[ RadSafe ] [Nuclear News] Anti-nuclear activists begin battle for minds of Albertans
Sandy Perle
sandyfl at cox.net
Fri Jan 25 10:46:47 CST 2008
Index:
Anti-nuclear activists begin battle for minds of Albertans
China Nuclear-power firm mulls going public
DeMint pushes Yucca storage of nuclear waste
EDF chairman says accord with Enel to open up other nuclear projects
Vermonters concerned about nuclear waste, open to wind power
No need to independently review firing of nuclear watchdog, Lunn says
Cell phone to combat nuclear terrorism
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Anti-nuclear activists begin battle for minds of Albertans
(The Canadian Press - For Business Edge) Jan 25 - Albertans fighting
a nuclear power plant are using a high-profile expert to warn about
the dangers of the technology while the company behind the proposal
and the province remain quiet.
Gordon Edwards, one of Canada's top nuclear experts, is calling on
people throughout Alberta to learn all they can about the
environmental and economic consequences of nuclear energy.
He told audiences in Edmonton and Calgary recently that politicians
and the private sector cannot be allowed to make such a decision
without plenty of public input and scrutiny.
"The dangers are contamination of the watershed and contamination of
the environment - which are irreversible," said Edwards, president of
the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility.
"Nuclear power is not business as usual. It carries very special
risks and obligations which last far longer than any other industry."
Bruce Power announced in November that it plans to acquire Energy
Alberta Corp., which has applied for a licence from Atomic Energy of
Canada Ltd. to build a nuclear electricity generating plant near
Peace River in northwestern Alberta.
If successful, the proposal would be the first new nuclear power
plant in Canada in almost 30 years.
Bruce Power is owned by a group of partners including TransCanada
Corp. and Cameco Corp., and provides about 20 per cent of Ontario's
electricity. France-based Areva has also made inquiries about
building a nuclear plant in the region.
Edwards said the province and Bruce Power must also clearly explain
how tonnes of dangerous nuclear waste from such a plant would be
disposed.
In Ontario, more than 800,000 tonnes of radioactive waste from a
nuclear plant are being stored near Port Hope because there is no
place else to send the material, he said.
"Back in 1975 it was promised by the federal government that this
waste would be removed from the community in a couple of years. Well,
it is still there," he said.
Edwards raised similar concerns in the communities of Peace River and
Whitecourt last fall. His recent visit to Alberta was sponsored by
the Sierra Club of Canada.
Steve Cannon, a Bruce Power spokesman, said the corporation has not
launched its own information campaign in Alberta because the deal
with Energy Alberta is still not complete.
Cannon said the corporation will eventually open an office in
northwestern Alberta and spread the word about its proposal once the
deal closes.
In the meantime, Albertans should not be swept away by emotional
arguments, he said.
"I think people are enlightened enough to see through scare tactics,
I don't think people want that," Cannon said from Tiverton, Ont.
"When you weigh the pros and cons in an era of climate change and an
era when security of supply for electricity is needed, I think
nuclear power is going to come out quite well in that examination."
The Alberta government has tried to stay out of the nuclear debate
despite community meetings against the proposal and protests by
hundreds of people last fall at the legislature.
In early December Premier Ed Stelmach suggested the province would
announce within a few weeks a strategy to consult the public about
nuclear power.
Alberta Energy spokesman Jason Chance said the government is still
working on a plan that is to be announced in the coming weeks.
----------------
China Nuclear-power firm mulls going public
China Guangdong Nuclear Power Holding Co (CGNPC) yesterday announced
that it would go public in a bid to "get bigger and stronger".
The smaller player of China's two nuclear power corporations just
ordered two nuclear reactors with third-generation technology from
Areva, the world's largest maker of the units, for its new project in
Taishan, Guangdong Province in late November.
"We are capable of taking half of the domestic market shares of
nuclear power supply, but we are far lagging behind the country's top
five power suppliers, which reinforce our ambitions to get bigger and
stronger in the future," said Zhang Weiqing, spokesman for CGNPC in a
press briefing.
The goal will be achieved in a variety of means, including raising
funds from stock markets, he added.
"Going public could raise the company's transparency and is good to
improve management. We do not rule out the possibility to be a listed
company and preparation is underway under the guidance of the higher
authority," Zhang said.
