State report backs nuclear power as clean energy
State report backs nuclear power as clean energy
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Florida’s energy future should be “clean” – not just “renewable” – and include nuclear power as a source of green energy, according to recommendations from the staff of utility regulators released Wednesday.
The 111-page report is the latest step in the debate over whether power companies can count new nuclear power toward their obligation to generate renewable energy…………………………. The report follows months of lobbying by Florida Power & Light – the state’s largest utility and producer of nuclear power – to persuade regulators to create a “Clean Energy Portfolio Standard” rather than a “Renewable Portfolio Standard.” Florida statues do not include nuclear power in the definition of “renewable” energy. FPL generates no renewable energy in Florida………………..Including nuclear power in the green energy mix “could make it easier” for investor-owned utilities, such as FPL, to meet an earlier deadline to go green.
Daniel Kessler: President Obama and Nuclear Power’s Spin Campaign
President Obama and Nuclear Power’s spin campaign
The Huffington Post Daniel Kessler and Jim Riccio 25 Nov 08 Within hours of President-elect Obama’s victory, the nuclear industry was at it again:spinning nuclear power and attempting to put the best light on the industry’s prospects after the loss of their favorite candidate, Sen. John McCain. The President of the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), Skip Bowman, congratulated President-elect Obama andVice President-elect Biden on their victory and then he proceeded to mischaracterize their position on nuclear power…………………..the nuclear industry selectively edited the Obama/Biden campaign message.Here’s the part of the Obama/Biden platform that the nuclear spin-doctors at NEI left out:
However, before an expansion of nuclear power is considered, key issues must be addressed including: security of nuclear fuel and waste, waste storage, and proliferation.
So rather than calling for an expansion of nuclear power, the Obama/Biden campaign actually acknowledged the dirty and dangerous downside of nuclear power and the risk that expanding nuclear power would lead to the spread of nuclear weapons.It is not just the threat of proliferation that makes nuclear power a “non -starter.” Eight years of inaction on global warming by the Bush/Cheney administration have put America and the world well behind the climate curve ball. In order to address climate change we need energy choices that are fast and affordable and nuclear power is neither.
In fact, the price tag for new nuclear power is so prohibitively expensive; $11 to $12 billion per plant, that one U.S. corporation has already rejected building a new nuclear plant. Last December, MidAmerican Energy Holdings, a subsidiary of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., became the first U.S. corporation to reject plans for a new nuclear reactor………………..Similarly, a new report by Greenpeace and European Renewable Energy Council shows that investment in renewable power and energy efficiency worldwide would create a $360 billion a year industry, provide half of the world’s electricity, and slash $18 trillion in future fuel expenditures — all while protecting the climate and phasing out nuclear power.
Nuclear propagandists have and will continue to attempt to spin the climate crisis to the advantage of nuclear corporations. They will continue to claim that we can’t address global warming without more nuclear reactors.
Fortunately for America and the planet….Yes We Can!
Daniel Kessler: President Obama and Nuclear Power’s Spin Campaign
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radiation, uranium
Effects of Bootheel uranium search costly
Effects of Bootheel uranium search costly
columbiotribune.com By KEN MIDKIFF Friday, November 21, 2008 Something’s going on down in the Bootheel. At this point, it is all still pretty much a mystery, but if all comes together, it is likely to be an environmental disaster.All that is known at this point is that a consulting firm – Gustafson Inc. of Boulder, Colo. – is doing some exploratory work for the U.S. Department of Energy and the Bendix Corp. Apparently, the engineers and geologists at Gustafson think that underneath all that rich topsoil deposited over thousands of years by flooding from the adjacent Mississippi River, is uranium………………………The legacies of uranium mining in the western states are abandoned, unsafe mines and several radioactive dumps that will cost millions of taxpayer dollars to cover or move. The uranium boom quickly went bust, and once-thriving towns ceased to exist or were greatly diminished.The Midwest, not having very many public lands, was not part of the uranium boom. So, what has changed?
That question is essential because the Gustafson group is actively looking on private lands in this state and several surrounding states – Kentucky, Arkansas and Kansas. As usual, those interested in establishing uranium extraction sites are promising landowners that they will become rich, taking vacations in the Bahamas. But, as usual, the money resulting from any uranium that might exist will go to Bendix, and landowners will be left with – well, the shaft.
