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£31 million injection for new nuclear technology in the UK

26 Mar 2013

The nuclear industry received a boost today as Business Secretary Vince Cable announced major new funding awards that will enhance the supply chain and increase opportunities to commercialise new technologies in the sector.

The funding will support 36 projects across the UK in developing new technologies for the construction, operation and decommissioning of nuclear power plants. This will bring together over 60 experienced organisations including Laing O’Rourke, Sheffield Forgemasters and EDF. They will work alongside innovative small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) and universities.

The £18 million joint funding between the Technology Strategy Board, the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) is expected to leverage in an additional £13 million making the total value of the projects £31 million.

Business Secretary Vince Cable said:

“There are huge global opportunities that the UK is well placed to take advantage of in the nuclear industry. Our strong research base will help develop exciting new technologies that can be commercialised here and then exported across the globe.

Continue reading

March 29, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Wind Energy races ahead, as nuclear production falls in USA

wind-nuclear-BAD NEWS FOR HOMER SIMPSON HTTP://QZ.COM/68344/US-RENEWABLE-ENERGY-PRODUCTION-NOW-TOPS-NUCLEAR-POWER/   US renewable energy production now tops nuclear power  By Todd Woody — March 28, 2013

US president Barack Obama has pursued an energy policy he describes as “all of the above,” a bit of Bill Clinton-style triangulation that seeks to boost production from carbon-intensive oil and gas drilling while promoting clean technologies like solar and wind.

So how’s he doing?

New data released yesterday from the US Energy Information Administration offers a snapshot of the energy landscape in Obama’s first term.   Energy production from natural gas grew 16% while coal-fired power fell more than 4%, thanks to a glut of cheap natural gas from the fracking boom. It’s a trend likely to continue as shale gas reserves are tapped and new emissions regulations effectively bar the construction of new coal-fired power plants.

Renewable energy production jumped nearly 24% but remains only 11% of the US’ total energy production. But the trend lines tell the story: Wind energy, for instance, grew 89% while electricity production from nuclear power plants fell 4%.

And this factoid should warm the hearts of anti-nuke activists: The US now gets more energy from renewable sources—wind, solar, hydro, geothermal, and biomass—than it does from nuclear power plants.

While there are new nuclear projects winding their way through the regulatory process, don’t expect a nuke boom. Multibillion-dollar price tags, waste disposal issues and growing water shortages are likely to limit nuclear power’s contribution to the nation’s energy mix in the coming decades.

Mr. Burns just might want to start looking for another job, perhaps as a wind farm magnate.

March 29, 2013 Posted by | business and costs, USA | Leave a comment

Up to 1,000 North Wales nuclear workers retraining for alternative industries

….“When considering my future career I needed to think about location and lifestyle. Working in a fast-paced London-based job would not have met my lifestyle results for example.”

Judy says the academic level of the workers in Trawsfynydd and Wylfa would shock most people.

“It’s very unusual for a project to be working with people from the top end of the academic scale,” she said….

….She is worried the are could be “crippled” economically if this does not happen, as a report commissioned by Magnox found £42m would come out of the local economy as a result of 1,200 people at Trawsfynydd and Wylfa not living and working in the area…….

…She admitted “funding is starting to fade” and was unsure whether the project would apply for a second round after 2015…

UP TO 1,000 nuclear energy staff in north west Wales are being retrained and re-educated to work in other industries.

Menter Môn’s £4million Shaping the Future initiative is attempting to get every member of the Trawsfynydd and Wylfa workforces into other jobs in a bid to retain £42m for the region’s economy.

Hitachi’s acquisition of Horizon last year gave the Wylfa B development a shot in the arm and firmed-up its future.

But project director Judy Craske says staff still need to be reeducated and re-skilled so they could be put to use in other industries, such as the automotive, tourism, manufacturing and aerospace sectors.

She says a talent drain would have a knock-on effect for the counties and has been busy enrolling employees at both sites.

At the last count in the new year, 833 of the 1,200 people she targeted have signed up for Shaping the Future – 527 at Wylfa and 306 at Trawsfynydd.

Speaking to Business Post, the former Magnox transition manager revealed last June how she garnered millions of pounds of European Social Fund cash through the Welsh Government, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and Gwynedd and Anglesey councils to try and save them from the scrapheap.

“Since last summer the project has been off and now back on again, which has caused uncertainty,” she said.

“There is no panic but there is a wind of change and it is vital they take this on board. They’re going to get an idea in the coming months what the future will look like.

“Most can’t believe the day will come when there is not a job for them. They have to take this opportunity while there’s money in the bank. You never know, Wylfa might break, can keep going as long as it can but eventually there will be no more fuel to burn.”

Judy says, even dismissing the worst-case scenario, the staff should capitalise on Shaping the Future – notably the experience of ambassadors including Centrica nuclear director Greg Evans, and Aerospace Wales chief executive John Whalley – and add more skills to their CV so other positions open up to them. She is worried the are could be “crippled” economically if this does not happen, as a report commissioned by Magnox found £42m would come out of the local economy as a result of 1,200 people at Trawsfynydd and Wylfa not living and working in the area.

Among those to have already benefited is Magnox communications employee Ian Edwards, who secured funding to start an MsC in public relations at the University of Glamorgan.

“I immediately saw the benefits of Shaping the Future in helping me and my colleagues to improve our skills and qualifications for the future,” said Ian.

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March 29, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

How wildlife can, and does, damage nuclear reactors

exclamation-Wildlife vs U.S. nuclear plants: Flies short-out transformer — Pelican starts emergency generator — Snake causes fire — Bird shuts down reactor… more http://enenews.com/wildlife-incidents-at-u-s-nuclear-plants-flies-short-out-power-transformer-pelican-starts-emergency-generator-snake-causes-fire-fish-block-water-intake-more
  March 27th, 2013
 Title: Fission Stories #133: Mayflies, and Squirrels, and Rats 
Flag-USASource: All Things Nuclear (Union of Concerned Scientists)
Author: Dave Lochbaum, director, Nuclear Safety Project
Date: March 26, 2013

[…] one wonders about the havoc that an individual saboteur or a team of bad guys might be able to cause by malicious intent. Could well-trained and heavily armed attackers cause more devastation than a furry little squirrel or a pesky rat? […]

Selected incidents at U.S. nuclear plants:

Pelican started an emergency diesel generator
Bird caused […] shut down […] after it landed in the switchyard containing electrical cables connecting the plant to its offsite electrical power grid
Snake slithering onto an overhead power cable […] caused a short that caught the wooden pole holding the cable on fire
“A large number of small forage fish” blocked the screens at the intake structure
Squirrel caused an electrical short in the main power transformer.
Bunch of jellyfish blocked the screens at the intake station
Mayflies caused a power transformer to short out

Full report here      

See also: Tepco: Animal caused extended power outage at Fukushima Daiichi — Nearly a foot long (PHOTO)

March 29, 2013 Posted by | safety, USA | Leave a comment

VIDEO: Arnie Gundersen at New York Symposium about Fukushima

see-this.waySymposium Q&A: Explosion at Fukushima Unit 3 drove nuclear fuel out of storage pool — Scattered up to 2 miles away (VIDEO)   http://enenews.com/symposium-qa-explosion-unit-3-drove-nuclear-fuel-pool-scattered-particles-miles-away-video 

Source: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Accident, Day 1
Author: The Helen Caldicott Foundation
Date Presented: March 11, 2013
Questions & Answers
Arnie Gundersen, Fairewinds Energy Education: Unit 3 started as a hydrogen explosion – I am in the minority, but I think it’s more than a hydrogen explosion.

I actually think it was something called a prompt moderated criticality that was caused by a hydrogen explosion, which then drove the fuel and scattered particles of fuel for as far as two miles from the fuel pool. […]

The important thing though is that it was a detonation. How it was created is less important than the fact that it was a detonation shockwave and no containment can withstand that.

See also: NRC: There’s got to be fission products or pellets in parking lot outside Fukushima plant

March 29, 2013 Posted by | Resources -audiovicual | Leave a comment

Tokyo has the storage capacity for a solar powered city

sunA Solar Powered Tokyo? http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3661 28 March 13 Much of Tokyo’s power needs once supplied by nuclear power could be met by rooftop solar along with energy storage systems already in place.

flag-japanNuclear is still a dirty word to many in Japan following the Fukushima crisis, a disaster that will continue to negatively affect a large area for many years to come.

While solar power offers an attractive alternative; the issue remains of continual supply – particularly at night and during heavily overcast days.