When the thermal power companies were reported to suffer great losses
last year due to the price hike of coal, CGNPC recorded a slight
increase in revenue, from nearly 11.2 billion yuan in 2006 to 11.5
billion yuan in 2007, without operation of new units.
However, given that the price for uranium is also on the rise, Zhang
said the company is actively increasing the reserve of the rare
element and looking for new uranium mines.
The company has cooperated with local companies in Kazakhstan and
Uzbekistan to explore uranium mines. "We will set up a branch in
Kazakhstan soon," Zhang added.
The firm's new deal with Areva also allowed it to gain access to 35
percent of production from Areva uranium unit UraMin Inc.
Zhang also explained for the first time on the application of the
third-generation technology to the Taishan project rather than the
previously planned Yangjiang project, also in Guangdong.
"It was almost ready for the construction of Yangjiang nuclear power
station last year, but the negotiation on the introduction of third-
generation technology would take time. Finally we decided to make the
adjustment to use the new technology in Taishan project," Zhang told
the reporters.
The Yangjiang project is expected to start construction in the second
half of this year while the Taishan project just started. The two
nuclear units might be put into operation by 2026, he added.
---------------
DeMint pushes Yucca storage of nuclear waste
WASHINGTON (thestate.com) - U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint and five other
Republican senators introduced legislation Thursday to break the
deadlock over the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump and ease limits
on opening new nuclear power plants.
Progress on the stalled waste depository, designed to be built deep
within Yucca Mountain 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas, is critical
for South Carolina:
More than half of S.C.´s electricity comes from nuclear power, and
millions of pounds of highly radioactive waste are in temporary
storage around the state at seven commercial reactors and the
Savannah River Site nuclear weapons complex near Aiken.
"Without a permanent storage facility for nuclear waste at Yucca
Mountain, our country will become more dependent on foreign sources
of energy and pollute our environment even more," DeMint said.
David Wright, a South Carolina public service commissioner, said
South Carolinians have paid $1 billion in federal utility surcharges
intended to fund the Yucca depository but used for other purposes as
part of $28 billion collected nationwide.
The Yucca waste site was first proposed in 1982 and projected to
start operating in 1998. But Congress didn´t approve it until 2002,
and lawsuits, funding shortfalls, environmental concerns and fierce
opposition from Nevada politicians have caused further delays.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, has ridiculed
the Yucca project as a "dead beast" and vowed to block it in every
possible way.
GOP Sens. James Inhofe of Oklahoma, Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Kit
Bond of Missouri, Mike Crapo of Idaho and John Barrasso of Wyoming
joined DeMint in crafting the new Yucca measure.
"Continuing delays in opening our nation´s repository at Yucca
Mountain will hinder the resurgence of nuclear energy in the United
States," said Inhofe, senior Republican on the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee.
While the senators presented the bill as clearing the political
impasse over the Yucca waste dump, it could help kill the
controversial plan.
The Yucca dispute has held the development of new nuclear power
plants hostage because federal law requires a permanent and safe
waste disposal site before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission can
issue a new operating license.
There are 104 commercial nuclear reactors in 39 states, but none has
opened since 1996. Dozens of applications are on hold.
Meanwhile, tens of millions of pounds of highly toxic waste are being
held in temporary storage at the reactors, including about 4 million
pounds at the seven reactors in South Carolina.
SRS, one of three central temporary storage sites for waste from
nuclear weapons production, has an additional 9 million pounds.
---------------------
EDF chairman says accord with Enel to open up other nuclear projects
in Europe
MILAN (Thomson Financial) - Electricite de France chairman Pierre
Gadonneix said his group's agreement with Enel SpA to participate in
the development of the French group's new EPR nuclear reactor
programme will create the conditions for Enel to take part in new
nuclear power projects in other European states.
In an interview in the weekly Il Mondo, Gadonneix said EDF will be a
leading global player in the development of nuclear power.
'Especially in four macro-areas: China, USA, South Africa and the
UK,' Gadonneix said.
The EDF chairman said Edison SpA could become an important European
gas player.
He said EDF fully supports Edison's current CEO Umberto Quadrino,
adding 'his leaving the group before his mandate expires is out of
the question'.
EDF controls Edison alongside northern utility A2A SpA.
