[ RadSafe ] Exelon plans to divest generation to get merge
Sandy Perle
sandyfl at earthlink.net
Sun Feb 6 17:08:13 CET 2005
Index:
Exelon plans to divest generation to get merger OK
U.S. plans inert-bomb tests for bunkerbuster nukes
Deficiencies found in mock terrorist attack at Nevada Test Site
========================================
Exelon plans to divest generation to get merger OK
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Exelon Corp. and Public Service
Enterprise Group said Friday they are prepared to sell off a portion
of their fossil fuel and nuclear power plants to clinch regulatory
approval of their proposed merger.
---------------
U.S. plans inert-bomb tests for bunkerbuster nukes
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (Kyodo) - The United States plans to conduct an
inert-bomb test in fiscal 2006 as part of its ongoing research to
develop a bunkerbuster nuclear bomb, congressional sources said
Thursday.
President George W. Bush intends to seek outlays for the planned test
in his budget plan to be submitted to Congress on Monday for the
fiscal year starting Oct. 1, the sources said.
The plan to move toward development of the weapons is likely to
undermine an international conference to be held from May 2 in New
York to review the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which bans
nonnuclear states from obtaining atomic weapons and obliges nations
with nuclear arms to work toward disarmament.
The Bush administration launched the research in 2003 for what it
calls the "robust nuclear earth penetrator," which is aimed at
attacking underground facilities such as alleged hideouts of
terrorists and stores of biological and chemical weapons.
The bunkerbusters and "mini-nuclear" bombs form the core of the Bush
administration's policy to develop ready-for-use nuclear arms to deal
with what it calls "terrorists" and "rogue states."
The sources said the Defense Department and the Energy Department
have been working since last summer toward testing the bunkerbusting
nuke by dropping inert bombs from bombers. Inert bombs are usually
nonexplosive military practice bombs.
The test is aimed at assessing whether nuclear warheads can withstand
the impact of ground penetration, the sources said. Depleted uranium,
lead and other materials will be used for the inert bombs instead of
plutonium and other nuclear fission materials.
The research project at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in
California and elsewhere involves modification of existing nuclear
bombs such as the B61 and B83 bombs.
With the original target of completing the preliminary study in three
years, the Bush administration included some $27 million for the
research in its fiscal 2005 budget plan.
But Congress dropped all the outlays when it passed the fiscal 2005
budget appropriation bill.
House of Representatives member David Hobson, a Republican from Ohio
who strongly opposed the outlays, acknowledged that the president's
budget for the Energy Department for fiscal 2006 will include
spending
for the study.
"I don't think it will be near that amount," he said, referring to
the $27 million dropped from the fiscal 2005 budget bill.
-------------------
Deficiencies found in mock terrorist attack at Nevada Test Site
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Security has been beefed up at the Nevada Test Site
after guards failed to stop a mock terrorist attack on a bunker built
to safeguard weapons-grade nuclear material.
The Aug. 12 exercise exposed outdated training and tactics for
defending the Device Assembly Facility, and found shortcomings in
transfer-of-ownership paperwork for nuclear material, a National
Nuclear Security Administration official said Thursday.
"We have changed procedures, added guards and augmented training,"
said Kevin Rohrer, an NNSA spokesman in North Las Vegas. "We've taken
corrective actions."
The exercise involved agents from the Energy Department's Office of
Independent Oversight and Performance Assurance.
Rohrer declined to describe the exercise, the number of guards on
duty or whether the attackers got inside the facility designed as the
most secure part of the 1,375-square-mile federal reservation.
"That gets into security vulnerabilities that we really don't want
the bad guys to know," he said.
Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., a member of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, was notified shortly after the failed test. Ensign aide
Jack Finn provided no details about steps taken to improve security
afterward, but said Thursday that Ensign was satisfied after sending
two national security aides to meet with test site officials.
The $100 million Device Assembly Facility was built to consolidate
handling of weapons-grade plutonium, highly enriched uranium and high
explosives during assembly and disassembly of nuclear weapons and
experiments.
The compound includes administration, receiving, staging, assembly
and shipping bays in a buried compound guarded by gun turrets. Gravel
suspended in a superstructure is designed to drop and entomb the
facility if nuclear material detonates.
Rohrer said no nuclear material was at the facility during the
exercise.
Training was updated and more guards were added before the facility
began receiving shipments of nuclear material in September from the
Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, the NNSA spokesman
said.
"Security was certified as adequate," Rohrer said, adding that
deliveries were for nuclear safety training and experiments - not
full-scale testing.
"We're not doing nuclear testing and have no plans for nuclear
testing," Rohrer said.
Test site guards had been notified a security exercise was planned,
but were not told when or where it would take place.
The test site, nearly the size of Rhode Island, was the location of
above- and below-ground nuclear detonations from 1951 to 1992.
In recent years, parts of the site some 65 miles northwest of Las
Vegas have been used for underground "subcritical" experiments
designed to test the nuclear stockpile without reaching critical mass
for full-scale nuclear reactions.
Other sections of the vast test site are used for hazardous materials
spill training and Department of Homeland Security counterterrorism
exercises.
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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
Global Dosimetry Website: http://www.dosimetry.com/
Personal Website: http://sandy-travels.com/
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