Note that this does not involve mining but rather “uranium extraction,” and therein lays the problem. Although folks out West will complain of the unsafe holes in the ground left by uranium mining, the method proposed for Mississippi County is “in situ leaching.”…………………..
Immediately, several problems arise with this method. First, the sandstone in the Bootheel is permeable, and it is likely that groundwater – drinking water – in the area will be contaminated with dissolved radioactive metals.
Second, the process, although effective, does not remove all of the uranium – some remains underground; some remains in the wastewater. Third, any discharge of radioactive and heavy metal waste will flow into area creeks and then into the Mississippi River…………………Polluted groundwater, discharge of radioactive waste into local creeks and national rivers – the costs of these issues will be borne by everyone. Just ask folks in Utah dealing with the “Moab pile”, where the uranium boom left a massive radioactive dump that is polluting the nearby Colorado River. Moving the radioactive materials to a site where it will cause much less harm will cost taxpayers millions.
The “external costs” turn out to be very costly.
Ethical Corporation: By Invitation – Resources slump: Why oil and mining must garner social capital
More from the oxymoronic “Ethical Corporati0n”
Resources slump: Why oil and mining must garner social capitalMany oil and mining companies are slashing investments as commodity prices collapse. For their own sake, the socio-political fall out will need to be sensitively managedBy Rob Foulkes and Daniel Litvin Nov 24 08 well-focused sustainable development programmes and other relationship-building activities – which typically cost a small fraction of overall capital expenditure for a project – may be a worthwhile investment. Doing the right stakeholder engagement work is equivalent to buying an option to reopen projects, or at least lower the risk of future backlash.Past turbulenceWhen it comes to their treatment by foreign extractive companies, governments and populations in resource-rich countries tend to have long memories, and in many parts of the world feel that the multinationals have historically paid scant attention to their needs.
The oil and mining nationalisations that swept the developing world in the 1960s and 1970s were in part a response to decades of perceived exploitation, a belief – fair or not – that foreign companies had treated host countries as cash-cows to be milked or discarded as required without sufficient consideration for the human consequences……………………………………….The financial value of trustIn terms of the management of individual projects during investment delays, our research suggests that the way socio-political issues are handled can significantly affect the support a company enjoys from its hosts when conditions improve and it seeks to re-launch.
Allowing relationships with key stakeholders to deteriorate, for example, or failing to pursue valued community projects, can undermine local and national support that may have taken years to build up, and will increase the risk of delays or backlash when prices pick up.
The case of Jabiluka, an Australian uranium project acquired by the mining company North in 1991, illustrates at least an aspect of this. Stalled at that point by a national policy limiting uranium mine development, the project did at least have the formal consent of the local Aboriginal community. Yet by 1996, when a new government revoked the policy, community opposition had intensified. Hundreds of people were arrested during protests over the next two years and the mine became a national controversy.
Perceptions of social and environmental problems around its nearby Ranger mine (whether these were fair or not), and Aboriginal concerns that re-launching Jabiluka would mean more of the same meant that any local support the company had once enjoyed was severely eroded. Rio Tinto, which acquired North in 2000, has since agreed to mothball the project until the local community reaffirms its consent, which some of its leaders insist it will never do………………………….a sensitive but strategically designed approach to stakeholder relations can help extractive companies soften the impact of project delays on the way they are viewed in resource-rich countries. Maintaining sufficient levels of contact with host governments and communities, and responding wherever possible to their needs during periods of project delay (including through continued, even if pared back, sustainability programmes) is a critical element of this……………………companies may do well to pay at least some attention to public and political perceptions of what constitutes a ‘fair deal’ for the host country.
Ethical Corporation: By Invitation – Resources slump: Why oil and mining must garner social capital
Ethical Corporation: By Invitation – Resources slump: Why oil and mining must garner social capital
Resources slump: Why oil and mining must garner social capital (Translation – we’d better get better at conning the public?)
Ethical Corporation (now THERE’s an oxymoron) 24 Nov 08 Many oil and mining companies are slashing investments as commodity prices collapse. For their own sake, the socio-political fall out will need to be sensitively managed
By Rob Foulkes and Daniel Litvin
Companies focused intently on cutting costs may be tempted to treat management of socio-political and sustainability issues as a luxury which they can live without while projects are on hold.Clearly, legal requirements in this area need to be met: complying with environmental regulations for mothballed facilities, for example. But is there any sense in going beyond this – for example investing in community projects or stakeholder engagement programmes – while other investment is frozen?