Gaddoneix said that relations with A2A over Edison are 'relaxed'.
The Edison shareholder pact expires on Oct 1 this year but any
decision not to renew the pact by one of the sides must be notified
six months before.
Some recent press reports said that A2A could insist on a change in
the pact conditions.
Asked about Gazprom's desire to enter European markets, Gadonneix
said other players wanted to enter directly into EU markets.
'But I don't think they are looking for significant market shares,'
he said.
-----------------
Vermonters concerned about nuclear waste, open to wind power
(Host) New polling by the state Department of Public Service found
that most Vermonters are concerned about nuclear waste. But they're
so supportive of wind power that they wouldn't mind a wind farm
within sight of their homes.
The Legislature asked the department to conduct an in-depth study of
Vermonters' opinions about energy. It was done as the state prepares
for the possible loss, within the next eight years, of two-thirds of
its power supplies.
Steve Wark, the department's consumer affairs director, briefed
lawmakers on the results.
(Wark) "There were many points of agreement in this process. With the
exception of nuclear - remove that from the situation for a second.
People really supported wind. They liked efficiency. They liked
hydropower and they love renewables."
(Host) Utility contracts to purchase power from the Vermont Yankee
nuclear plant expire in 2012, and with the provincial utility Hydro-
Quebec by 2016.
-----------------
No need to independently review firing of nuclear watchdog, Lunn says
OTTAWA (Globe and Mail) Jan 25 - Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn
rejected a call from the opposition Liberals yesterday for an
independent, non-partisan tribunal to review the firing of Linda Keen
as head of the country's nuclear safety regulator.
Mr. Lunn said in an interview with The Globe and Mail that he had
done everything within his power to prompt Ms. Keen, the former head
of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, to end an impasse over the
extended shutdown of the nuclear reactor that produces much of the
continent's nuclear isotopes.
It took emergency legislation approved by Parliament in December to
get the reactor running again, overriding Ms. Keen's concerns that
safety upgrades had not been completed and the reactor was in
violation of its licensing agreement.
"Obviously we wouldn't have had to get to that point, we wouldn't
have had to go to the House of Commons, had the former president and
CEO fulfilled her executive responsibilities," Mr. Lunn said. "So
there will be no review."
The Liberals said it was important that an independent body look into
Ms. Keen's dismissal last week because Canadians have not had an
opportunity to hear her side of the story and the government has not
proved it had just cause to terminate her as CNSC president.
Ms. Keen is scheduled to appear before the House of Commons natural
resources committee on Tuesday, as are Auditor-General Sheila Fraser
and Health Minister Tony Clement.
But Liberal natural resources critic Omar Alghabra said there is a
need for an independent look at the precedent set by the firing of
the head of a quasi-judicial tribunal like the CNSC.
"The Harper government has failed to account for a string of
decisions that have run roughshod over fundamental principles of good
governance and have left Canada with a weaker, less independent
nuclear safety regulator," he said.
A call by the NDP for an inquiry into what the party describes as
long-term problems at AECL, the CNSC and Natural Resources has been
put on hold by the committee. But Mr. Alghabra said that is not the
same thing as a comprehensive look at the specific issue of the
isotope shortage and the firing of Ms. Keen.The Liberals say the
position of nuclear regulator has been weakened by the appointment of
Michael Binder, an assistant deputy minister from the Industry
Department, to replace Ms. Keen. They also say that Mr. Lunn "muddied
the waters in terms of oversight and created potential conflicts of
interest" by placing his own deputy minister and a deputy minister
from Industry on the ACEL board.
Mr. Lunn rejected those accusations.
"Mr. Binder is a fine individual who has accepted this on an interim
basis" that gives the government time to find an eminently qualified
person, he said. And it is "absolutely reasonable," Mr. Lunn said, to
have senior, non-partisan public servants on the AECL board to make
sure there is good liaison between the government and the
corporation.
------------------
Cell phone to combat nuclear terrorism
Washington: Terrorists may soon have a tough time plotting attacks,
as researchers are working hard to develop a system where cell phones
can detect radiation and prevent Nuclear Terrorism.
Researchers at Purdue University in collaboration with the state of
Indiana are putting in efforts to develop a system that would use a
network of cell phones to detect and track radiation to help thwart
terrorist attacks with radiological 'dirty bombs' and nuclear
weapons.
The network of cell phones, which already have global positioning
locators, can serve as a tracking system when equipped with radiation
sensors able to detect even light residues of radioactive material,
said physics professor Ephraim Fischbach, who is working with Jere
Jenkins, director of Purdue's radiation laboratories within the
School of Nuclear Engineering.
Andrew Longman, a consulting instrumentation scientist developed the
software for the system and then worked with Purdue researchers to
integrate the software with radiation detectors and cell phones.
''Big cities with concentrated population form soft targets for
potential terrorist attacks and a system like this would pose
difficulties for someone to go undetected with a radiological dirty
bomb in such an area,'' Longman, also a Purdue alumnus said. The more
people are walking around with cell phones and Personal digital
assistants (PDAs), the easier it would be to detect and catch the
perpetrator, he said.
Tiny solid-state radiation sensors are commercially available.
The detection system would require additional circuitry and would not
add significant bulk to portable electronic products, Fischbach said
adding that the software can work with a variety of sensor types.
The system was tested last November is capable of detecting a weak
radiation source 15 feet from the sensors, researchers said.
The sensors don't really perform the detection task individually,
Fischbach said adding that the collective action of the sensors,
combined with the software analysis, detects the source.
The system would transmit signals to a data centre, and the data
centre would transmit information to authorities without alerting the
person carrying the phone.
The signal grows weaker with increasing distance from the source, and
the software is able to use the data from many cell phones to
pinpoint the location of the radiation source.
The system would be sensitive enough to detect these tiny levels of
radiation, but it would be smart enough to discern which sources
posed potential threats and which are harmless.
------------------
Why going nuclear won't solve energy crisis
(Belfast Telegraph) Jan 25 - t's good to know that there is healthy
opposition to the idea of a nuclear power station in the North West.
Nevertheless, I want to emphasise some points to ponder.
According to Greenpeace, nuclear power could supply only 4% of our
electrical energy from the year 2020, when fossil fuels will already
be in dwindling supply.
Nuclear fission is CO2 neutral, but extracting uranium out of Africa
and Australia involves machinery for mining and transportation, all
of which is CO2 positive. Who pays for nuclear accidents? Remember
Chernobyl, Three Mile Island and the Sellafield fire?
Insurance companies consider them too risky for business. Who in the
emergency services will volunteer to tackle a nuclear fire, because
each firefighter would need to know if it would be his or her last
job before a painful cancerous death?
Each nuclear reactor produces 500 pounds of nuclear waste (plutonium)
yearly, enough for governments or terrorists to make thousands of
atomic bombs.
Plutonium, the most toxic, longlife substance on earth, needs to be
stored in cooled containers and guarded by armed security for 250,000
years. The containers corrode, so they need to be changed every 50
years, 5,000 times into the future.
If we dare to spend billions of pounds on an irreversible nuclear
future, our children's descendants will curse us forever.
We should all shout NO together.
Philip Allen, Belfast
----------------
NRC fines NYC-area nuclear plant for alert system
LOS ANGELES, Jan 24 (Reuters) - Entergy Corp (ETR.N: Quote, Profile,
Research) was fined $650,000 for failure to put in place and operate
a new emergency notification system with backup power at the Indian
Point nuclear power plant near New York City, the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission said on Thursday.
This is a backup for the alarm system that would alert people in a 10-
mile radius of a radiation accident at Indian Point. The two-reactor
plant is on the Hudson River in Westchester County, about 35 miles
north of Times Square in midtown Manhattan.
The plant already has a working siren system -- which will remain in
place once the new one begins operation -- but this one is required
by the NRC because Indian Point is in such a big metropolitan area.
About 20 million people live within 50 miles of the plant.
The lack of a secondary siren system has not endangered the public,
said Neil Sheehan, NRC spokesman, who pointed out the primary system
is operating.
The fine is 10 times what the NRC normally would assess for such a
relatively low-level violation, but the NRC penalized Entergy, the
second-largest U.S. nuclear power generator, because it failed to
comply with previous NRC orders.
Luis Reyes, NRC executive director for operations, said, "We are
taking this situation very seriously and will not ease up on our
scrutiny in this important matter."
Entergy spokeswoman Robyn Bentley said Entergy will respond to the
NRC notice within a month. She said the cost of adding the backup
alert system with batteries stands at $20 million.
Entergy has installed sirens at 155 locations in Westchester,
Rockland, Putnam and Orange counties in New York. Bentley said
Entergy may add a dozen more to ensure the sirens can be heard
clearly throughout the 10-mile radius of the reactors on the Hudson
River.
As part of the federal Energy Policy Act of 2005, Entergy was
required to install the system, at the urging of New York Sen.
Hillary Clinton. It is the only plant in the country required to do
so, due to the high population near the plant.
Some nuclear power plant operators have installed such a backup
system without being required to do so, Sheehan said.
Entergy was told by the NRC in January 2006 that it had a year to
install the new backup system at Indian Point. In January 2007,
Entergy asked and was given an extension by the NRC but missed a new
deadline of April 2007. The NRC fined Entergy $130,000 for missing
that April 2007 deadline.
In July 2007, the NRC gave Entergy until August 24, 2007 to have the
new alert scheme in place, and to have approval from the Federal
Emergency Management Agency.
Bentley said Entergy has worked with agencies from FEMA to local
ones. Sheehan of the NRC said that Entergy should have anticipated
some of the hurdles it has encountered getting the siren system
working to acceptable levels.
Last month, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo urged the NRC not
to grant 20-year extensions to the licenses to operate Unit 2 (to
2033) and Unit 3 (to 2035).
Indian Point is one of five nuclear power plants that Entergy plants
to spin off into a new company during the third quarter of this year.
Indian Point opened in 1962 with a reactor that shut in 1974. The
1,035-megawatt Unit 2 opened in 1973 and the 1,036-megawatt Unit 3
opened in 1976.
------------------
Energy Department Eases Nuclear Power Path for Iraq, Libya
WASHINGTON, DC, January 24, 2008 (ENS) - The Department of Energy has
"overstated accomplishments" of a program designed to employ nuclear
scientists from the former Soviet Union who might otherwise pose a
nuclear proliferation risk, the investigative branch of the U.S.
Congress has found.
In addition, the program has recently targeted Iraq and Libya to help
these countries develop projects to expand the use of civilian
nuclear power by becoming client states for sales of U.S. nuclear
fuel and reprocessing services.
This activity is outside the original scope of the Initiatives for
Proliferation Prevention program, according to testimony Wednesday
before a congressional subcommittee by Robert Robinson, managing
director natural resources and environment, with the Government
Accountability Office, GAO.
Robinson said the Department of Energy, DOE, "overstated
accomplishments on the number of scientists receiving DOE support and
the number of long-term, private sector jobs created."
Although DOE claims to have engaged over 16,770 scientists in Russia
and other countries, this total includes both scientists with and
without weapons-related experience, Robinson said.
GAO's analysis of 97 projects involving about 6,450 scientists showed
that more than half did not claim to possess any weapons-related
experience.
Furthermore, officials from 10 Russian and Ukrainian weapons
institutes told GAO investigators that the program helps them
attract, recruit, and retain younger scientists and contributes to
the continued operation of their facilities.
"This is contrary to the original intent of the program, which was to
reduce the proliferation risk posed by Soviet-era weapons
scientists," Robinson said.
While the Energy Department says the program created 2,790 long-term,
private sector jobs for former weapons scientists, the credibility of
this number is "uncertain," said Robinson, because DOE relies on
"good-faith" reporting from U.S. industry partners and foreign
institutes and does not independently verify the number of jobs
reported to have been created.
In addition, Robinson told the House Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations, the DOE has recently expanded the program to new
areas.
"Specifically, DOE recently began providing assistance to scientists
in Iraq and Libya and, through the IPP program, is working to develop
projects that support the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership - a DOE-
led international effort to expand the use of civilian nuclear
power."
"DOE expanded the program's efforts without a clear mandate from the
Congress and suspended parts of its IPP program guidance for projects
in these new areas," Robinson said.
Part of President George W. Bush's Advanced Energy Initiative, the
Global Nuclear Energy Partnership would have "nations with secure,
advanced nuclear capabilities provide fuel services - fresh fuel and
recovery of used fuel - to other nations who agree to employ nuclear
energy for power generation purposes only," the Energy Department
explains on its website.
