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For Scotland, energy is our best argument for independence

,,,,,,,,,,, the Government’s obsession with nuclear power – the most expensive method ever devised for generating electricity. The Government claims nuclear is renewable. It isn’t. At current rates, there is maybe 90 years’ supply of uranium left – less if we use more. The Government claims it is clean. It isn’t. The toxic radioactive waste needs to be isolated from living things, including us, for centuries. The Government claims it provides energy security. It doesn’t. The UK has no uranium. Yet the UK Government, supported by its Labour opposition, is preparing to rapidly expand nuclear power at vast expense to the taxpayer.

The National, By Tommy Sheppard, 6th August 23

SOMETIMES I wonder what it’s going to take to make the UK Government take climate change seriously. We’ve spent this miserable, sodden Scottish summer watching holiday destinations in the Mediterranean combust. The news is full of floods and typhoons. Records are broken every day. Across the world people are drowning and burning.

All of this is going to get worse. Beyond the headlines, a catastrophe unfolds as the ice melts and sea levels rise. Famine and more mass migration result. The climate emergency is here now.

……………………………….We have created the climate crisis. And we can fix it, but only if our political leaders are prepared to take hard decisions and apply a degree of honesty and common sense which has so far escaped them.

……………….. We need to stop burning oil and gas……………..

Let’s start with new oil and gas exploitation. Of all the utter bollocks talked by Sunak’s government, this takes the biscuit. Despite committing to a policy of reducing oil and gas, we’re told it’s okay to massively increase drilling and extraction in the North Sea. This is an affront to common sense. The dogs in the street know you cannot reduce something by having more of it.

To be clear, what is now being considered is massive. Bigger than before…………………………

And then we’re told that if the UK does not allow this, some other country will, so it’s futile not doing it. This counsel of despair has been rejected by – among others – the Tory chair of the Climate Change Committee, Lord Deben,……………………….

Let’s be clear, the best way to capture carbon is to plant trees. Photosynthesis is how CO2 is taken out of the atmosphere. And one of the factors in rising CO2 levels is that these islands, like most of the world, have lost half the tree cover they used to have.

CARBON capture can never replace nature in sequestering carbon from the atmosphere. …………………………………………………………………………………

We can’t have a conversation about the deceitfulness of UK energy policy without discussing the Government’s obsession with nuclear power – the most expensive method ever devised for generating electricity. The Government claims nuclear is renewable. It isn’t. At current rates, there is maybe 90 years’ supply of uranium left – less if we use more. The Government claims it is clean. It isn’t. The toxic radioactive waste needs to be isolated from living things, including us, for centuries. The Government claims it provides energy security. It doesn’t. The UK has no uranium. Yet the UK Government, supported by its Labour opposition, is preparing to rapidly expand nuclear power at vast expense to the taxpayer.

……………………………………………. More than most countries, Scotland is blessed with renewable energy sources in abundance. We just need the political and financial commitment to develop them at a scale never before seen. That commitment won’t come from this UK Government, nor it seems the next one.

So, perhaps more than any other area of policy, the need for Scotland to have control over its energy production makes a compelling case for our political independence.  https://www.thenational.scot/politics/23703825.tommy-sheppard-energy-best-argument-independence/

August 8, 2023 Posted by | ENERGY, UK | Leave a comment

Nevada’s atomic fallout: How nuclear explosions in the Silver State reverberate through lives today

Aug 08, 2023  https://www.ktnv.com/news/nevadas-atomic-fallout-how-nuclear-explosions-in-the-silver-state-reverberate-through-lives-today

It happened not so long ago, though some who call Nevada home may not remember the “Atomic Era,” when more than 1,000 nuclear bombs were set off near the Las Vegas Valley.

But there are some in the Silver State who can never forget. These are their stories.

(Video) The stories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as told through the eyes of survivors. Channel 13 anchor Paulina Bucka hears from two Las Vegas residents who share how the 1945 bombings still impact them today.

The two bombs killed more than 300,000 people — and counting. “Whoever survived…sometimes they’d say they were better off dead,” Kumiko Noriega, a Las Vegas resident who grew up in Hiroshima after the bombings, told Channel 13.

 so, so much.”

DOWNWINDERS: A TRUE LAS VEGAS STORY

(Video) During the height of the Cold War and atomic nuclear testing, Las Vegas became home to one of the largest atomic testing sites in the country.

In the vast Nevada desert, there are many stories of people who lived to tell about the effects of nuclear fallout — and many who did not. Paulina Bucka reports.

THE FATHER OF THE ATOMIC BOMB

Even before its theater debut, the blockbuster biopic “Oppenheimer” prompted thought-provoking discussions about the past, present, and future implications of the atomic bomb and nuclear energy.

Oppenheimer’s grandchildren recently discussed his legacy at an event in Southern Nevada. Isabella Martin reports.

‘OPPENHEIMER’: THE BLOCKBUSTER FILM’S LAS VEGAS CONNECTION

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August 8, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

A warning from the Caribbean – none of us is safe from nuclear disaster

Nuclear disaster a very real prospect

Trinidad Express Editorial, 8 Aug 23

Two days ago, the world, led by Japan, peered through the long lens of history to August 6, 1945, when the first atomic bomb was released above Hiroshima that changed the world.

As Japan rang its peace bell and observed its annual moment of silence—at the exact time and date that the A-bomb innocuously nicknamed “Little Boy” was unleashed—Hollywood filmmaker Christopher Nolan threw his gaze forward to the age of artificial intelligence, calling this inflection point in global technological advancement an “Oppenheimer moment”.

Together, both cast modern perspectives on the 78-year-old event that killed between 129,000 and 226,000 mostly civilians and pushed the world to where it is now: in near-constant fear of global annihilation from nuclear weapons.

. In the time between that fateful day in 1945 and now, far from being chastened into complete nuclear disarmament, nations have invested in technological advancements that have made nuclear weapons 80 times more powerful than the one detonated over Hiroshima. These modern weapons now have more accurate and resilient delivery methods that can fly faster than the speed of sound……………………………………………….

last weekend’s anniversary reminds us that climate chaos is not the only threat to the future of humanity. Here in T&T, we may feel farther away from nuclear annihilation than from the weather crises we experience daily but one serves to remind us of the other.

As the Caribbean raises its voice on the world stage on climate change, so too our voices must be heard on the other looming threat to our existence.  https://trinidadexpress.com/opinion/editorials/nuclear-disaster-a-very-real-prospect/article_2cff3a12-3585-11ee-a35f-334a8a703465.html

August 8, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment