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NUCLEAR POWER CONTENTS
1 India to pursue three-stage nuclear power programme
2 UK eyes opportunites in Dounreay nuclear clean-up
3 Bangkok Post Homepage Deadly Radiation Leak
4 Dounreay: Minter: in the shadow of Dounreay
5 Russia: Atomic power station may be solution for environmental
6 Nuclear firm bids for Dublin rail deal
7 Nuclear waste trains set to go twice safe limit
8 FOCUS: Japan's nuclear energy policy remains in limbo
9 Nuclear waste protesters take message to Las Vegas Strip
10 Haggling hides lack of Nevada nuclear clout
11 Testifying at Extortion Trial May Not End Semnani's Woes
12 Russia offers another reactor to Iran
13 Experiments test heat in Yucca Mountain
14 Yucca Mountain foes see alternative
15 Nuclear waste protesters hit Strip
16 Nuclear power plans
17 Columnist Susan Snyder: Small towns ready for garden party
18 Letter: Waiting for bus too dangerous
19 Letter: Expand nuke hearings
20 Nuclear waste protesters hit the Strip
21 Lawsuit threatened as Yucca hearings near
22 Letter: Safety foremost
23 Shipments to state more a matter of when, not if
24 Government urged to back nuclear power
25 Daily Events Report
26 IAEA Daily Press Review
27 Russia plans to enlarge Iranian nuclear power plant
28 ADAMS: Items of Interest - Tuesday, September 04, 2001
29 Nuclear power isn't 'clean'; it's dangerous
30 Plutonium shipments will occur
31 Austrian minister demands closure of disputed Czech nuclear
32 Newspaper denies Russian secretiveness about nuclear dumping
33 Bulgaria: Nuclear plant negotiates transportation of spent
NUCLEAR WEAPONS CONTENTS
1 Nuclear science flourishing in Kazakhstan
2 International Atomic Energy Agency official unlikely to visit
3 Pakistan's Restraint
4 Castro recalls apartheid South Africa's nuclear capability
5 'Waging Modern War'
6 Japan to reconsider A-bomb law
7 Baby bones used in nuclear test study
8 Labor peace at the Flats
9 Y-12, ORNL workers not getting fair shake
10 Publication of Regulatory Guide G-225, Emergency Planning at
11 For the Nuclear Submarine Kursk, Plans for a Risky Resurrection
12 Broken Cable Halts Russian Sub Job
13 Radiation Safety Service To Be Set Up During The Kursk's Docking
14 Atomic museum changing its target
15 Group Seeks Strict Rules on Beryllium
16 Stamp honors father of the atomic bomb
17 D-Day for French nuclear sector (Jour J pour le nucleaire
18 Fallen Heroes: Daghlian, Slotin, Bragg, & Meigs
19 International Conference on Topical Isues in Nuclear Safety
20 Antinuclear activist launches political party
21 Nuclear tests on thousands of Australian bone samples: report
22 BRIT GIVES OK FOR KURSK LIFT
23 Government secrets
24 Public Citizen seeks stricter rules on beryllium
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NUCLEAR POWER ARTICLES
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1 India to pursue three-stage nuclear power programme
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 4, 2001
Text of report by Indian news agency PTI
Hyderabad, 4 September: India will pursue a three-stage nuclear
power programme aimed at meeting the long-term energy needs of
the country, according to Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) Chairman
Anil Kakodkar.
The programme would include maximum utilization of existing
nuclear power plants, developing indigenous small plants and
setting up of heavy water reactors with external help, Kakodkar
said while delivering a talk here Monday [3 September] night.
To further bolster nuclear power generation, the Department of
Atomic Energy (DAE) is developing research reactors,
accelerators, lasers and other advanced technologies, Kakodkar
said.
"In future, the DAE plans to expand the existing mechanisms apart
from initiating new programmes. It is also proposed to increase
the outlay of the Board of Research and Nuclear Sciences for
setting up more centres in universities in such as way that the
UGC's programme is strengthened in the areas of interest to DAE,"
he said.
A new campus for Bhaba Atomic Research Centre, with a co-located
academic framework of university status, is also in the planning
stage, the AEC chairman said.
Kakodkar also called for an "organic linkage" between research
centres and industrial units to ensure success of any agency
working in high-tech areas.
Source: PTI news agency, New Delhi, in English 1248 gmt 4 Sep 01
/BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
Copyright
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2 UK eyes opportunites in Dounreay nuclear clean-up
Planet Ark Environmental News:
UK: September 3, 2001
LONDON - Britain wants the 4.5 billion pound decommissioning of
its Dounreay nuclear complex in northern Scotland to help the
country win contracts in the lucrative international clean-up
business, the energy minister said last week.
"The world-wide market for decommissioning nuclear research sites
is already worth hundreds of billions of pounds and growing",
said Brian Wilson in a statement.
"Decommissioning presents a huge opportunity for the local
economy which is why we must develop the right skills and
infrastructure so that the UK in general and the Highlands in
particular secure as much of this work as possible", he added.
Britain decided to shut Dounreay, operated by the United Kingdom
Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA), in June 1998 because the
facility was judged to have no economic future. It will take
between 50-60 years before the environmental restoration at the
site is complete. Built in the 1950s as a centre of nuclear
research, Dounreay drew increasingcriticism in later years
following various radioactive leaks and equipment failures.
Stories that polyfilla, a domestic do-it-yourself product used to
fill wall cracks, was used to bind liquid nuclear waste,
undermined public confidence in the site and hastened calls for
its closure. The Dounreay reactor closed in 1994 with the end of
Britain's programme to develop a fast breeder reactor and
reprocessing ended in 1996 after a radioactive leak.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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3 Bangkok Post Homepage Deadly Radiation Leak
Current Issues in Thailand - Radiation Leak
August 29, 2001
Cobalt-60 victims stage protest to demand state compensation
Seeking B4.7m from emergency budget
Anjira Assavanonda
Victims of last year's cobalt 60 radiation leak rallied in front
of Government House yesterday to demand urgent help.
The state had not done enough since the incident in February last
year, they said.
Victims who were directly exposed to the leak, particularly the
scrap collectors, were still ill and some were getting worse.
They were weak and short of energy. Some had burns which refused
to heal and others had lost limbs.
Jitsen Chantarasakha, a collector who at first lost a few fingers
to radiation burns, now has no fingers left. He did not turn up
at Government House yesterday amid worsening physical and mental
health.
Mr Jitsen was hit by a car last week while he tried to resume
work.
The other two collectors, Sonthaya Sapathum, who earlier suffered
burns on his hands, and Boonthueng Sila, who had injured legs,
have lost another finger each.
Sonthaya said he had already gone back to work, but poor health
had become a big obstacle and he could not earn more than 200
baht a day.
``That is not enough to feed my family. It's really hard for us.
Our electricity and water were cut off last week as we don't have
enough to pay the bills,'' said Mr Sonthaya.
In a petition to Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the victims
demanded 4.7 million baht from an Interior Ministry emergency
budget to alleviate hardship from disasters.
Ida Aroonwongse, of the Alternative Energy Project for
Sustainability, who headed the protest, said the money would help
ease their plight while lawsuits were pending in court.
The group has filed papers against Kamol Sukosol Electric Co,
owner of the cobalt-60 container which was broken open, demanding
109 million baht compensation. They filed another complaint with
the Administrative Court, accusing the Office of Atomic Energy
for Peace of negligence, and demanding 94 million baht.
