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Oxford Research Group - Briefing papers - Too Hot to Handle? The Future of Civil Nuclea... - 0 views

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    Frank Barnaby and James Kemp, with a foreword by David Howarth MP, July 2007 Supporters of nuclear power claim that the security risks can be managed. However, this briefing paper clearly shows that a worldwide nuclear renaissance is beyond the capacity of the nuclear industry to deliver and would stretch to breaking point the capacity of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to monitor and safeguard civil nuclear power. Even a failed terrorist attack on one of the first new builds would most probably cause subsequent new build to halt in many countries. If this happened, the authors argue that governments would need to again review energy policy - minus civil nuclear power - further delaying progress towards a sustainable and secure energy policy and possibly causing the UK and other countries to miss the window of opportunity to tackle climate change. This briefing paper is one of a series of reports and factsheets published as part of ORG's Secure energy project.
    Availability Download as a PDF   http://www.oxfordresearchgroup.org.uk/publications/briefing_papers/toohottothandle
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Nuclear Decommissioning - U.S. Uranium Mill Tailings map - 0 views

  • #1Former Uranium Processing Sites > Next Release: October 2005 To view mill site pages, click on the mill name on the map or on the links below the map.
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IEER: Energy & Security #4: Top Ten Global Uranium Mines - 0 views

  • Sites of Uranium Mining for Weapons Programs1
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Ranger Uranium Mine on Flickr - Photo Sharing! - 0 views

  • Ranger Uranium Mine To take full advantage of Flickr, you should use a JavaScript-enabled browser and install the latest version of the Macromedia Flash Player. F.decorate(_ge('button_bar'), F._photo_button_bar).bar_go_go_go(119819594, 0);
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Australia: Nuclear Posters - 0 views

  • Uranium Mining: Hurting Everybody. Amidst the vote-grabbing banter of 'climate change' and smarter 'water planning', Its business as usual for the uranium mining industry, with massive expansions of wasteful and destructive operations planned in the near future... To fuel a conventional nuclear power station for one year, two hundred tonnes of uranium are needed, leaving behind a hundred and thirty thousand tonnes of waste (133,20
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Canada: MiningWatch > Uranium - 0 views

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    MiningWatch Canada (MWC) is a pan-Canadian initiative supported by environmental, social justice, Aboriginal and labour organisations from across the country. It addresses the urgent need for a co-ordinated public interest response to the threats to public health, water and air quality, fish and wildlife habitat and community interests posed by irresponsible mineral policies and practices in Canada and around the world.
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IRC Americas Program | Indigenous Peoples Call for Global Ban on Uranium Mining - 0 views

  • Major challenges For years uranium mining was shrouded in secrecy as part of the Cold War and its victims were isolated. Compensation has been hard to win in the courts and although recognized in the 1990 Radiation Exposure Compensation Act for Navajo Uranium Miners, only a small percentage of mining families have received their due. A general lack of political power in indigenous communities makes them easy marks for dangerous uranium mining and dumping projects. The rising price of uranium has caused renewed pressure on indigenous lands.
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StockInterview.com - Spot Uranium Price Holds Steady - 0 views

  • Contaminated soil, containing uranium and related chemicals, found beneath Cameco’s Port Hope conversion facility – located about 60 miles east of Toronto – could place ‘significant’ upward pressure on the spot uranium price. Cameco Fuel Services, at 1 Eldorado Place in Port Hope, is about one-quarter mile from the shores of Lake Ontario. Source: Cameco Corp.
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