The closed fuel cycle model envisioned by this partnership requires
development and deployment of technologies that enable recycling and
consumption of long-lived radioactive waste.
It was "at the State Department's request" that the IPP program moved
into Libya after the country decided in 2004 to abandon all weapons
of mass destruction, a senior official of the National Nuclear
Security Administration told the subcommittee.
Adam Scheinman said, "We also partner with the State Department in
Iraq, and are prepared to engage elsewhere, including in North Korea
if circumstances warrant it."
Agreeing with Robinson that the IPP program requires "recalibration"
because "Russia's economy is stable and conditions in the closed
cities are much improved," still Scheinman said most of the program's
work remains in Russia.
"The absence of a high risk of scientist migration does not imply
zero risk or that the job is done," Scheinman said. "To the contrary,
as long as proliferation demand exists, we have a requirement to
cooperate with others to impede supply, whether that involves
improved export controls, better border security, or scientist
engagement."
As to the overstatement of accomplishments, Scheinman said the
program has engaged "many thousands of WMD [weapons of mass
destruction] scientists and experts - an impressive achievement that
serves our nonproliferation objectives and our nation's security."
The GAO recommends, among other things, that the Energy Department
conduct a fundamental reassessment of the IPP program, including the
development of a prioritization plan and exit strategy. The federal
agency "generally concurred" with GAO's findings, but does not
believe that the IPP program needs to be reassessed.
------------------
India, France to boost civil nuclear cooperation
New Delhi, Jan 25 (ANI): France and India today decided to give a new
impetus to their cooperation for the development of nuclear energy
for peaceful purposes as an expression of their strategic
partnership.
The joint statement issued after discussions that President Nicholas
Sarkozy had in Delhi said that both sides look forward to the
finalisation of India-specific safeguards agreement with the
International Atomic Energy Commission (IAEA) and the adjustment of
international civil nuclear cooperation framework. France expressed
its support for the same.
"Both sides recognise that as a reliable source of sustainable and
non-polluting energy, it (nuclear energy) could make a significant
contribution to meeting the global challenge of achieving energy
security, sustainable development, economic growth and limiting
climate change," the statement said.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh has expressed hope that
a safeguard agreement with the IAEA will be concluded successfully
without any loss of time.
Replying to questions during a joint press conference with President
Sarkozy, Dr. Singh said that international negotiations too take
time, but he said that talks are moving forward in right direction.
France and India have also finalised negotiation in regard to
reaching a bilateral agreement for civil nuclear cooperation. This
agreement will form the basis of wide ranging bilateral cooperation
from basic and applied research to full civil nuclear cooperation
including reactors, fuel supply and management.
Another agreement was signed today in the field of nuclear research,
which is key for preparing for the future.
It relates to the participation of the Indian Department of Atomic
Energy (DAE) in the research project, the Jules Horowitz Reactor,
which will be built by the Commissariat a l´energie atomique (French
Atomic Energy Commission) at Cadarache, France.
An MOU that establishes cooperation between the Bhabha Atomic
Research Centre and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research on the
one hand, and the Grand Accelerateur National d´Ions Lourds (GANIL)
on the other on the use of Spiral 2 high intensity beam production
system at Caen, France will be signed in Mumbai.
GANIL is a heavy ion accelerator based at Caen.
India and France also agreed to intensify exchanges between the
scientists of both countries in the nuclear field, establish
structures for training, and undertake nuclear safety research.
In addition, the existing dialogue between respective nuclear safety
authorities will also be reinforced, especially in the context of
future industrial cooperation.
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Turkey to go nuclear as Bush pushes Turkish-US nuclear cooperation
agreement
(The New Anatolian) ANKARA - U.S. President George W. Bush on
Wednesday submitted a cooperation agreement between the United States
and Turkey concerning peaceful uses of nuclear energy to the U.S.
Congress, saying that private-sector proliferation worries have been
addressed.
The July 2000 agreement, signed by then-US president Bill Clinton, is
expected to clear the way for transfers of nuclear know-how to
Turkey's planned civilian atomic sector.
According to a statement released by the White House, Bush said in
his message to lawmakers, "In my judgment, entry into force of the
Agreement will serve as a strong incentive for Turkey to continue its
support for nonproliferation objectives and enact future sound
nonproliferation policies and practices."