Ms Ida said it was uncertain how long it would take for victims
to get compensation.
The group also want faster progress on special medical cards
which have yet to be issued, a new follow-up committee on
treatment, and unconditional compensation from the Social
Security Office to the family of Niphon Phankhan, the scrap-shop
employee who died from radiation injuries.
Joining the victims yesterday was a group of villagers from
Ongkharak district in Nakhon Nayok province, who came to protest
against plans to build a nuclear reactor in their neighbourhood.
© Copyright The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 1999
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4 Dounreay: Minter: in the shadow of Dounreay
The Sunday Times: Ecosse:September 2 2001ECOSSE
Many people have disputes with their neighbours - but not about
radioactive waste polluting their land. Geoffrey Minter tells
Christopher Cairns about living next door to Dounreay © Under
siege: property developer Geoffrey Minter and his wife, Michelle,
in front of Sandside House, Caithness. Their beach has been
polluted by nearby Dounreay. Photographs: Michael J Scott The
curse of Dounreay
The view from the 18th-century library of Sandside House is truly
magnificent; beyond a walled garden the Caithness coast zigzags
east in a series of rocky promontories, while in the foreground
Sandside Bay nestles between aquamarine sea and a tumble of
grassy dunes. On a clear day, the Orkneys can be seen on the
northern horizon.
It was captivating enough for the Mackay clan, who built the
house and kept the estate over several generations, and the
Pilkington (glass) family, who were among its more recent
inhabitants.
Nowadays the scene also boasts a splendid view of a famous
Scottish landmark, a listed building and world-renowned
institution almost single-handedly responsible for, at one time,
giving Britain a pre-eminent position in a vital field of
scientific research and development. Not that you often hear
Dounreay described thus.
Such is the fear and loathing this place now generates that it is
hard to look at its sprawling installations behind miles of
barbed-wire fences, particularly its spherical fast-breeder
reactor, and not feel a shiver of apprehension, as if Castle
Greyskull had just loomed on the horizon.
Geoffrey Minter and his family certainly feel this way - and as
they own and live in Sandside House, they have to look at it
every day. Well, serves them right for buying the estate, would
be the usual response. But Minter claims mitigation. "When we
bought this place 10 years ago, Dounreay was just another nuclear
plant. In fact, its reputation was pretty good and there was
certainly no suggestion it was leaking like a sieve. I had
absolutely no preconceived ideas about nuclear power stations and
no reason to believe it would be anything but a good neighbour."
That, however, was before Dounreay's history of lax environmental
standards began to surface throughout the 1990s, before highly
radioactive particles were found on Sandside Bay, and before
Minter had any dealings with the UK Atomic Energy Authority
(UKAEA).
In the four years since the first particle was found on Minter's
beach, the relationship between the neighbours has deteriorated
drastically. Once it was claret and smoked Orkney salmon in the
drawing room or a guided tour and corporate hospitality, now it
is lawyers' letters and statements to the press.
The latest public spat has centred on the Reay golf course - the
most northerly on the British mainland - where Minter threatened
to withdraw permission for play to continue, fearing possible
claims from players affected by particles blown there from
Sandside beach. After the offer from Dounreay of security against
any such claims, that threat has been withdrawn, but heated
debate about the real extent of the hazard for players continues.
As in most cases of this sort, the ill-feeling generated by years
of bickering has tended to cloud the issues - but for all that
the dispute is, in essence, a simple one: Minter as landowner
wants his property cleaned up and wants legal protection against
any claims for damages from the public, while UKAEA, as polluter,
maintains it is doing more than enough to clear up its mess and
that Minter's demands for improved monitoring are unrealistic.
Minter, meanwhile, has engaged his own scientific and legal
counsel. But this is not some academic exercise in liabilities
and costs - medical experts have warned that the most dangerous
of those particles washing up on the beach (there have been 17
detected to date) could kill or cause cancers if ingested or
inhaled. Radiation burns could also occur if they are handled.
UKAEA denies that the particles are this dangerous.
An indemnity offer from UKAEA was made to Minter and formally
accepted last week, which is progress of a sort. The nuclear body
now pledges to cover any claims made against the estate as a
result of the contamination. But it still leaves the issue of to
what extent the beach is being monitored and cleaned up.
"I am not going to be paid off to go away," Minter says. "This is
not a case of 'what price your hush money' - I haven't got a
price. They have got to do this job properly."
Minter's story is important not just from the human interest
point of view - 'my neighbours from hell' writ large - but
because, if Minter is right, it will have taken a private
homeowner to expose a gaping hole in the ability of the
government and its agencies to regulate the environment
sufficiently to guarantee public safety. This homeowner is not
holding out against state bureaucracy because it is over-reaching
its authority - Minter is desperately arguing for more
interference on his land. He believes Sandside Bay should be
swarming with Land Rovers, men in UKAEA uniforms, Geiger counters
and metal detectors.
And, unluckily for UKAEA, Minter is not your average homeowner.
He has wealth, connections and, most importantly, a highly
developed sense of justice - especially in matters where
principle and self-interest so neatly converge.
A self-made millionaire, Minter, 59, enjoyed an upbringing in
London and Oxfordshire that was privileged by any standards. But
he earned his own living as a chartered surveyor, property
adviser and, latterly, commercial property owner. His business
interests in London, managed by two of his three children,
include a successful conference centre in the Strand.
He discovered Sandside while on shooting holidays in the area and
had no hesitation in paying £1.25m for the property in 1991.
Since then he has improved its turnover, not least by opening up
a lucrative diorite quartz quarry, and the estate would now be
worth considerably more. The key word there is, of course,
"would", since the discovery of dangerous contamination on
Sandside's beach, not to mention the generally bad press Dounreay
has received, means Minter would probably incur a loss should he
decide to sell. Which he will not.
The strain on the Minter family is easily detected behind the
brave words and the everyday business of running a 10,000-acre
estate - an activity which almost takes on the appearance of
diversion. "It has had a huge effect on me and my family," he
says. "Contending with that organisation [the UKAEA] has been
extremely frustrating.
But I suppose that has been balanced by the feeling that I am
being efficacious by helping to sort out a problem, that I am
doing my bit for the public good."
In the garden, Minter's wife, Michelle, is cutting back the
lobelia with perhaps a little more vigour than would otherwise be
the case. "I think it is just crazy and it's in danger of ruining
our lives," she says, wielding the secateurs. "Those people have
been paid for the job they do over there but I don't think they
could care less what happens to us or anyone else. But what
Geoffrey takes on, he takes on with his whole heart and soul and
he won't stop until he gets what he wants."
Minter, in truth a little defensive about coming across as the
typical English aristocrat, his vintage Bentley notwithstanding -
is quick to point out that he is half Scottish. His mother, a
Macfarlane, also lives on the estate. He has certainly wasted no
time in immersing himself in Caithness's commercial and social
life, and, apart from acting as the chairman of Hunters of Brora,
the woollen mill, being a key member of the Scrabster Harbour
Trust and of the Caithness District Salmon Fisheries Board, he
hosts the Northern Highland College's game-keeping course at
Sandside.
He manages, despite the actions of one or two vocal opponents of
his stance, to maintain a fair degree of local support - a
remarkable achievement, given the importance of Dounreay as the
largest employer for hundreds of miles around.
Charlie Sutherland, a retired quarry worker who skippers Minter's
launch out of Sandside harbour (for no pay), has lived in the
area for more than 40 years and believes the days when anything
Dounreay's management said was accepted by local people as gospel
are coming to an end.
"Locals have not wanted to say anything because 99% of them are
employed there, but it's clear now Dounreay has polluted the
beach - not only that but it doesn't want to accept that it has,"
he says. "The longer it goes on, the more people realise that
everything Dounreay says is not true . . . Geoffrey gets support
because he is batting not just for himself but for the whole
community."
What really put the cat among the pigeons was the intervention
earlier this year of Dr Philip Day, a reader in chemistry at
Manchester University. On Minter's behalf he and his team of
radiologists monitored the monitors and concluded in a damning
report that UKAEA's efforts on Sandside Bay fell considerably
short of those required to identify and remove all potentially
hazardous particles. In fact, Day asserts, through a combination
of using the wrong equipment on the wrong types of vehicles,
which move too quickly over only limited stretches of the bay,
Dounreay's staff are probably picking up less than 1% of the
particles.
That finding is denied by the UKAEA and the Scottish Environment
Protection Agency, but Day's report has yet to be officially
considered.
Yet there are signs that Minter's doggedness is paying dividends;
apart from the indemnity offer, the Dounreay Particles Advisory
Group, a panel of experts, has now agreed to admit the public to
its hearings and, most significantly, Minter has been assured in
the last week that the monitoring will, after all, be stepped up.
Although details of that new regime have yet to be revealed, the
assurance has been enough for Minter to allow UKAEA personnel
back onto the beach. He had previously banned them after coming
to the conclusion that he would prefer no monitoring than merely
the pretence of it.
"I know it sounds a little corny or old fashioned and I know I am
being painted in some quarters as only in this for the money,
but, to be blunt, I don't need the money," he says. "I genuinely
want to see this mess cleaned up for the sake of public safety .
. . sometimes I feel as though I am the only one who remembers
that this is what it's all supposed to be about."
Copyright 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd. This service is provided on
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5 Russia: Atomic power station may be solution for environmental
disaster zone
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 4, 2001
[Presenter Anna Fedotova] There is a threat of an environmental
disaster in Chelyabinsk Region. Governor Petr Sumin has even sent
an open letter to [Russian Prime Minister] Mikhail Kasyanov.
Waste from the radioactive enterprise Mayak is in danger of
getting into the local rivers. Yelena Markova reports.
[Correspondent] The Mayak enterprise, where our country's nuclear
shield was once forged, is not far from the river Techa. In the
1950s, radioactive water was channelled into the river in the
hope that nature would clean everything up. But soon it became
clear that this was not possible, and the Techa had to be blocked
off with dams to stop contaminated water from getting into the
rivers Isset and Tobol. A number of ponds formed.
The largest pond is number 11. It looks like an ordinary natural
lake, but its water is contaminated with strontium. Its level of
radioactivity is ten times higher than normal, although the birds
do not seem to notice: ducks, geese and even swans have their
nests here. At one time, employees of the law-enforcement
agencies used to come hunting here, but they were advised against
it. Pond number 11 is guarded by the police and surrounded by a
long dam.
[Vladimir Yakimov, captioned as chief of water flow technogy of
the Mayak enetrprise] As concerns their construction, the dams
between the canal and the pond was built of loamy soil which is
now absorbing radioactive substances.
[Correspondent] In last years, the inflow of water exceeds
evaporation, and there is a danger that the pond will overflow.
It is already over full by 7m cubic metres.
[Yevgeniy Drozhko, captioned as deputy director for new
environmental and technical projects] When we were deciding what
to do, three possible solutions were considered: the construction
of a nuclear power station, that's the first possibility. The
second possibility is installing a facility for absorption
purification of the water of pond number 11, and the third is
creation of an evaporation system for this water.
[Correspondent] These projects are more or less equal in terms of
cost. The specialists believe that the best option is to build an
atomic power station. It will not only allow for the surplus
water to be evaporated, but it will produce power. However, the
idea is not popular with the Region's residents. People attribute
all their problems to radiation.
[omitted: vox pop interview with local resident] However, people
in the neighbouring villages are willing to work at the new
station.
[vox pop interview with woman saying she would happily work at
the atomic power station because she has several children and
needs more money]
[Correspondent] Now the governor has to persuade Moscow and the
people of his region that an atomic power station is needed.
Source: Ren TV, Moscow, in Russian 1500 gmt 3 Sep 01 /BBC
Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
Copyright
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6 Nuclear firm bids for Dublin rail deal
The Sunday Times:September 2 2001BUSINESS IRELAND
Tom McEnaney, Irish Business Editor
A LEADING player in the British nuclear weapons industry has
emerged as one of two companies in the running for the Luas light
rail contract in Dublin.
Serco, whose interests in-clude nuclear weapons research, is
expected to be shortlisted with Transdev, the French transport
giant, for the government's £100m-plus project.
With the closing date for the submission of "qualification
documents" approaching in less than a fortnight, industry sources
said Transdev enjoyed a slight lead over its rival.
Other companies that have submitted preliminary bids include
National Express, Britain's former national bus company, which
now operates train and bus services in Europe, Australia and
America. French transport giant Connex, and Britain's largest
transport company, FirstGroup, are also in the running.
Another of the companies dominating the British transport sector,
Stagecoach, expressed an interest earlier this year, but later
withdrew.
At this stage, bidders have to prove they are suitably qualified
to run a light rail system.
Transdev has reintroduced trams in France and now operates tram
systems in Nantes, Grenoble, Orleans and Strasbourg. It has also
won transport franchises in Nottingham, Oporto in Portugal and
Melbourne, Australia.
Serco is loosely described as a contract-management company.
Along with British Nuclear Fuels and Lockheed Martin, it is a
major shareholder in AWE Management, whose activities include
nuclear weapons research, managing Britain's nuclear stockpile
and decommissioning nuclear weapons. Last month Serco purchased
the nuclear consulting arm of British firm AEA Technology for
£75m. Serco was one of the principal beneficiaries of
privatisation in the UK, winning 400 diverse public contracts
from prison management to operating Manchester's tram service.
The five-year franchise on offer is for the first of the three
lines of Dublin's Luas network. The contract is expected to be
worth about £20m per year, or £100m during its life.
Copyright 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd. This service is provided on
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7 Nuclear waste trains set to go twice safe limit
Sunday Herald home
BNFL's secret plans to enable trains carrying nuclear waste to
travel at 60mph is 'a disaster waiting to happen'
By Rob Edwards Environment Editor
A secret plan to boost the speed of trains carrying radioactive
waste on the west coast main line will see their potentially
lethal cargoes travelling twice as fast as the safety limit.
Every week, dozens of 50- tonne flasks containing a deadly
cocktail of radioactivity are taken by rail from nuclear power
stations around Britain to the waste reprocessing centre at
Sellafield in Cumbria. Until now they have all travelled at a
maximum speed of 45mph in order to reduce the risk of accidents.
But the Sunday Herald can reveal that their speed is set to
increase to 60mph, under a plan being discussed behind closed
doors by Railtrack and state-owned British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL).
Experts say that the increase will make a lethal leakage of
radioactivity from a crash much more likely.
