, the next steps and what he sees in America’s upcoming future.

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February 9, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Obama administration embraces major new nuclear weapons cut

Michael Portillo, the defense minister under Conservative prime minister John Major in the 1990’s, told the Financial Times last month that Britain maintained its arsenal “partly for industrial and employment reasons, and mainly for prestige.” He called it “a tremendous waste of money.”

Advisers reach consensus that current arsenals are larger than needed to target foes

Obama administration embraces major new nuclear weapons cut

Advisers reach consensus that current arsenals are larger than needed to target foes

By R. Jeffrey Smith

The Center for Public Integrity

6 Feb 2013

Senior Obama administration officials have agreed that the number of nuclear warheads the U.S. military deploys could be cut by at least a third without harming national security, according to sources involved in the deliberations.

They said the officials’ consensus agreement, not yet announced, opens the door to billions of dollars in military savings that might ease the federal deficit and improve prospects for a new arms deal with Russia before the president leaves office. But it is likely to draw fire from conservatives, if previous debate on the issue is any guide.

The results of the internal review are reflected in a draft of a classified decision directive prepared for Obama’s signature that guides how U.S. nuclear weapons should be targeted in the future against potential foes, according to four sources with direct knowledge of it. The sources, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to a reporter about the review, described the president as fully on board, but said he has not signed the document.

The document directs the first detailed Pentagon revisions in U.S. targeting since 2009, when the military’s nuclear war planners last took account of a substantial shrinkage — roughly by half from 2000 to 2008 — in the total number of nuclear weapons in the U.S. arsenal. It makes clear that an even smaller nuclear force can still meet all defense requirements.

Although the document offers various options for Obama, his top advisers reached their consensus position last year, after a review that included the State Department, the Defense Department, the National Security Council, the intelligence community, the U.S. Strategic Command, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the office of Vice President Joseph Biden, according to the sources.

Several said the results were not disclosed at the time partly because of political concerns that any resulting controversy might rob Obama of popular votes in the November election. Some Republican lawmakers have said they oppose cutting the U.S. arsenal out of concern that it could diminish America’s standing in the world.

The new policy directive, which formally implements a revised nuclear policy Obama adopted in 2010, endorses the use of a smaller U.S. arsenal to deter attack or protect American interests by targeting fewer, but more important, military or political sites in Russia, China, and several other countries. This can be accomplished by 1000-1100 warheads, the sources said, instead of the 1,550 allowed under an existing arms treaty.

The 2010 policy called for reducing the role of nuclear weapons, arguing that they are “poorly suited to address the challenges posed by suicidal terrorists and unfriendly regimes seeking nuclear weapons.” But many critics have charged that not much of the policy has been implemented. Obama himself even joked in a video message to the Jan. 26 annual dinner of Washington’s exclusive Alfalfa Club, that he could not recall why he won his 2009 Nobel Peace Prize [the Oslo committee attributed it partly to his stimulation of “disarmament and arms control negotiations”].

With the election behind him and a new national security team selected, Obama is finally prepared to send this new guidance to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and to open a new dialogue with Russia about corresponding reductions in deployed weapons beyond those called for in a 2011 treaty, according to two senior U.S. officials involved in the deliberations.

“It is all done,” said one. “We did so much work on that there is no interest in going back and taking another look at it.” The second official said completion of the new directive would become public in coming weeks, when Obama may mention the issue in his State of the Union address on Feb. 12, or in another speech specifically dedicated to the subject, similar to the April 2009 Prague address in which he promised to “take concrete steps towards a world without nuclear weapons.”

Arms talks now being explored

Continue reading

February 9, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment