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Crooks and Liars » Senate Votes To Make Nonproliferation A Joke - 0 views

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    Most folks missed it, because the vote came just before the bailout bill, but on Wednesday the US Senate voted 86-13 to approve the India 123 bill, giving India access to US nuclear know-how and materials for the first time since India conducted a nuclear weapons test three decades ago. Both presidential candidates voted for the bill and the House had already passed it 298 to 117. The roll call for the Senate vote shows that Boxer, Byrd, Feingold, Leahy and Sanders were among the few "Nay" votes.
Energy Net

New law and order in Russian radioactive waste - 0 views

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    The number of storage sites for radioactive wastes number thousands, and they are difficult to monitor, deputy head of Russia's nuclear energy company Rosatom told journalists in Sankt Petersburg. Now, a new law will help reduce the number of sites. -We expect a new law on the handling of radioactive wastes to be adopted by the end of the year, deputy head of Rosatom Yevgenii Yevstratov confirmed. The law will help significantly limit the number of waste storage sites.
Energy Net

knoxnews.com |Peace activist 'uncovers' info policy at DOE/NNSA - 0 views

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    Suffice it to say, Ralph Hutchison, coordinator of the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, has not been very pleased with the NNSA's treatment of public information in recent years regarding operations at the Y-12 nuclear weapons plant. He also wasn't happy when the feds at Y-12 recently turned down a request for a tour during Dr. Helen Caldicott's upcoming visit.
Energy Net

UK nuclear capacity in meltdown | Greenpeace UK - 0 views

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    Should you happen to find yourself debating with a passionate supporter of nuclear power about how to supply our country's future energy needs, the odds are that pretty early in the debate they'll play their trump card - namely that only nuclear can supply the 'base load' necessary to ensure that the lights stay on throughout the long, dark British winter. Hang the dangers of radioactivity, forget the ruinous expense, they'll say - we can't do without nuclear power.
Energy Net

Legalbrief - Pebble bed nuclear reactors in question - 0 views

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    Scientists heard conflicting views on safety issues around pebble-bed nuclear reactors at an international conference in Washington last week, says the Cape Times. The debate is significant for SA as the country intends to build a demonstration model pebble-bed modular reactor (PBMR) at Koeberg, and 20 to 30 for export. Eskom is attracted to the technology because it sees it as being 'inherently safe' and not needing the expense of a full safety barrier, known as a secondary containment, which other modern reactors have. In June, Rainer Moormann, a scientist who works at Germany's Juelich Research Centre, FZJ, published a report on safety problems with pebble-bed reactors after re-examining the pebble-bed prototype reactor, the AVR, which was shut down in 1988. According to an article in Nucleonics Week, Rainer's findings were 'strongly rebutted' in a presentation by PBMR Ltd, which is 100% owned by Eskom. The PBMR company said Moormann is alone in his findings, and other scientists regard his study as 'flawed'.
Energy Net

knoxnews.com |Trench 13: Small, odd and really hazardous - 0 views

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    One of the more interesting and challenging waste sites on the DOE reservation is Trench 13, which is the topic of today's column at Knoxnews.com. It's located at the far end of an ORNL burial ground known politely as Solid Waste Storage Area No. 5.
Energy Net

WCAX.COM. Yankee Decommissioning Fund Takes a Hit - 0 views

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    New numbers show Vermont Yankee's decommissioning fund is taking a hit amid all this financial turmoil. Last September, the fund to dismantle the plant once it closes was at $440 million. A year later-- it's dropped $43 million. It's expected to cost at least $800 million to shut down and clean up the site.
Energy Net

Bush signs U.S.-India nuclear pact into law | Reuters - 0 views

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    President George W. Bush on Wednesday signed legislation that will allow the United States and India to open up nuclear trade, saying the two countries are "natural partners." His action will pave the way for the details of the agreement to be signed by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Indian External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee in Washington on Friday.
Energy Net

Victoria Advocate - Forum faces nuclear issues - 0 views

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    City refuses to air meeting on Channel 15, but did air pro-nuke speakers A group of residents concerned about nuclear power coming to Victoria doesn't think the city is giving it a "fair shake." Texans for a Sound Energy Policy Alliance asked to air a recording of the "Nuclear 101" forum tonight on the city's Channel 15, but city leaders declined, director John Figer said.
Energy Net

Committee questions health officials on radiation - Boston.com - 0 views

  • But others were sharply critical of the changes, saying they were among multiple steps taken in recent years that had the effect of making it easier for Vermont Yankee to stay under its radiation limits.
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    A legislative committee on Wednesday criticized the Vermont Health Department for reworking the way it measures radiation being emitted by the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant without first bringing the changes to the committee. The Legislative Committee on Administrative Rules put the Health Department's radiological health chief in the hot seat over changes that have made it easier for Vermont Yankee to stay within state limits for radiation as measured at the plant boundary.
Energy Net

RIA Novosti - Russia denies nuclear weapons on ships bound for Venezuela - 0 views

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    Russian warships en route to Venezuela to take part in naval exercises are not carrying nuclear weapons, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said Thursday. "There are no tactical nuclear weapons on board these ships," Andrei Nesterenko told a news conference at RIA Novosti.
Energy Net

Whitecourt Star - Study links cancer, nuclear power - 0 views

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    A German study linking increased cancer rates in children with their proximity to nuclear power plants raised some eyebrows at the Blue Ridge Community Hall last week. Tipping Point, a Whitecourt-based anti-nuclear group invited German pediatrician Dr. Ernst Iskenius to present the results of the KiKK study to about 30 Whitecourt and Woodland County residents. The KiKK study was the second of two released by the German government last fall. Its results created a public outcry and debate, which is still continuing today in Europe. The first German study, published by Terschueren Hoffmann and D.B. Richardson found 14 cases of leukemia between 1990 and 2005 in children living within five kilometres from the Krummel nuclear plant in Geesthacht and another northern facility in Germany.
Energy Net