Uranium fuel burnt in the nuclear power stations at Hunterston on
the Clyde coast and Torness in East Lothian is taken by rail to
Sellafield every few days for reprocessing. The trains pass
through several heavily populated areas, including Ayrshire,
Edinburgh and Carlisle. Trains also run regularly from eight
other nuclear sites around the coast of England and Wales.
John Large, the leading independent nuclear engineer, says that
some radioactive waste could catch fire and disperse tiny
particles of plutonium into the air. 'This would be a respiratory
hazard and could lead to large areas being evacuated, depending
on the wind and the weather,' he said.
'After Paddington, Hatfield and Selby, the safety of rail travel
these days leaves a lot to be desired. To ratchet up the
likelihood of an accident with nuclear freight trains defies
common sense.' Large, who advises governments on nuclear hazards,
pointed out that the tests which are designed to ensure the
safety of nuclear transport flasks had no scientific basis. They
included dropping a flask nine metres on to a hard surface, which
is equivalent to an impact of 30mph. But when the flasks start
travelling at 60mph, Large argued, the impact speeds in accidents
would be much greater. Collisions with oncoming trains could
reach combined impact speeds of 120mph or more.
The plan to increase the speed of nuclear trains is part of
Railtrack's scheme to upgrade the west coast main line from
Glasgow to London over the next four years .
But BNFL, which runs the nuclear trains through its subsidiary
Direct Rail Services, has also long-harboured a secret desire to
boost speeds. A leaked memo showed that the company made the
suggestion back in 1999, but deliberately 'buried' it so that the
public wouldn't know, and then dropped it. Now, however, the idea
has been resurrected, though not yet formally announced. In March
there was an emergency at Torness when a train carrying three
empty nuclear flasks was derailed . The accident, which didn't
cause any leakage of radioactivity, occurred when the train was
reversing at just 5mph.
'The derailment of nuclear flasks near Dunbar earlier this year
was a low-speed incident,' said Dr Richard Dixon, head of
research at Friends of the Earth Scotland. ' It is baffling that
efforts are being made to speed up highly dangerous nuclear
shipments. This can only be a recipe for disaster.'
Other environmental groups also laid into the plan . 'To increase
speeds to twice that which the waste containers are tested to
withstand in the event of an accident, and using a line adjacent
to passenger trains travelling at 140mph is a disaster waiting to
happen,' said Pete Roche from Greenpeace.
BNFL, however, insisted that the transport flasks were safe. The
nine-metre drop on to an unyielding surface was just one of a
series of tests 'designed to simulate the most serious credible
accident scenarios', said BNFL's Janine Claber.
But Martin Forwood, a campaigner from Cumbrians Opposed to a
Radioactive Environment , pointed out that BNFL had earlier axed
guard's vans from the trains, leaving drivers to cope with any
accident on their own. 'Now they want to speed things up. This
does not exactly smack of putting safety first. '
www.rail.co.uk www.railtrack.co.uk
©2001 smg sunday newspapers ltd. no.176088. all rights reserved.
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8 FOCUS: Japan's nuclear energy policy remains in limbo
KYODO NEWS
By Takashi Miura
TOKYO, Sept. 2, Kyodo - Japan's nuclear energy policy -- with the
so-called pluthermal project at its core -- is in limbo, with the
government now paying the price for having neglected to consult
with people living near nuclear plants when formulating the
far-reaching plan.
And in a sign of high-level internal discord, Kyoko Kimoto, a
former TV broadcaster and a critic, said in mid-August that she
will take a leave of absence from the Atomic Energy Commission,
an advisory panel to the prime minister on atomic energy policy,
blaming the commission for taking a negative stance in dialogue
with citizens about pluthermal projects.
Tokyo Electric Power Co. had planned to use plutonium-uranium
mixed oxide (MOX) fuel in the No. 3 reactor at its
Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in Niigata Prefecture, but Kariwa
residents voted against the plan in a May plebiscite.
Tokyo Electric Power, about half of whose power generation comes
from nuclear reactors, is the largest of the nation's 10 electric
power companies.
The government of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has thus
established a liaison council among ministries and agencies,
including the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, to devise
measures to gain public consensus for the pluthermal project,
which derives its name the combination of plutonium and thermal.
The measures, unveiled in early August, call for energy education
at elementary, junior and senior high schools. The education
ministry has asked that 500 million yen be earmarked in the state
budget for fiscal 2002 to fund such education through the
publication of side readers.
The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry also asked that 700
million yen be spent to triple the number of visitors to nuclear
plants to one million annually.
But analysts doubt whether this kind of ''education'' and
''publicity'' from above will actually persuade people of the
safety and necessity of the pluthermal project.
The original pillar of Japan's nuclear fuel recycling policy was
the creation of fast-breeder reactors, which use plutonium fuel,
but the prospects for their development collapsed in 1995 when
the Monju reactor in Fukui Prefecture leaked plutonium.
It was then that plans for the pluthermal project surfaced.
Kansai Electric Power Co. and Tokyo Electric Power planned to use
MOX at the Takahama and Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plants
respectively.
But the Takahama plant was forced to suspend the plan after a
British company was found to have falsified fuel manufacturing
data. The Fukushima No. 1 plant was also forced to postpone the
plan as the Fukushima prefectural government opposed a revision
in Tokyo Electric Power's construction of a thermal power plant.
The government's atomic energy officials said the promotion of
the pluthermal project is a ''national policy'' because it was
incorporated into a long-term nuclear energy research and
development program the government fixed last year.
However, informed sources said that in the process of working out
the program, there was little discussion about whether or not
plutonium should be used, and opinions from those cautions about
nuclear power and citizens opposed to the program were not given
much weight.
Currently, a plan exists to construct a MOX fuel processing plant
in the village of Rokkasho, Aomori Prefecture, where a nuclear
fuel reprocessing plant is being built.
Analysts have said that if the pluthermal project is revised, the
plan to build the MOX plant will be favorably affected, but that
public understanding is difficult to obtain without full
explanations of the program.
Tokyo Electric Power is conducting a basic survey about whether
to locate an ''intermediate storage'' facility in the Aomori city
of Mutsu, where used fuel that is not to be recycled immediately
can be stored for up to 10 years.
The analysts said used fuel can be stored at the intermediate
storage facility for the time being in order to allow enough time
for discussions, but stressed the need to stop and consider
alternatives, including the nonprocessing of the whole volume of
used fuel.
2001 Kyodo News (c) Established 1945.
*****************************************************************
9 Nuclear waste protesters take message to Las Vegas Strip
Las Vegas SUN
September 03, 2001
LAS VEGAS (AP) - About 40 protesters wore protective gear and
wheeled barrels bearing radiation symbols along the Las Vegas
Strip to encourage attendance at hearings on the storage of
nuclear waste in Nevada.
"Our main message here is to get people out to the meetings,"
said Kalynda Tilges, a protest organizer and nuclear issues
coordinator for Citizen Alert.
The demonstrators marched Monday among the hordes of Labor Day
tourists from the Bellagio resort to the Fashion Show Mall. Many
carried signs that read, "Last chance to tell the DOE: No Yucca
Mountain Dump!"
"Nuclear waste never takes a holiday," said Jennifer Viereck, a
protester. "Those shipments are coming if we don't do something
to stop them right now." Yucca Mountain, located 90 miles
northwest of Las Vegas, is the only site under federal study to
accept 77,000 tons of highly radioactive waste from nuclear
reactors around the country.
Nevada lawmakers have asked Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham to
personally attend the meetings to hear the views of Nevadans and
others on the proposed repository.
Their request delivered over the weekend was the latest in a
campaign by Nevada officials to pressure Abraham before
Wednesday's public hearing in North Las Vegas on the Energy
Department's scientific research at Yucca Mountain. So far, the
secretary has not responded.
Tilges said her group is planning another demonstration before
Wednesday's meeting.
"The DOE is subverting the public process," she said. "They're
holding the last public hearing on Yucca Mountain this week with
very little notice, and without the required final analysis of
the environmental impacts."
Nevada lawmakers and Gov. Kenny Guinn are also seeking
postponement of the public hearings and a 90-day extension of a
public comment period following the Energy Department's Aug. 21
release of a preliminary site suitability report on Yucca
Mountain.
The DOE argues that the report's data has been available to the
public in the past, so an extended comment period is not
necessary, said spokesman Joe Davis. Public hearings also are
scheduled for Sept. 12 in Amargosa Valley and Sept. 13 in
Pahrump.
Abraham is expected to decide late this year whether to recommend
Yucca Mountain as a repository site after reviewing the results
of site studies and environmental assessments prepared by DOE
scientists.
On the Net: Energy Department: http://www.ymp.gov Citizen Alert:
http://www.citizenalert.org
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
10 Haggling hides lack of Nevada nuclear clout
Reno Gazette-Journal
Monday September 3rd, 2001
They have fought over radiation standards and other elements of
the shibboleth known as “sound science.”
They have argued about interim storage and permanent storage,
trying to stop, or at least slow down, both proposals.
They have brandished fornicating metaphors ad infinitum,
beginning with the Screw Nevada Bill of 1987.
And now, they are disgorging their rhetoric over . . . a meeting
place?
Yes, defying all odds, the state’s political elite reached yet
another nadir -- it’s as if they are trying to constantly burrow
lower on the spin scale -- on the issue of Yucca Mountain and the
nuclear waste dump.
The congressional delegation and Gov. Kenny Guinn last week were
outraged -- outraged, I tell you -- to discover that the
Department of Energy was moving hearings on a site suitability
report from a Las Vegas hotel to a federal site in North Las
Vegas. Then, the senators, congressfolk and Guinn sent a letter
to Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham asking him to extend the
public comment period by 90 days.
“Fifteen days notice of the first public hearing does not provide
adequate time for review and travel arrangements to be made by
citizens wishing to attend the hearing in person,” thundered
Senate Majority Whip Harry Reid.
And what’s more -- the letter didn’t say -- it doesn’t give the
governor and the delegation time to gin up interest in the
hearings so they actually are attended by more than a handful of
gadflies.
So beyond any private contest over whose quote got the best play
in the media, what did the governor and the delegation hope to
gain -- beyond, of course, annoying us with their incessant
rhetorical overload on this topic?
Hey, how many of you out there realize the DOE is hell-bent on
building the dump at Yucca Mountain? How many of you think that
the feds have spent upwards of $8 billion near the test site just
to “study” the area? And how many of you think any of the
political ruling class has any idea how to really stop the
project other than to delay, delay, delay and then pray, pray,
pray?
It doesn’t help that ex-Gov. Bob List sold his credibility to the
nuclear industry. List may be a political cipher here but he
surely is being used in Washington as the industry’s trophy
governor.
There really are only two questions here for the public to
consider, beyond all the silly controversy over a meeting place
and a comment period. And they are:
Does Guinn have the kind of relationship with President Bush
where the latter actually might help the state as the time draws
nigh for the DOE to officially recommend Yucca Mountain?
And, perhaps more significantly, can Reid use his newfound clout
to stop the dump?
If the answers to those two questions are both “no,” then all the
press releases and sound bites in the world will go for naught.
Jon Ralston, who publishes The Ralston Report, works for
Greenspun Media Group. He welcomes comments and questions. Write
him at 2300 Prometheus Court, Henderson, Nev. 89014. Or call
(702) 870-7997.
© Reno Gazette-Journal
*****************************************************************
11 Testifying at Extortion Trial May Not End Semnani's Woes
The Salt Lake Tribune --
Tuesday , September 4, 2001
[PHOTO] Khosrow Semnani was forced to give up control of his
company, Envirocare of Utah, in the wake of the pay-to-play
investigation involving him and former state regulator Larry
Anderson. (Tribune file photo)
BY JUDY FAHYS
The way Khosrow Semnani tells it, a former regulator's
demands for cash and fear of exposure finally drove him to stop
the shakedown.
"Mainly," Semnani testified at Larry Anderson's extortion
trial last week, "I wanted to stop this madness."
But that decision five years ago did not end the craziness
for Semnani. Since then, the radioactive waste landfill owner has
fended off lawsuits from Anderson and at least three business
competitors.
He was forced to give up control of his company, Envirocare
of Utah, while it endured compliance reviews by authorities in
four state and federal regulatory agencies.
And he pleaded guilty to a federal tax charge in the Anderson
scandal, paid a $100,000 fine and pledged to help the Anderson
prosecution.
It would seem that the conclusion of Anderson's trial might
finally close the door on those troubles -- especially if
Anderson is convicted.
But, in many ways, the trial has only aggravated the quarrels
and questions that have hounded Semnani and Envirocare of Utah,
his multimillion-dollar company. It was something Semnani noticed
the other day, during a break in his dramatic testimony, when he
remarked on the faces he saw in the courtroom audience. "My
competitors," he said uneasily, "they are all out there."
None of the governors and lawmakers who have accepted tens of
thousands of dollars in political contributions from Semnani
could be seen in the audience, nor family members. Just two of
Semnani's legal team and his spokesman.
Semnani attorney Rod Snow said his client has taken
responsibility for his part in the alleged scandal. "I'm sure he
will be happy to get this behind him," Snow said.
From the witness stand in U.S. District Judge Tena Campbell's
courtroom last week, Semnani sat face to face with Anderson.
The former state regulator accepted, then rejected a plea
agreement earlier this year in hopes of beating six federal
charges and the threat of up to 37 years in jail by telling his
version of events. Anderson has seemingly staked his freedom on
convincing a jury that in 1987, he sold Semnani a business plan
for a radioactive waste landfill in the West Desert for $100,000
and a handsome 5 percent of the revenue.
Anderson, according to his testimony, planned to quit his
state job as director of Utah's Radiation Control Division, which
licenses and oversees radioactive waste facilities, once business
got started. But while he used his role to smooth the way for
Envirocare, Semnani stopped paying and repudiated the
partnership, which over eight years had netted Anderson roughly
$600,000 in cash, gold coins and golf-course real estate.
That was about $7 million shy of what Anderson thought
Semnani owed him for the business plan, so he sued Semnani in
1996. The businessman countersued, and both wound up being
charged as criminals.
Semnani's 1999 deal with prosecutors spared the businessman
the expense of living up to his agreement, said Anderson defense
attorney Jerry Mooney. "Some people will do a lot for $10
million. It's almost like Powerball."
Although Semnani's testimony last week fulfills his
obligation to the federal government and will finally end his
quarrel with Anderson, the trial has also provided new fodder for
Semnani's critics.
The trial has renewed criticism about Semnani's coziness with
public officials, which blurred the lines between business and
regulator and between private gain and public good. In tapes
Anderson secretly made in 1995 to catch Semnani admitting the two
had a business deal, the regulator taunted the businessman by
accusing him of bribery.
On the second day of the trial, over the courtroom
loudspeaker, the recorded exchanges returned to haunt both men:
Semnani: Nobody bribed you.
Anderson: The hell you didn't. . . . You did.
Semnani: Well, you say that I did. That's [inaudible].
Anderson: I'm just showing you how you sound on the other
side, Khos. It's the same thing. It's the coin turned over.
That's exactly . . .
Semnani: I never bribed you and even if I had bribed you why
did you take it? Even if I bribed you why did you take it? Did
you take it?
To be sure, Anderson benefited from the relationship.
The two shared a Park City golf-course retreat for five years
before Anderson signed it away for $490,000, or $185,000 more
than Semnani's purchase price.
Anderson cashed in about $30,000 worth of gold coins Semnani
had given him. And he occasionally walked away from Semnani with
$100 bills stuffed in magazines or tucked in envelopes passed off
in elevators.
Semnani also helped Anderson hide money -- or coached him to,
depending on whom you believe.
In 1990, when Anderson needed quick cash to open a Swiss bank
account, Semnani phoned his stepfather in Paris and asked him to
dispatch money to a friend in Geneva having trouble settling a
hotel bill.
Semnani repaid that money and wired money to his stepfather's
brother in France to deposit into the Geneva account in two
payments of $50,000.
Environmental activist Jason Groenewold, watching the trial
from Campbell's courtroom, remains cynical about Envirocare and
the dubious regulatory environment that spawned it. He says the
Semnani-Anderson scandal reflects a "facilitate-don't-regulate"
attitude toward business in Utah and makes citizens skeptical
regulators will protect their health.
"It was born out of a time of scandal," said Groenewold, a
frequent critic of Semnani and opponent of Envirocare's efforts
to expand into new business lines, including modestly radioactive
nuclear power plant discards.
"Can he [Semnani] be trusted to dispose nuclear waste in
Utah?"
Semnani also saw in the courtroom audience another unwelcome
face, that of attorney Steve Densley, who represents a Texas man
Semnani is suing for defamation.
Kenneth N. Bigham, a former business rival of Semnani's, has
a simple defense: damage he might possibly have done to the
reputations of Envirocare and Semnani is negligible compared with
the damage done by the Anderson scandal.
Densley has scribbled notes throughout the trial that
bolsters the notion that Semnani's credibility already was in
doubt.
"It's an enormous problem for him," Densley said. "The
defamation suit will only stir it up again."
fahys@sltrib.com
© Copyright 2001, The Salt Lake Tribune All material found on
*****************************************************************
12 Russia offers another reactor to Iran
BBC News | EUROPE |
4 September, 2001, 14:28 GMT 15:28 UK
The Russian deputy minister for atomic energy says Moscow will
propose building further nuclear reactors in the southern Iranian
port of Bushehr.
Russia is already constructing a nuclear power plant there, but
the deputy minister, Yevgeny Reshetnikov, said Tehran could order
at least one more reactor from the Russians.
The announcement comes as the Israeli prime minister, Ariel
Sharon, who is in Moscow, is expected to ask Russia to scale down
its military and nuclear exports to Iran.
Both Israel and the United States fear that Iran could use
Russian nuclear technology for military purposes.
Moscow and Tehran say it will not be, and the BBC defence
correspondent says Moscow stands to gain important export revenue
from its sale of arms and nuclear technology.
*****************************************************************
13 Experiments test heat in Yucca Mountain
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL: NEWS:
Energy Department scientist William Boyle, left, and Los Alamos
National Laboratory geologist Mark Peters examine a sign inside
Yucca Mountain that records data on an experiment that simulates
heat produced by decaying nuclear waste.
Photo by Gary Thompson.
Dust covers the first of nine mock nuclear waste canisters where
heaters have been running for nearly four years for a study at
Yucca Mountain on how rock would behave if the mountain is filled
with 77,000 tons of decaying nuclear waste. Photo by Gary
Thompson.
A train hauls ventilation ducts out of Yucca Mountain where
scientists are studying how heat from nuclear waste would affect
the volcanic-rock ridge, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Photo
by Gary Thompson.
Monday, September 03, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Experiments test heat in Yucca Mountain
Scientists need to know how decaying waste will affect
surroundings in a proposed repository
By KEITH ROGERS
REVIEW-JOURNAL
The temperature last week was a sizzling 391 degrees inside a
sealed cavern more than a mile from the entrance of the Yucca
Mountain tunnel and 1,000 feet below the ridge top.
"You could cook a pizza," said Mark Peters, a geologist from the
Los Alamos, N.M., national laboratory.
But instead of dough topped with cheese and pepperoni, for four
years scientists on the Yucca Mountain Project have been using
electric rods to cook a type of volcanic rock called Topopah
Spring tuff -- a layer of volcanic ash that fell from the sky
roughly 13 million years ago.
It's the same kind of rock as that located where the Department
of Energy wants to dig a maze of tunnels to entomb the nation's
highly radioactive waste.
But before spent nuclear fuel rods can be put in the mountain,
100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, scientists need to know how
heat from the decaying radioactive waste will affect the
surrounding rock and water it holds that trickled down from tiny
cracks in the mountain. They also want to know how the water's
chemistry changes.
The data will be used to predict how a repository and its
steel-and-nickel waste canisters would hold up centuries after
tunnels, or drifts, have been stocked with 77,000 tons of spent
nuclear fuel and other lethal waste.
Of key interest, Peters said, is how far apart the tunnels should
be spaced. Heat from the decaying waste, he said, will be used to
drive away moisture by vaporizing it. This will keep the
surrounding walls dry enough to prevent rapid corrosion of the
canisters.
The arrangement, scientists believe, will also allow water
traveling downward from the surface to drain away from the
tunnels.
Peters, who oversees more than a dozen tests government
scientists are conducting in the ridge, and Energy Department
scientist William Boyle, said the preliminary results hold no
surprises. The rock tends to heat up to the boiling point about
10 feet into the walls surrounding the waste storage tunnels.
"It pretty much confirms what we expected would happen," said
Boyle, a geologist and engineer who has worked on the project 14
years.
He said the experiment was designed to give scientists a
conservative analysis of how the repository will perform when
peak temperatures are expected to be reached hundreds of years
after the last canister of waste is put in the mountain and vents
to the outside air are sealed. Depending on the final design,
temperatures are expected to range near or above the boiling
point, which is 205 degrees at the site's elevation.
Scientists on a government panel -- the Nuclear Waste Technical
Review Board -- have asked Yucca Mountain scientists to consider
a design for the repository to operate at relatively colder
temperatures, on the order of 180 degrees, along with the hotter
design for up to 300 degrees that they've been pursuing.
The panel's concern is that water would be more mobile inside the
mountain at hotter temperatures, possibly increasing the rate of
corrosion of waste packages.
The debate on how hot the repository should operate is among the
topics expected to be aired at public hearings that begin
Wednesday in North Las Vegas. Other issues will be addressed,
such as hazards posed by earthquakes and volcanic activity in the
area and the rate at which surface water will travel through the
mountain as climate changes during the 10,000-year regulatory
period for the repository, if one is built.
Boyle said using electrified rods, like giant curling irons, to
simulate heat from spent nuclear fuel pellets, is not a new
technique but the scope and purpose of this battery of tests are
unique. No other country has come as far along toward building a
geologic repository for high-level nuclear waste as the U.S.
effort at Yucca Mountain.
Under the current schedule, spent fuel from U.S. nuclear power
reactors could be brought to the mountain for disposal as early
as 2010, provided that Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham finds the
site suitable for constructing a repository, President Bush
approves it, and other political hurdles are cleared.
"Right now Spain and Switzerland are doing heater tests, and
Canada, Japan and Sweden have each done one too," Boyle said on a
visit last week to the mountain.
"Many of the other tests were not done for a specific site where
people are considering putting nuclear waste," he said.
On Dec. 3, 1997, scientists switched on 50 electric rods in the
walls of a 50-yard-long cavern to mimic temperatures that rock
layers would reach between waste tunnels. Besides the rods, nine
"dummy" waste packages were rigged with electric heaters to
simulate decaying waste.
"We just want to see what the heat would do with the rock and
water," Boyle explained.
He said the goal was to reach a rock-wall temperature of 392
degrees and keep it there for two or three years.
Since 1997, the Energy Department has spent $367,000 on
electricity to power the drift scale heater test.
Power to the experiment will be shut off some time in January,
according to Peters.
Then, scientists will spend up to four years collecting and
analyzing data on how the rock cools.
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1997 - 2001
*****************************************************************
14 Yucca Mountain foes see alternative
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL: NEWS:
Monday, September 03, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Transmutation would reduce nuclear waste
By TONY BATT
DONREY WASHINGTON BUREAU
WASHINGTON -- Even if it is developed into a repository, Yucca
Mountain does not have enough room to store all the nation's
projected nuclear waste; that is forcing lawmakers and scientists
to look at technology that might reduce the amount of radioactive
spent fuel placed in storage and how long it stays there.
Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, would have a
designated capacity to store 77,000 tons of high level nuclear
waste. Even if the United States does not license any new nuclear
power plants in the next 20 years, however, the waste inventory
from existing plants would exceed 100,000 tons, officials said.
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., sees transmutation as a possible
solution. Transmutation reduces the volume and toxicity of
nuclear waste by bombarding it with neutrons from a high-powered
accelerator.
"It's like an automobile running its exhaust back through so it
can be re-burned for more energy," said Gregory Van Tuyle, who
leads transmutation programs at Los Alamos National Laboratory in
New Mexico.
While transmutation would not eliminate the need for a nuclear
waste repository, it could reduce the storage time from 10,000
years to 300 years, proponents say.
Congressional funding for transmutation has grown from less than
$5 million in 1999 to $34 million this year. For next year's
budget, Domenici is seeking $50 million for transmutation
research.
The Senate approved Domenici's request in July. A House and
Senate conference will work toward a compromise this fall.
Domenici is a longtime skeptic of the chances for a nuclear waste
repository ever opening at Yucca Mountain. The Waste Isolation
Pilot Plant in New Mexico, for low level nuclear waste storage,
had the support of the governor and the state's congressional
delegation, "and it still took us 20 years to get it licensed," a
Domenici aide said. "Then he looks at Nevada, where the
opposition to Yucca Mountain is almost total."
One of Domenici's strongest supporters for transmutation funding
is Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.
Environmentalists, usually dependable allies of Nevada on nuclear
waste issues, adamantly oppose transmutation.
"Even if transmutation works, you still end up with long-lasting
nuclear waste that has to be isolated for hundreds of years,"
said Diane D'Arrigo, the radioactive waste project director for
the Nuclear Information and Resource Service.
D'Arrigo also expressed concerns that the reprocessing involved
in transmutation would produce more plutonium for nuclear
weapons.
The nuclear power industry supports transmutation research, up to
a point. Nuclear Energy Institute spokesman Steven Kerekes hedged
when asked whether the industry would support reducing Yucca
Mountain's budget to provide more funding for transmutation
research. "That's a hypothetical, and I'm not going to get into
it," Kerekes said.
No one disputes the high costs of a transmutation program. A
report to Congress in October 1999 estimated expenses would reach
$280 billion over 117 years. By contrast, the total cost of a
Yucca Mountain repository is estimated at $58 billion.
But unlike Yucca Mountain, transmutation would offset its costs
by producing energy that could be sold, according to Anthony
Hechanova, a nuclear engineer at the University of Nevada, Las
Vegas.
"Each year, these (transmutation) plants would earn about a
billion dollars, and the 1999 study indicated this could be a
wash," Hechanova said.
The reduced toxicity of nuclear waste resulting from
transmutation could allow the government to store it in regional
sites other than Yucca Mountain, Hechanova said.
Van Tuyle says scientific questions about transmutation are
solved and the only issue holding it back is money.
Although the Bush administration did not include any funding for
transmutation research in its budget proposal this year, Vice
President Dick Cheney lauded the technology's potential in a
comprehensive energy report.
International cooperation in transmutation research is a strong
possibility, according to William Magwood, director of the Energy
Department's nuclear energy program.
"We have had very substantive conversations with France, Japan,
Russian and Switzerland," Magwood said.
He said Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham signed an agreement with
France for research in this area, "but at this stage it's just
exploratory."
Magwood downplays the notion that transmutation could be the
magic answer on how to dispose of nuclear waste. He stresses that
transmutation would be a complement, not an alternative, to a
nuclear waste repository.
webmaster@lvrj.com Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1997 -
*****************************************************************
15 Nuclear waste protesters hit Strip
[Las Vegas Review-Journal]
Tuesday, September 04, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Goal to encourage attendance during upcoming hearings
By LISA SNEDEKER
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
About 40 protesters wore protective gear and wheeled barrels
bearing radiation symbols along the Strip on Monday to encourage
attendance at hearings on the storage of nuclear waste in Nevada.
"Our main message here is to get people out to the meetings,"
said Kalynda Tilges, a protest organizer and nuclear issues
coordinator for Citizen Alert.
The demonstrators marched among the hordes of Labor Day tourists
from the Bellagio to the Fashion Show mall. Many carried signs
that read, "Last chance to tell the DOE: No Yucca Mountain Dump!"
"Nuclear waste never takes a holiday," said protester Jennifer
Viereck. "Those shipments are coming if we don't do something to
stop them right now."
Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, is the only
site under federal study to accept 77,000 tons of highly
radioactive waste from nuclear reactors around the country.
Nevada lawmakers have asked Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham to
attend the meetings to hear the views of Nevadans and others on
the proposed repository.
Their request delivered over the weekend was the latest in a
campaign by Nevada officials to pressure Abraham before
Wednesday's public hearing in North Las Vegas on the Energy
Department's scientific research at Yucca Mountain.
So far, the secretary has not responded.
Tilges said her group is planning another demonstration before
Wednesday's meeting.
"The DOE is subverting the public process," she said. "They're
holding the last public hearing on Yucca Mountain this week with
very little notice, and without the required final analysis of
the environmental impacts."
Nevada lawmakers and Gov. Kenny Guinn are also seeking
postponement of the public hearings and a 90-day extension of a
public comment period following the Energy Department's Aug. 21
release of a preliminary site suitability report on Yucca
Mountain.
This story is located at:
http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Sep-04-Tue-2001/news/16917436.html
*****************************************************************
16 Nuclear power plans
The Scotsman Online
MINISTERS could order the building of new nuclear power stations in
Scotland, it was reported last night.
