nuclear-news

The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry Fukushima Chernobyl Mayak Three Mile Island Atomic Testing Radiation Isotope

Henry Kissinger’s 2014 book warns of increasingly unstable and dangerous international nuclear system.

by putting trade and commerce before nuclear security concerns, Canada is arguably undermining the non-proliferation regime. Last month, Canada confirmed a deal to sell uranium to India, which covertly used a Canadian-designed civilian nuclear reactor to develop and test detonate a nuclear weapon in 1974

Global nuclear threat remains , The Whig.com By Geoffrey Johnston Thursday, May 14, 2015With the end of the Cold War, the threat of nuclear war between the existing nuclear superpowers had essentially disappeared,” writes former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger in his 2014 book World Order.

Yet Kissinger cautions that the proliferation of civilian nuclear technology “has vastly increased the feasibility of acquiring a nuclear capability.” And that makes for an increasingly unstable and dangerous international system. Continue reading

May 15, 2015 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

Serious concerns over the safety of Ukraine’s nuclear waste storage

Zaprozhia-nuclear-plant-UkrUkrainian nuclear waste stored in open air 200km from warzone, Alternative News May 13, 2015 Serious concerns have been raised by experts and environmentalists over the ‘shocking’ way spent nuclear fuel is being stored at Zaporizhia nuclear power plant, Europe’s largest, just 200km away from the front line in Donbass.

More than 3,000 spent nuclear fuel rods are being stored in the open air in mental casks close to the perimeter fence at the Zaporizhia nuclear power plant in conditions that have shocked environmentalists, The Guardian reports.

Nuclear experts say the waste should have another secondary containment structure, such as a building with a roof.

“With a war around the corner, it is shocking that the spent fuel rod containers are standing under the open sky, with just a metal gate and some security guards waltzing up and down for protection. It is unheard of when, in Germany, interim storage operators have been ordered by the court to terror-proof their casks with roofs and reinforced walls,” Patricia Lorenz, a Friends of the Earth nuclear spokeswoman who visited the plant on a fact-finding mission, told the paper.

Although the front line is for now too far away from the nuclear plant to be at any risk, the potential consequences of the conflict engulfing the power station is major worry to locals……..

The current Zaporizhia nuclear fuel storage unit was built to a US design and did involve testing to withstand a terrorist attack.

However a dry storage container with a bomb resilient roof and contained ventilation system would offer much greater protection. However this would be impossible to build on the current site and it would have to be constructed somewhere else nearby and then all the nuclear casks would have to be moved inside at even greater expense.

“It is obvious that if you do not have an array of dry cast [interim] stores with secondary containment around it, then that will have a greater risk of release of radioactive material,” said Antony Froggatt, a senior research fellow and European nuclear specialist at Chatham House, London.

Although sources at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) told The Guardian that any request for funding for such a structure would be seriously considered. The bank has already made 300 million euros available to extend the lifespan of Ukraine’s ageing nuclear plants………http://www.angrysummit.com/%E2%80%8Bukrainian-nuclear-waste-stored-in-open-air-200km-from-warzone

May 15, 2015 Posted by | Ukraine, wastes | Leave a comment

Tesla battery just added another nail to the nuclear coffin

Why Tesla’s Powerwall Might Mean The End Of Fukushima-Style Catastrophe http://www.forbes.com/sites/quora/2015/05/12/why-teslas-powerwall-might-mean-the-end-of-fukushima-style-catastrophe/ 

Did the Tesla Home Battery just kill nuclear power? Mike Barnard, Energy guy

  Not really, as far as I can tell. It added another nail to the coffin perhaps………
No, what’s killing nuclear is cheap wind and solar at utility scales. Storage is a useful and necessary component of a decarbonized grid, but history teaches us that overbuilding capacity and continental interconnectedness is cheaper. Overbuilding of wind and solar and connecting countries together with big pipes is killing nuclear. Storage is more an end game.

Nuclear has been in decline since 2005 in both relative and absolute terms because it’s expensive, fiscal liability costs are high and every build is a megaproject with high risks of schedule and budget overruns.

I’m very happy that Tesla has come into this space, but it’s a minor wedge, not a killer wedge.

May 15, 2015 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

Rural areas in Pakistan get Solar-powered ATMs to deliver clean drinking water

Solar-powered ATMs to deliver clean drinking water in Pakistan – TRFN BY AAMIR SAEED LAHORE, Pakistan, May 14 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – P unjab province is set to launch an innovation for water-short Pakistan: Solar-powered ATMs that dispense clean water when a smart card is scanned.

The two-foot-square prototype machine looks and functions like an ATM, but dispenses water instead of cash. Users are issued a card they can use to claim a daily share of water.

The project, a collaboration between the Punjab Saaf Pani (Clean Water) Company and the Innovations for Poverty Alleviation Lab (IPAL), a research centre in Lahore, aims to install a water ATM on each of a series of water filtration plants being established in rural and urban fringe areas of Punjab province…….http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/05/14/pakistan-solar-water-idUSL5N0Y51MO20150514

May 15, 2015 Posted by | decentralised, Pakistan | Leave a comment

Revolutionary solar rotating system tested in South Africa’s Kalahari desert.

Could this be the world’s most efficient solar electricity system?, Guardian, Jeffrey Barbee, 14 May 15 
Using military technology and a zero-emission engine invented by a 19th-century Scot, Swedish firm seeks to revolutionise solar energy production. A new solar electricity generation system that developers claim is the most efficient in the world, is being tested in South Africa’s Kalahari desert.

The Swedish company behind the project – which combines military technology with an idea developed by a 19th-century Scottish engineer and clergyman – says it is on the verge of building its first commercial installation.

In the remote Northern Cape province, huge mirrors reflect the sun across the brown Kalahari sand. This is the test site for Swedish company Ripasso, which is using the intense South African sun and local manufacturing know-how to develop their cutting-edge kit.

“Our whole team in South Africa has been hired locally, and our new systems have all been built with local South African labour. It works great,” says CEO Gunnar Larsson.

This is the only working small-scale concentrated solar energy system of its kind in the world. 34% of the sun’s energy hitting the mirrors is converted directly to grid-available electric power, compared to roughly half that for standard solar panels. Traditional photovoltaic panels are able to turn about 23% of the solar energy that strikes them into electricity, but this is cut to around 15% before it is usable by the grid.

Jean-Pierre Fourie is Ripasso’s South African site manager. His crew has been testing the system in the Kalahari under harsh desert conditions for four years. “What we hope is to become one of the biggest competitors for renewable energy in the world.”

The massive 100 square metre dishes slowly rotate, following the sun. Light clicks and taps fill the still desert air as they constantly adjust to capture the maximum solar energy.

Independent tests by IT Power in the UK confirm that a single Ripasso dish can generate 75 to 85 megawatt hours of electricity a year – enough to power 24 typical UK homes. To make the same amount of electricity by burning coal would mean releasing roughly 81 metric tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere………

The project has not been without its troubles. “Our major challenge over the last couple of years has been to get the technology accepted by the financing community, especially from the banks,” says Larsson.

Although banks have been unwilling to finance such novel technology, Ripasso has now secured private funding to begin their first large-scale installation. “We are very ready to head into the commercial phase,” says Larsson. http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/may/13/could-this-be-the-worlds-most-efficient-solar-electricity-system

May 15, 2015 Posted by | renewable, South Africa | Leave a comment

Oyster Creek nuclear plant offline for fifth straight day

 By BRIAN IANIERI, Staff Writer The Oyster Creek nuclear power plant in southern Ocean County remains shut down for the fifth day on Monday as staff work to solve the electric problem that sent it offline, a spokeswoman said……http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/business/oyster-creek-nuclear-plant-offline-for-fifth-straight-day/article_bff63088-f7e9-11e4-98a9-1bde50cc13e9.html

May 15, 2015 Posted by | general | Leave a comment