[ RadSafe ] [Nuclear News] DOE Extends Deadline for Comments on Nuclear Plant
Sandy Perle
sandyfl at cox.net
Tue Apr 3 11:31:23 CDT 2007
Index:
DOE Extends Deadline for Comments on Nuclear Plant
Chernobyl Radiation Equal to Everyday Risks, Study Finds
British Energy still in nuclear plant restart talks
Atom Stroi to take part in IAEO tender on nuclear power plants
Logistical units of Bushehr nuclear power plant begins operation
China reveals nuclear lunar roverHeading for the moon in 2012
New Lab Can Diagnose Radiation Victims In Nuclear Emergency
Landowner to allow Owyhee nuclear plant
China plant to expand nuclear power capacity
Kuwait seeks NATO's assistance to combat nuclear radiations
Cost of Nuclear Electricity May be Half That of Gas-Fired Generation
-------------------------------------------------------------------
DOE Extends Deadline for Comments on Nuclear Plant
Apr. 3-- -- A two-month extension will allow people to incorporate
comments about a Paducah siting study for a 1,000-job spent nuclear
fuel recycling plant into a nationwide environmental impact
statement.
The Department of Energy announced Monday that it has extended the
comment deadline for its Global Nuclear Energy Partnership program
from Wednesday to June 4. Comments will be used to help DOE decide by
June 2008 whether and where to build one or more recycling plants and
advanced recycling reactors that would generate electricity while
destroying a large amount of highly radioactive waste left over from
fuel rods.
A Paducah task force, which is competing with 12 other cities for the
facilities, has until May 30 to finish its siting study. Task force
representative Dale Allen said the study should be finished and
posted on the local Web site, www.paducahgnep.com, by May 1.
"We were really time-constrained in getting the report in, but this
will give the public an opportunity to see the finished report and
comment directly into the programmatic environmental impact
statement," Allen said. "We'll put our report on the Paducah Web site
word for word."
Allen said concerns were expressed at a recent public meeting about
the time constraints for public comments.
"Continuing the environmental scoping process means we will continue
to better understand the environmental conditions under which we will
be operating," DOE Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy Dennis
Spurgeon said. "We have seen strong support for GNEP all across the
country, and it's encouraging to hear that an increasing number of
Americans recognize the growing need for nuclear energy, a safe,
affordable and emissions-free power source."
In two previous public meetings in Paducah, GNEP has received support
from business and governmental leaders but opposition from some
environmental activists and neighbors of the proposed plant site. The
$15 billion recycling factory is targeted for 580 acres just
southwest of the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant and would open about
2020.
Two other public meetings are scheduled -- April 10 at Harrah's
theater in Metropolis, Ill., and April 12 at Kentucky Dam Village
State Resort Park Convention Center in Gilbertsville. Each meeting is
scheduled to last from 6 to 8:30 p.m.
------------------
Chernobyl Radiation Equal to Everyday Risks, Study Finds
LONDON -- The risk of survivors of the Chernobyl accident dying early
is far less than supposed, ranking about the same as exposure to air
pollution or passive smoking, according to new research published on
Tuesday.
The human toll from the world's worst civil nuclear accident has been
hotly debated ever since the Ukrainian power station's No. 4 reactor
blew up on April 26, 1986, spewing radioactive dust across Europe.
Now a top British scientist has evaluated the comparative risks and
concluded that for those most affected by the disaster -- emergency
workers and people living nearby -- the increased risk of premature
death due to radiation is around 1 percent.
That is roughly the same as the risk of dying from diseases triggered
by air pollution in a major city or the effects of inhaling other
people's tobacco smoke, said Jim Smith of Britain's Centre for
Ecology and Hydrology.
Smith has been a regular visitor to the contaminated 30-km (20-mile)
"exclusion zone" around Chernobyl that straddles parts of Ukraine and
neighbouring Belarus and has found wildlife to be thriving there.
Some people are also living in the area and surviving well into their
70s, he noted.
"Populations still living unofficially in the abandoned lands around
Chernobyl may actually have a lower health risk from radiation than
they would have if they were exposed to the air pollution health risk
in a large city such as nearby Kiev," Smith wrote in the journal
BioMedCentral Public Health.
His study focused on long-term health risks to survivors who received
high but non-lethal doses of radiation.
