[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

RE: Coal v. Nuclear (was Re: from lochbaum, differences in biological effects of)



Glenn:			8/16/00
I asked the ANS Communications Adminstrator (Chuck Vincent) about the doses
listed for coal fired power plants and nuclear power plants and he said the
table is in error.  The correct dose value for the table is 0.03 mrem for a
coal fired plant.  (Too many zeros were entered into the dose number in the
table for the coal fired plant; ANS is correcting this.)  The dose value for
the nuclear plant is correct at 0.009 mrem.  The location of the corrected
table (an acrobat PDF file)is at the following URL:

	http://www.ans.org/pi/brochures/
Then choose:  Personal Radiation Dose Chart

Hope this helps.
Jeanie Polehn, CHP
509-372-0787
Jeanie_L_Polehn@RL.GOV

-----Original Message-----
From: GlennACarlson@aol.com [mailto:GlennACarlson@aol.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2000 1:48 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: Coal v. Nuclear (was Re: from lochbaum, differences in
biological effects of)


In a message dated 8/15/2000 9:43:48 AM Central Daylight Time, 
rickdixon@pdcnet.com writes:

> There is very little 
>  doubt that any of the coal-fired plants with existing technology put more

>  of that scary radiation stuff into the environment in one day than
nuclear 
>  plants will in a year!

According to the American Nuclear Society 
(http://www.ans.org/pi/raddosechart/pdfs/raddosechart.pdf) your annual dose 
from a nuclear power plant is THREE TIMES your annual dose from a coal-fired

electrical utility plant.

Glenn A. Carlson, P.E.
glennacarlson@aol.com
************************************************************************
The RADSAFE Frequently Asked Questions list, archives and subscription
information can be accessed at http://www.ehs.uiuc.edu/~rad/radsafe.html
************************************************************************
The RADSAFE Frequently Asked Questions list, archives and subscription
information can be accessed at http://www.ehs.uiuc.edu/~rad/radsafe.html