Al Jazeera English - Africa - 'Toxic waste' behind Somali piracy - 0 views

  • Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, the UN envoy for Somalia confirmed to Al Jazeera the world body has "reliable information" that European and Asian companies are dumping toxic waste, including nuclear waste, off the Somali coastline.
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    Somali pirates have accused European firms of dumping toxic waste off the Somali coast and are demanding an $8m ransom for the return of a Ukranian ship they captured, saying the money will go towards cleaning up the waste. The ransom demand is a means of "reacting to the toxic waste that has been continually dumped on the shores of our country for nearly 20 years", Januna Ali Jama, a spokesman for the pirates, based in the semi-autonomous region of Puntland, said.
Energy Net

The Center for Public Integrity | Front & Center News - How the Gores, Father and Son, ... - 0 views

  • Uranium Deal Helps Benefactors, but Costs Taxpayers $2.1 Billion IN 1993, Vice President Gore boarded Air Force Two and flew to Moscow for meetings with Russian Prime Minister Victor Chernomyrdin about the vitally important task of protecting nuclear weapons and nuclear material in the newly decentralized former Soviet Union. It was a natural mission for Gore; during his tenure in the Senate, he had become something of an expert in arms control agreements and, thanks to the patronage from Hammer, had already met with Anatoly Dobrynin, Moscow’s longtime ambassador to Washington. Many defense experts consider Russia’s nuclear arsenal to pose the greatest immediate threat to U.S. security, of even greater concern than China’s alleged acquisition of U.S. nuclear secrets. The Chinese will no doubt develop sophisticated warheads and the missiles to launch them over the next decade or two; the Russians already have them. The fear of loose nukes grew as economic conditions in the old Soviet republics deteriorated in the early 1990s. Gore’s mission was to reach an agreement with Russia on a way to manage all those weapons in a post-Cold War world.
  • Uranium Deal Helps Benefactors, but Costs Taxpayers $2.1 Billion IN 1993, Vice President Gore boarded Air Force Two and flew to Moscow for meetings with Russian Prime Minister Victor Chernomyrdin about the vitally important task of protecting nuclear weapons and nuclear material in the newly decentralized former Soviet Union. It was a natural mission for Gore; during his tenure in the Senate, he had become something of an expert in arms control agreements and, thanks to the patronage from Hammer, had already met with Anatoly Dobrynin, Moscow’s longtime ambassador to Washington.
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    Uranium Deal Helps Benefactors, but Costs Taxpayers $2.1 Billion IN 1993, Vice President Gore boarded Air Force Two and flew to Moscow for meetings with Russian Prime Minister Victor Chernomyrdin about the vitally important task of protecting nuclear weapons and nuclear material in the newly decentralized former Soviet Union. It was a natural mission for Gore; during his tenure in the Senate, he had become something of an expert in arms control agreements and, thanks to the patronage from Hammer, had already met with Anatoly Dobrynin, Moscow's longtime ambassador to Washington. Many defense experts consider Russia's nuclear arsenal to pose the greatest immediate threat to U.S. security, of even greater concern than China's alleged acquisition of U.S. nuclear secrets. The Chinese will no doubt develop sophisticated warheads and the missiles to launch them over the next decade or two; the Russians already have them. The fear of loose nukes grew as economic conditions in the old Soviet republics deteriorated in the early 1990s. Gore's mission was to reach an agreement with Russia on a way to manage all those weapons in a post-Cold War world.
Energy Net

Next president has power, though not absolute, over waste dump decision - Las Vegas Sun - 0 views

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    Today, the Yucca Mountain project is a horseshoe-shaped tunnel under 1,000 feet of an unimpressive peak in Southern Nevada. It's 60 miles as the crow flies to the lowest point in the continental United States, Badwater in Death Valley National Park. From Yucca's ridge it is also possible to see the highest point in the continental United States, Mt. Whitney, as well as ancient volcanoes and a major fault line.
Energy Net

Two decades later, how we got here - Las Vegas Sun - 0 views

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    John McCain supports plans to store high-level nuclear waste 90 miles from Las Vegas at Yucca Mountain. Barack Obama does not. The question being asked by Nevadans who oppose the repository - and by those who support it, too - is whether that matters. What could each candidate actually do about it as president?
Energy Net

Victoria Advocate - Energy group shares information - 0 views

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    Daniel Rojas, a 61-year-old retiree, came to the nuclear power forum to see how a nuclear power plant would affect him. "It could affect me both ways: good, economically for the community," Rojas said. "And bad, with the dangers involved."
Energy Net

The Cumberland News: Sellafield bosses accused of no-strike 'bribe' - 0 views

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    Nuclear bosses have been accused of trying to "bribe" Sellafield staff not to strike by threatening to withhold a £1,500 loyalty payment. British Nuclear Fuels Ltd (BNFL) staff at other UK nuclear sites have received the cash when those businesses were sold to private sector.
Energy Net

PBMR plant construction contracts awarded - 0 views

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    South Africa's Pebble Bed Modular Reactor Company (PBMR) reports that its PBMR nuclear power plant is poised to become the world's first commercial scale advanced nuclear reactor to be built in the new millennium.
Energy Net

Suburban Journals| HEMATITE: Prep work begins for cleaning former Westinghouse site - 0 views

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    Waste clean up at the former site of a nuclear fuel processing plant in Hematite could begin as early as 2009. The 228-acre site was closed by owner Westinghouse in 2002, after producing nuclear fuel rods for more than four decades.
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