It excluded the cases of 134 firemen and helicopter pilots who
suffered acute radiation sickness, leading to death in around 40
cases.
About 4,000 people also developed thyroid cancer in 1986 as a result
of the accident, most of them children and adolescents, although the
survival rate has been 99 percent.
Smith told reporters it was important to put the relative risks of
radiation in perspective -- not least to help survivors of Chernobyl,
who have suffered two decades of mental anguish about the risk of
developing various cancers.
"The mis-perception of radiation risks has caused serious economic,
social and psychological problems for the population," he said.
The World Health Organisation puts at 9,000 the number of people
expected to die of radiation exposure from Chernobyl, while
environmental group Greenpeace has predicted an eventual death toll
of 93,000.
Smith's research was funded by Britain's government-backed Natural
Environment Research Council.
-------------------
British Energy still in nuclear plant restart talks
LONDON (Reuters) - Nuclear watchdog is still in talks with British
Energy over the generator's request to restart its Hinkley Point
power plant, a spokesman for the Health & Saftey Executive said on
Tuesday.
British Energy must convince the HSE's Nuclear Installations
Inspectorate (NII) that Hinkley Point, which has been shut for about
six months for boiler repairs, can run safely at 70 percent of
capacity until further work planned for next year.
The company had hoped to get at least one of the two affected
reactors at the power station in southwest England going by the end
of March, subject to NII approval.
But the watchdog is still not satisfied.
"There's been no decision made either way," the HSE spokesman said.
"There's no restart date yet."
He declined to say how much longer the talks would continue.
One of the reactors at Hinkley Point has been shut since late
September while the other was stopped a month later because of cracks
in boiler pipes.
The company's Hunterston B power station in Scotland has also been
shut since October but the company has already said that plant would
not restart until April, again subject to NII approval.
The long-term outages not only slashed British Energy's output last
year but also led to an increase in carbon emissions as coal fired
power plants had to make up for the lack of carbon-free nuclear
power.
Britain emitted 1.25 percent more carbon dioxide last year than in
2005, mostly because power stations switched to high-carbon coal from
gas and nuclear generation, the government said last week.
--------------------
Atom Stroi to take part in IAEO tender on nuclear power plants
IRNA Apr 3 - A delegation representing the contractor of Bushehr
nuclear power plant project, Atom Stroi Export Company, is expected
to depart to Iran in the near future.
This was declared by the spokeswoman for Atom Stroi Export Co., Irina
Yesipova in an exclusive interview with IRNA on Tuesday.
Two round of talks between Iran's Atomic Energy Organization (IAEO)
and Atom Extroi Export Co. about the project have so long been held
in Moscow and Tehran, but due to New Year holidays in Iran the second
round was stopped.
She said that only 10 million dollars was paid by Iran in March to
cover the expenses of the power plant, which is not sufficient to
continue the project.
The Russian spokeswoman referred to the favorable and stable trend of
works at Bushehr nuclear power plant, saying that various sections of
the project are now being tested and prepared to be commissioned.
In response to a question about the prospect of participation of Atom
Stroi Export Co. in Iran's upcoming tender for establishment of
nuclear power plants in the country, Yesipova said, "We will
certainly take part in the tender if the offered conditions are
acceptable." The spokeswoman for the Russian Atom Stroi Export Co.
declared the company's readiness in this regard.
Meanwhile, IAEO deputy head for international affairs, Mohammad
Saeedi, told IRNA that Iran will hold a tender on establishment of
more nuclear power plants in Iran in the coming 3-4 months to
generate 2,000 MWs out of the predicted 20,000 MWs of nuclear power.
---------------
Logistical units of Bushehr nuclear power plant begins operation
TEHRAN, Apr.03 (ISNA) -The logistical units of Bushehr nuclear power
plant commenced operation today in the presence of the Iranian vice
president, Parviz Davoudi.
The four newly launched units include non-mineral water production,
central cold water for controlling systems, central pumping station
and a 400 KW electrical transmission facility.
Iran's Atomic Energy Organization chief who was also present at the
ceremony gave news of a 360 Megawatt power plant constructed in line
with the Bushehr plant.
"The first goal and phase of achievement for the organization was
development and employment of nuclear fuel and the second phase is
nuclear power plant development," said Reza Aghazadeh while informing
that 92 percent of the new plant construction was complete.
He also went on to say that the preliminary reports on security
analysis of the Bushehr power plant were ready in 17 volumes and
approved by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The final security reports were also ready to go through the
procedure and facilitate the operation of Bushehr plant.
Speaking to the reporters before the trip to Bushehr, Aghazadeh said
he would have some good nuclear news for journalists and the Iranian
nation in the upcoming week.
He also referred to the delay in the Bushehr plant fuel, scheduled to
be delivered by Russia back in February.
"I have no doubts that this is a political matter but I do not agree
that the Russians plan not to provide us with the fuel anyway," he
said while reiterating that the launching Bushehr plant and fuel
delivery were dependable on political issues.
Aghazadeh further added that it would not be of any advantage to
Russia to generate mistrust in case of fuel delivery to a power
plant, particularly when "they are responsible for its construction".
"After the political obstacles are removed, various countries will
judge Russia's decisions and dealings," he said while asserting that
political issues would be resolved sooner or later.
--------------
China reveals nuclear lunar roverHeading for the moon in 2012
China is planning to send a nuclear powered rover to the moon in 2012
on its first unmanned mission to our natural satellite.
Several technology institutes across the country are competing to
develop the vehicle, although there is no word on when the official
selection will be made. In what seems to be a bid to get the edge on
their competitors, engineers at the Shanghai Institute demonstrated
their prototype to the press this week.
The vehicle, as yet unnamed, will roll over the lunar surface on six
wheels. Shanghai Daily reports that the rover is 1.5 metres tall and
weighs in at 200kg. The paper adds that it should be able to transmit
video in real time, dig, collect, and analyse soil samples, and
produce 3D images of the lunar surface.
Shanghai Institute director Luo Jian says: "We want it to be better
than the early US rovers," according to reports.
The rover will be able to roll at a top speed of 100 metres per hour,
and will be equipped with sensors to stop it crashing into things.
Researchers say they still need to refine the rover's ability to
withstand the rigours of the lunar environment: low gravity, extreme
temperatures, and exposure to cosmic rays are all engineering
challenges.
Although the notion of strapping nuclear material to a rocket and
hoping it doesn't explode on its way to space sounds a bit risky, it
isn't a new idea. The first nuclear powered satellite, Transit 4A,
was launched in 1961 and until the Columbia disaster in 2003, NASA
had been pushing hard to expand the use of nuclear power in space.
The space agency estimated that the chance of something going wrong
on a nuclear satellite launch hovered at around one in 230. In the
event of an explosion, people downwind of the launch site for up to
60 miles could be affected by nuclear material, the most serious risk
from inhalation of "small quantities of radionuclides".
Once in space, away from handy plug-in chargers, the options for
power are fairly limited. If solar won't do it, the only realistic
alternative is a nuclear power source. Advocates argue that nuclear
power in space is vital for long term exploration projects.
The idea of a nuclear stage for launch rockets was also considered
seriously for a while. The numbers never quite stacked, however, and
the idea was abandoned.
------------------
New Lab Can Diagnose Radiation Victims In Nuclear Emergency
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP) - The government has opened a laboratory in Oak
Ridge capable of diagnosing radiation exposure to civilians caught in
a nuclear accident or terrorist attack.
The one (M) million dollar lab will be able to estimate personal
radiation dosages based on chromosome damage in blood samples
collected from victims wherever the incidents occur.
The information should help physicians decide treatment.
The lab is part of the Radiation Emergency Assistance Center and
Training Site, which is managed by Oak Ridge Associated Universities
for the federal government.
-----------------
Landowner to allow Owyhee nuclear plant
The Lynchberg, Va.(Idaho Statesman) Apr 3 -based company that wants
to build a nuclear power plant in Owyhee County has secured the land
where the proposed plant would be built.
Alternate Energy Holdings President and CEO Don Gillispie said the
company would use a portion of 4,000 acres of land owned by James C.
Hilliard to build a 1,600-megawatt energy complex that would include
a nuclear and biofuels plant.
In return for use of his land, Gillispie said Hilliard has agreed to
become a major investor in the company.
"I look forward to working with Alternate Energy Holdings on the
Idaho Energy Complex - this will bring jobs and economic security to
all of Southwest Idaho," Hilliard, who was raised in Nampa, said in a
statement. "Farming communities and urban centers will benefit from
continued access to reliable, inexpensive power, and farmers will
have another market for their crops and ag waste."
Hilliard, who now lives in Florida, has been involved in a number of
business ventures across the United States. He owns radio stations in
New Mexico, Dallas and Florida.
If the company is successful and builds the plants, Gillespie said it
would create about 500 jobs and provide enough power for about 1.5
million homes.
But before that can happen the company has to receive many local,
state and federal approvals. The company also has yet to raise the
more than $1.5 billion it would need to build the plants.
Gillispie's company trades on the over-the-counter market - a market
where most start-up companies begin because they don't meet the
listing requirements of the larger public stock markets like the
Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange. The company trades under the
symbol AEHI.PK. On Monday, the company's stock closed at 46 cents a
share, down 14 cents.
------------
China plant to expand nuclear power capacity
Datang International plans to have 9% of electrical generating
capacity from nuclear plants by 2015
BEIJING: Datang International Power Generation said 9 percent of its
electricity generating capacity will come from nuclear plants by 2015
as China promotes alternatives to coal and oil.
The utility is studying between six and eight sites for reactors in
China and expects to complete its first nuclear power plant by 2012,
Zhang Yi, vice chairman of the second-biggest Hong Kong-listed
Chinese electricity producer, told reporters Tuesday.
China needs to add two reactors a year to reach a target of
generating 4 percent of its power from nuclear energy by 2020 from
about 2.3 percent now. The government wants to reduce reliance on
coal, which is burned to produce two-thirds of the country's
electricity, as part of efforts to curb pollution.
Datang will spend as much as 70 billion yuan, or $9.1 billion, by
2010 adding 18.4 million kilowatts of generating capacity by the end
of the decade, Zhang said.
The utility will increase output by 20 percent this year, its
chairman, Zhai Ruoyu, said Tuesday.
The company expects to operate its plants for 5,760 hours this year,
almost unchanged from the 5,756 hours in 2006, the company's
executive director, Yang Hongming, said.
Datang said Monday it will buy a stake in a rival for 1.82 billion
yuan, or $235 million, to buy 55 percent of Jinzhou East Power to
boost capacity. Buying the stake in Jinzhou East Power, which
supplies electricity in China's northeast, will raise Beijing-based
Datang's generation capacity by about 6.2 percent. Jinzhou East Power
operates six 200 megawatt generators.
China will increase electricity generation capacity by 95 gigawatts
to 720 gigawatts by the end of 2007, the state-owned Assets
Supervision and Administration Commission said Feb. 7. The nation's
power demand will rise between 11 percent and 12.5 percent this year,
State Grid Corp. of China, the larger of the nation's two power
distributors, said Jan. 24.
---------------------
Kuwait seeks NATO's assistance to combat nuclear radiations
Kuwait has submitted an official request to North Atlatic Treaty
Organization (NATO) seeking help in assessing the emirate's strategy
of combating nuclear radiations, Kuwait's official KUNA news agency
reported Monday.
Sheikh Thamer Ali al-Sabah, deputy chief of the National Security
Apparatus, said Kuwait was keen on benefiting the anti- radiation
experience of NATO concerning the current nuclear status in the
Mideast.
Kuwait's ministries of interior, defense, health, National Guards and
Civil Defense have been assigned to monitor and assess nuclear
radiation-related issues, said Sheikh Thamer.
The official expected a team of NATO experts would arrive in the
coming few days.
More than 60 percent of the NATO states had been affected by the
Chernobyl nuclear radiations in the former Soviet Union in 1986, he
added.
In a meeting held in Kuwait last December, NATO Secretary- General
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said security cooperation between NATO and Gulf
nations has become imperative in the face of threats such as
terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
---------------
At a 5% Discount Rate, the Cost of Nuclear Electricity May be Half
That of Gas-Fired Generation and in Terms of CO2 Emission Rates,
Nuclear Power Outperforms All Other Power Generation Technologies
except Hydropower
DUBLIN, Ireland--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets
(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c53305) has announced the
addition of The Future of Nuclear Power: Growth Opportunities, Market
Risk and the Impact of Future Technologies to their offering.