A recent study examining the potential for rooftop photovoltaics in Tokyo to replace nuclear capacity reveals some of the answer is already in place – pumped hydroelectric storage. Continue reading

March 29, 2013 Posted by | energy storage, Japan | Leave a comment

Good Friday protest march to Livermore nuclear weapons labs

Activists begin 30-mile march to end nuclear war San Ramon Express 27 March 13 Annual Good Friday protest to be held at Livermore labs

by Jessica Lipsky About a dozen anti-nuclear weapons activists began a 30-mile march to Livermore Wednesday morning against nuclear weapons and war. A group of protestors left the Mt. Diablo Peace and Justice Center with banners and signs on March 27 and walked 12 miles to Peace Lutheran Church in Danville. The group wants to bring attention to the upgrading of nuclear weapons and encourage conversion of the labs to a more peaceful use.

“We are very much against nuclear weaponry and the upgrading of it, it’s a waste of taxpayer money and we believe we should stop using them,” said the center’s Margli Auclair. “They should use that money for more pressing scientific needs, climate change, solar energy, renewable things that would solve problems rather than contribute.”
Marchers will spend the night at Peace Lutheran and walk 17 miles to the Quality Inn in Livermore using city streets to increase awareness. The group will walk to the entrance of the Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab at 6:45 a.m. on the morning of Good Friday for an annual mass and rally. …
The event is sponsored bythe Ecumenical Peace Institute, and will consist of a procession to the lab gates, stations of the cross and nonviolent acts of witness. Hanson expects between 75 and 100 attendees at this year’s event. About 25 to 30 will get arrested, he estimated. http://www.sanramonexpress.com/news/show_story.php?id=7187

March 29, 2013 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

US nuclear-capable B-2 bombers in exercises with South Korea

US nuclear-capable bombers complete training mission in South Korea The Guardian,   28 March 2013 US military announces B-2 stealth bomber drills amid threats of nuclear strikes from North Korea The US has taken the unprecedented step of publicly announcing that two of its nuclear-capable B-2 bombers have taken part in military exercises with South Korea, dropping dummy munitions on an island range, in what is taken to be a show of force following weeks of North Korean hostility.

The announcement on Thursday is likely to further enrage Pyongyang, which has already issued a flood of ominous statements to highlight its displeasure at the exercises and at UN sanctions over its nuclear test last month. Continue reading

March 29, 2013 Posted by | South Korea, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Video: Noam Chomsky on nuclear war and climate change

see-this.wayNoam Chomsky: If Nuclear War Doesn’t Get Us, Climate Change Will
http://www.thenation.com/video/173205/noam-chomsky-if-nuclear-war-doesnt-get-us-climate-change-will#
On The Earth Productions and The Nation March 28, 2013  In the
twenty-first century, humanity will likely burn out in a nuclear
holocaust or fade away amid the gradually mounting effects of climate
change. That was Noam Chomsky’s prediction during a
question-and-answer session in 2009 that still resonates today.

By moving forward with a missile defense policy that upsets the
balance of nuclear deterrence with Russia, “we’re consciously
increasing the threat of nuclear war,” Chomsky said. As for the
effects of climate change, “nobody knows the exact details, but
everybody knows that the longer you wait, the worse it’s going to be.”

—Alec Luhn

Noam Chomsky further eviscerates American foreign policy with his
piece “Why It’s Legal When the US Does It.”

March 29, 2013 Posted by | Resources -audiovicual | Leave a comment

Moratorium on uranium development in Quebec

“It’s a little bit like asbestos — people have come to the conclusion that there are certain minerals that are so dangerous that they’re not worth mining, they’re better to leave underground,” Edwards said. “One is asbestos, and one is uranium

logo-NO-nuclear-SmQuebec imposes moratorium on uranium development, Montreal Gazette, By Kevin Dougherty and Monique Beaudin, March 28, 2013
QUEBEC — No permits for the exploration or mining of uranium in Quebec will flag-canadabe issued until an independent study on the environmental impact and social acceptance of extracting uranium has been completed, Environment Minister Yves-François Blanchet announced Thursday. Continue reading

March 29, 2013 Posted by | Canada, Uranium | 1 Comment

UK does not need nuclear power for climate change obligations

globalnukeNONon-nuclear future
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/mar/28/non-nuclear-future
The Guardian, Professor David Elliott Open University  28 March 2013
I was dismayed by the statement by Professor John Beddington, the
government’s chief scientific adviser, that a nuclear energy-free
future for the UK is not something the coalition is thinking seriously
about (Report, 26 March). You quote him as adding: “We really can’t
see a future for the UK energy sector, if we are to meet our climate
change obligations and have resilience in the power sector, without a
significant component of nuclear.”

flag-UKThe Department of Energy and
Climate Change has provided an extensive online energy modelling
system and invited interested people and organisations to use it. The
British Pugwash Group spent a year doing just that and recently
published the results asa set of 2050 energy Pathways. It included one
I helped with, which showed clearly that it was possible to meet the
UK’s energy needs at reasonable cost with no nuclear power, while
reducing emissions below current 2050 targets. Evidently we were wasting our time.