In fact, while waste should be cut back in this area as elsewhere, strategically protecting key relationships during this period actually may be more important to companies’ long term success than any short term cash savings.
A feeling among host communities and governments that they have been cast aside by multinationals in the past has bred suspicion and resentment of foreign business in resource-rich developing countries. These feelings have underpinned successive waves of resource nationalism at great cost to the companies involved.
Research based on Critical Resource’s LicenseSecure™ methodology, which rates the health of the ‘socio-political license to operate’ of resource projects, suggests that frequently it is a foreign company’s handling of social and political concerns during a delay to a project that shapes the way the business is seen and treated by its hosts in the future.
Ethical Corporation: By Invitation – Resources slump: Why oil and mining must garner social capital
Uranium mining and market mayhem | GoDanRiver
Uranium mining and market mayhem
goDanRiver.com 10 Oct 08 TERRY ANDREWS, R.N. I find it interesting that most of the letters that favor uranium mining seem to be written by people who are VUI investors or employees. In other words, by people who stand to reap significant financial gains if uranium is mined and milled at the Coles Hill site in Pittsylvania County.
The people that oppose uranium mining are spending their own money and countless hours trying to educate the public on the dangers of uranium mining and milling — and they don’t get paid to do that. They, like me, do it because they love Virginia and don’t want their land, water, livestock and health destroyed………………………….
a physician was quoted as saying that there is a higher incidence of cancers (lung, bone and blood), kidney problems and birth defects in areas where uranium is mined. He was endorsing a resolution in Colorado that opposes uranium mining “in geographical areas that are utilized by the farming or ranching communities or where there are human residents, due to the adverse health conditions associated with the mining process …”
In a similar article from Utah, the results of a study by a state epidemiologist determined that “Monticello residents suffered from lung cancer and stomach cancers at up to twice the normal rate over three decades, a possible legacy of a uranium mill near the town in southeastern Utah.”
Uranium mining and market mayhem | GoDanRiver
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Political Intelligence – The Texas Observer
Dump and Dumber
The Texas Observer by Forrest Wilder October 03, 2008 | Political Intelligence – “………………….The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality convened the meeting to gather public input on a proposal by Waste Control Specialists to bury up to 28 million cubic feet of low-level radioactive waste in a landfill 30 miles west of Andrews. The September hearing follows the agency’s release of a draft license and environmental analysis. The documents simultaneously move the project one step closer to opening and raise questions about the environmental impact of what would be the nation’s largest commercial radioactive waste dump……………………………..Waste Control has spent at least 15 years convincing people in Andrews and Eunice that its hazardous and radioactive waste operation will aid the community, using radio and television spots and contributions to local charities and politicians……………………..Two groundwater tables appear to be in the “immediate vicinity” of the dump, one of which could be as close as 14 feet……………………………..The Sierra Club asserts, in written comments submitted to the TCEQ, that issuing the license “is clearly in violation of the law.”
Political Intelligence – The Texas Observer
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, radioactive, uranium
Letter: Bush could still attack Iran | World news | The Guardian
Bush could still attack Iran
The Guardian September Stefan Simanowitz Westminster Committee on Iran 17 2008 Despite the main finding in the latest report from the International Atomic Energy Agency that it “has been able to continue to verify the non-diversion of declared nuclear material in Iran”, the western media has focused on the issue of Tehran’s lack of transparency over the IAEA investigation into recent intelligence allegations (Report, September 12). These involve missile re-entry vehicle projects and have been rejected by the Iranians, who have not even been permitted to see the documents upon which the allegations are founded.
This week the US Congress is debating two non-binding resolutions which, if passed, will greatly increase the likelihood of military intervention against Iran………………..speculation that George Bush might authorise military attacks against Iran before the end of his term in office in January, or before the November elections to boost to the likelihood of a McCain presidency.
Stefan Simanowitz Westminster Committee on Iran
Letter: Bush could still attack Iran | World news | The Guardian
Tags: nuclear, antinuclear, uranium, radioactive
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