Nuclear power remains at the forefront of the debate about fuel
security, the environmental impact of reliance on fossil fuels and
the long-term cost benefits of switching to renewable power sources.
Beneath the emotional arguments for and against nuclear energy there
are also complex cost factors which alter just how attractive nuclear
power really is in the long and short term against traditional and
emerging power generation technologies.
The Future of Nuclear Power is a new management report that
critically evaluates the investment in nuclear power. It includes a
detailed analysis of the market drivers, resistors, opportunities and
risks. This new report also comprehensively examines the current and
future nuclear power generation technologies, the environmental
effects, cost factors, benefits and contains a survey of nuclear fuel
processing and reprocessing.
Use the independent analysis in this new report to recognize future
investment opportunities for growth and anticipate market threats.
Some key findings from this report...
In terms of CO2 emission rates, nuclear power outperforms all other
power generation technologies except hydropower with between 6 and 26
t/GWh of emissions. Life-cycle analysis of emissions also places it
very similarly to hydropower.
Build data shows that the cost of construction of nuclear power
plants rose well above the rate of inflation between 1970 and 2000,
partly because of safety and the cost of innovation. However, both
France and Japan have been able to keep costs significantly lower,
providing a model for future nuclear growth.
Recent studies - and some real costs of construction - imply that the
cost of building a third-generation nuclear power plant today is
approximately $2,000/kW, compared to historical costs of $3,000/kW.
Numerous studies point to nuclear power providing a lower cost of
power than either coal or gas. At a 5% discount rate, for example,
the cost of nuclear electricity may be half that of gas-fired
generation.
This new report will provide you with...
Detailed analysis of the capital costs of nuclear power - by
technology and across countries - versus other power generation
technologies.
Investigation of the true cost of electricity from nuclear power and
comparison with competing power generation technologies.
Evaluation of the major issues surrounding provision of adequate
supplies of nuclear fuel and their impact on the cost of nuclear
power.
In-depth examination of nuclear power generation technologies,
including third generation designs.
Forecast of the future of nuclear power and the key drivers and
resistors of capacity growth.
Some key questions answered in this report...
What is the likelihood of major changes in the cost of fuel over the
next ten years?
How do discount loan rates affect the cost of nuclear electricity?
What is the impact of power generation technology on the capital cost
of nuclear power?
How will nuclear capacity grow between now and 2015?
What are the CO2 emissions of nuclear power on a life-cycle based
analysis?
What are the main risks associated with nuclear power?
Some hot issues covered in this report...
Nuclear risk - the Chernobyl disaster and how it still casts a long
shadow over the development of future nuclear projects.
The cost of fuel - the impact on fuel costs, as military and civilian
surpluses of enriched uranium dwindle.
Loan discount rates - and the impact of the cost of power.
CO2 emission rates - of nuclear power and other competing
technologies.
Capacity growth - the impact on investment in nuclear and the
countries that will lead new development projects.
Top 5 reasons to order this new report today...
Discover the relative costs of nuclear power and other power
generation technologies.
Recognize the levels of risk associated with nuclear energy and its
role in reducing CO2 emissions.
Examine the different types of nuclear power generation and how this
drives the cost of electricity in different geographies.
Identify the drivers and resistors of nuclear power capacity growth
and future growth predictions.
Assess which factors can have an impact on the cost of new nuclear
projects.
Chapters Include:
Chapter 1 Introduction to nuclear power
Chapter 2 Nuclear fuel
Chapter 3 Nuclear power generation technology
Chapter 4 Nuclear risk and the environmental effects of nuclear power
Chapter 5 Economics of nuclear power
Chapter 6 The future of nuclear power
List of Figures
List of Tables
For more information visit
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c53305
Source: Business Insights
------------------
Sandy Perle
Senior Vice President, Technical Operations
Global Dosimetry Solutions, Inc.
2652 McGaw Avenue
Irvine, CA 92614
Tel: (949) 296-2306 / (888) 437-1714 Extension 2306
Fax:(949) 296-1144
E-Mail: sperle at dosimetry.com
E-Mail: sandyfl at cox.net
Global Dosimetry Website: http://www.dosimetry.com/
Personal Website: http://sandy-travels.com/
More information about the RadSafe
mailing list