March 29, 2013 Posted by | climate change, UK | Leave a comment

No deal in site between EDF and UK government, on nuclear subsidy

flag-UKEDF, U.K. Unlikely to Meet End-March Deadline on Nuclear Subsidy -Sources, Fox Business News,  By Geraldine Amiel and Selina Williams  March 28, 2013 Dow Jones Newswires French electricity company Electricite de France SA (EDF.FR) and the British government are unlikely to meet a deadline at the end of March to agree on subsidies that would allow the construction of new nuclear power plants in the U.K., people familiar with the matter said.

 The people said in recent days that although discussions are still ongoing, they aren’t intensive and neither side appeared to be willing to make any compromises.

“There’s no deal in sight, discussions are ongoing and if EDF doesn’t get the price that it believes is the right price then they won’t do it, they have no choice,” Continue reading

March 29, 2013 Posted by | politics, UK | Leave a comment

UK’s Liberal Democrats do a U turn on nuclear power policy

A Liberal Democrat promise goes nuclear – Time for another ’sorry’
video? http://blogs.independent.co.uk/2013/03/26/a-lib-dem-promise-goes-nuclear/
By Andy McSmith , 26 March 2013
Looking back at page 59 of the 2010 Liberal Democrat manifesto, one
finds a promise to “reject a new generation of nuclear power
stations.”
Last week the Energy Secretary Ed Davey, a Lib Dem, gave the go ahead
for the first new nuclear power station in Britain for a generation,
at Hinkley C, in Somerset. Today, he and the Business Secretary Vince
Cable and another Lib Dem promised help to enable UK business to
compete in the global nuclear energy market.

Time for another ’sorry’ video?

March 29, 2013 Posted by | politics, UK | Leave a comment

Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority suspect earthquake cause of Fukushima disaster

Japan: A New Nuclear Inquiry
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/28/world/asia/japan-a-new-nuclear-inquiry.html?_r=0By
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS  March 27, 2013 Japanese government regulators
said Wednesday that for the first time they will conduct their own
investigation into the country’s nuclear crisis to address unanswered
questions. The March 2011 earthquake and tsunami cut power and
destroyed vital cooling systems at the Fukushima Daichi nuclear plant,
causing meltdowns at three of its reactors. Experts still suspect that
the quake, not the tsunami, may have set off the meltdowns.

The
Nuclear Regulation Authority said this issue, which could affect
antiquake measures at nuclear plants nationwide, would be part of its
investigation. The authority said the inquiry would also look into
other issues, including how much and from where radiation leaked at
the plant.

March 29, 2013 Posted by | Fukushima 2013 | Leave a comment

Strange developments in the Julian Assange legal affair

exclamation-Assange blasted Justice Lindskog – who is chair of the Supreme Court of Sweden, theAssnage,Julian country’s highest court of appeal – for his decision to publicly discuss the case. “If an Australian High Court judge came out and spoke on a case the court expected or was likely to judge, it would be regarded as absolutely outrageous,” he told Fairfax media.
“This development is part of a pattern in which senior Swedish figures including the Swedish Foreign Minister, the Prime Minister and Minister for Justice have all publicly attacked me or WikiLeaks,” Assange added…..

WikiLeaks characterized the judge’s lecture as part of the Swedish government campaign against Assange, following Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt’s recent visit to Australia.

“The head of Swedish Supreme Court campaigning on a case they expect to judge with $ from the embassy in the run up to an election,” the group wrote on Twitter.

Assange legal shakeup: Prosecutor walks, Supreme Court judge to speak out on case  RT March 28, 2013 The lead Swedish prosecutor pursuing sexual assault charges against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is no longer handling the case, media reports revealed. Her departure comes as a top Swedish judge is set to speak publicly on the ‘Assange affair.’ Continue reading

March 29, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA, Legal | Leave a comment