"It will also promote closer political and economic ties with a NATO
ally, and provide the necessary legal framework for US industry to
make nuclear exports to Turkey's planned civil nuclear sector," he
said.
Last week Turkish Energy & Natural Resources Minister Hilmi Guler
said that the government was resolute to go ahead with its nuclear
energy project. The Turkish Energy Ministry is expected to publish
the tender for the construction of the country's first nuclear power
plant on January 21. Companies interested in the tender, which have
already taken part in a series of informative meetings and whose
number was 18 at the last meeting, will have to confirm their
participation within this date. According to Turkish dailies, the
Turkish Atomic Energy Agency (TAEK) has so far approved companies
from the United States, Japan, Canada, South Korea, France and
Russia. The tender should be closed by next June.
-------------------
The arguments for nuclear don´t add up
(Workers Liberty) UK - Jan 25 - Having already announced his plans to
build a new generation of nuclear power stations in November 2007,
Gordon Brown has just completed a "consultation" on the issue and
officially announced the "new" energy policy! A policy which,
surprise, surprise, proposes up to twenty nuclear power stations,
which will start coming on line around 2017.
The government plan is for the power stations to be financed through
private enterprise but there will be plenty of public money to bail
out the companies if they get into difficulty. While New Labour tries
to make a business case for nuclear, they are finding it hard. In
reality there is not a single nuclear power station in the world run
by a private company.
In his announcement to the Commons, John Hutton, argued that public
money had to be available to nuclear providers in order to create a
"level fiscal playing field" with other energy providers in the
fossil fuels and renewable sectors. Not for the first time, public
money will top up the profit margins of private shareholders.
Why is the government so keen on nuclear? According to Hutton,
nuclear power is the key to staving off climate change: "The entire
lifecycle emissions of nuclear - that´s from uranium mining through
to waste management - are only between 2% and 6% of those from gas
for every unit of electricity generated," he says. Apparently we also
need "energy security" to reduce our dependence on Islamist or
Russian regimes. And we also need to plug the "energy gap" that is
likely to occur with the decommissioning of several power stations.
Leaving the specific problems of nuclear aside (see Solidarity 3/119)
these arguments do not really add up. While the "energy gap", "energy
security" and "climate change" are like noble causes, the planned
proposals do little or nothing to solve them.
Even the most optimistic of guesses have the first of the new nuclear
power plants coming online in 2017. The only comparable example this
decade, Finland's Olkiluoto 3 reactor, is already two years behind
schedule. By the time we get a lightbulb´s worth of electricity out
of these reactors we would be in the middle of the energy gap and all
things being equal more dependent on all sorts of fascistic regimes,
with fossil fuel prices escalating.
By 2017 there should already have been massive cuts in our carbon
emissions if the planet is to avoid irreversible climate change.
That has to mean a massive investment in renewables, energy storage
and carbon capture technology. For this technology to be effective we
would need a giant international supergrid spreading throughout
Europe and North Africa, to offset fluctuations that occur with
weather changes and which would cause a smaller grid to collapse.
The current nuclear policy runs very much against the
internationalist logic. If everyone followed Britain´s lead and went
nuclear, global uranium deposits would run out in less than 10 years.
Sadly, the climate change issue is being used to shore up narrow
nationalistic sentiments at the expense of an international solution.
The nationalism inherent in the nuclear policy is further revealed
when we focus on the maniacal element of Brown´s nuclear programme -
the £70 billion Trident replacement project. Remind ourselves of the
family connections involved - Brown´s brother is a major lobbyist for
the French nuclear company, EDF - and we see public policy guided by
self-interest, short-sidedness and nepotism.
Unfortunately the leaders of Britain´s largest trade union, Unite,
has welcomed the energy plan in a statement echoing Brown´s "British
jobs for British workers" TUC speech.
Now more than ever we need a rank-and-file movement to wrest control
of the unions and the labour movement away from the short-sighted
demagogues playing dangerous political games with the future of the
planet.
-----------------------------------------
Sander C. Perle
President
Mirion Technologies, Inc., Dosimetry Service Division
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: http://www.dosimetry.com/
Mirion Technologies: http://www.mirion.com/
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