Sources close to the energy minister, Brian Wilson, have indicated
that, with a number of Britain's existing nuclear power stations
coming to the end of their lives, it is inevitable that new
plants will be built north of the Border.
It is thought any new nuclear station would be built on the site
of existing stations at either Hunterston in Ayrshire, Torness in
East Lothian, Chapelcross in Dumfriesshire, or Dounreay in
Caithness. All are due to be decommissioned in 2010.
The majority of ministers on the Whitehall energy review
committee are said to be in favour of the plan, with even
formerly anti-nuclear MP George Foulkes convinced of the need for
more power.
A decision is expected towards the end of the month, with plans
under way as soon as next year.
*****************************************************************
17 Columnist Susan Snyder: Small towns ready for garden party
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 04, 2001 at 8:28:49 PDT
Susan Snyder's column appears Tuesdays, Fridays and Sundays.
Reach her at snyder@lasvegassun.comor 259-4082.
The Nevada welcome center in Boulder City is easy to miss.
The turnoff is on the right as you're heading to Lake Mead on
U.S. 93, about a half-mile past St. Jude's Ranch for Children.
The center is a small concrete-block building next to a large
parking lot. There are five picnic shelters with tables and a
couple of benches sit on the surrounding asphalt.
It's OK. But the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority,
which maintains the center, says it can be better.
So Boulder City urban designer Damon Ohlerking came up with a
plan that shows just how much better. Ohlerking, who works for
Boulder City, designed a 10-acre oasis called the Mojave Botanic
Garden that would educate visitors about the desert landscape
while giving them a place to rest.
"The Mojave is the least-understood landscape. We just don't
know how to love it," Ohlerking said. "And we don't have any
place to learn to respect it. Imagine making these 10 acres into
a vision of the Mojave."
Ohlerking's vision doesn't stop in Boulder City. If one Nevada
botanical park is good, then 32 are better. His idea, which he
outlines in a proposal titled "Given the Nature of Nevada," calls
for placing similar 10-acre parks in such communities as Beatty,
Goldfield, West Wendover, Ely, Elko and Jean.
These gateways would break up the monotony for weary travelers
on Nevada's long, open stretches. Each would provide restrooms, a
gift shop offering ice cream, coffee and made-in-Nevada items,
along with carefully planned and explained gardens that would
showcase each area's flora and fauna.
"For instance, people are driving in from Kingman (Ariz.).
They're blitzed out on the landscape that they don't understand,
and here's a place to explain it all," he said.
Initial estimated cost of designing and planting 320 acres
spread among 32 such gardens is about $17 million, he said. And
it seems the money could be there.
Two weeks ago Ohlerking, who also is president of the Nevada
Shade Tree Council, traveled to Carson City with six other
members of that council and met with Attorney General Frankie Sue
Del Papa and Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev. Ohlerking says both
officials thought the proposal was a good one.
Del Papa is a well-known supporter of making more green space,
as she is spearheading the Nevada Trees 2000 project, a statewide
beautification effort.
Nevada has lured hundreds of thousands of visitors each year by
selling a a lifestyle that's fun to visit, Ohlerking said. Now
it's time for Nevada to sell an image it can live with.
These gateway gardens will lure a different kind of visitor
while giving each community a serene spot in which to contemplate
and relax.
"I believe Nevada has done a lousy job of marketing itself to
the rest of the country, and Yucca Mountain (the proposed nuclear
waster dump) is a result of that," he said.
"We can change the world's opinion of Nevada. And then why would
anyone want to send that stuff to the place where you go to
recharge your soul? "We can do these gardens," Ohlerking said
with all the passion of an
evangelist. "We can build beauty that's wholesome, that has
integrity, and that draws on the desert."
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
18 Letter: Waiting for bus too dangerous
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 04, 2001 at 9:58:05 PDT
Regarding a story in the Aug. 27 Sun, I'm not surprised somebody
got injured at a bus stop shelter. They're lucky they didn't get
killed.
Sometimes when I sit at a bus stop, I wonder, "If someone
crashes into me and my son sitting here, will they come after me
for child endangerment?"
The one on Valley View by Meadows mall near the Bennett Family
YMCA seems particularly conducive to pedestrian fatherly
self-doubts; especially after leaving the DOE Yucca Mountain
Exhibit, one meditates, "What's my half-traffic-life? A minute
and a half?"
I hope those two injured bus patrons sue CAT, the bus shelter
company and the municipal traffic engineers, who all place them
and the rest of us bus riders in the high-risk path of harm.
This city is the most pedestrian-hostile burg on Earth.
JAMES RICHARD LUCAS
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
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19 Letter: Expand nuke hearings
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 04, 2001 at 9:58:05 PDT
The U.S. Department of Energy's hearings for the Yucca Mountain
repository proposal need to be expanded to include other areas.
I live in San Luis Obispo, Calif., where a nuclear plant, Diablo
Canyon, operates two reactors. Pacific Gas and Electric, the
bankrupt owner of the nuke plant, has its bid in for Yucca
Mountain and is suing DOE to get it.
Now, it is my understanding that the state of Nevada is fighting
this proposal. We here in San Luis Obispo County are not thrilled
about it, either. Transportation of over 150 tons of radioactive
waste from San Luis Obispo County to Port Hueneme via barge, then
across the state of California via rail, is a scary thought.
Opportunities will exist for terrorism and accidents, not to
mention the ugly idea of nuke waste on the ocean.
We need to quit producing nuclear waste by switching to
renewable energy sources. Diablo Canyon is a time bomb waiting to
happen. Creating another one in Nevada is not the solution. The
DOE should hold a hearing in our county and be prepared to hear a
resounding "no" to nuke waste transportation.
SHEILA BAKER San Luis Obispo, Calif.
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
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20 Nuclear waste protesters hit the Strip
Photos: Yucca Mountain protesters | Eugenio Dellasala | Jason Halprin
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 04, 2001 at 11:06:06 PDT
By Lisa Snedeker
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LAS VEGAS -- About 40 protesters wore protective gear and
wheeled barrels bearing radiation symbols along the Las Vegas
Strip to encourage attendance at hearings on the storage of
nuclear waste in Nevada.
"Our main message here is to get people out to the meetings,"
Kalynda Tilges, a protest organizer and nuclear issues
coordinator for Citizen Alert, said.
The demonstrators marched Monday among the hordes of Labor Day
tourists from the Bellagio resort to the Fashion Show Mall. Many
carried signs that read,
"Last chance to tell the DOE: No Yucca Mountain Dump!"
"Nuclear waste never takes a holiday," Jennifer Viereck, a
protester, said. "Those shipments are coming if we don't do
something to stop them right now."
Yucca Mountain, located 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas, is the
only site under federal study to accept 77,000 tons of highly
radioactive waste from nuclear reactors around the country.
Nevada lawmakers have asked Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham to
personally attend the meetings to hear the views of Nevadans and
others on the proposed repository.
Their request delivered over the weekend was the latest in a
campaign by Nevada officials to pressure Abraham before
Wednesday's public hearing in North Las Vegas on the Energy
Department's scientific research at Yucca Mountain. So far, the
secretary has not responded.
Tilges said her group is planning another demonstration before
Wednesday's meeting.
"The DOE is subverting the public process," she said. "They're
holding the last public hearing on Yucca Mountain this week with
very little notice, and without the required final analysis of
the environmental impacts."
Nevada lawmakers and Gov. Kenny Guinn are also seeking
postponement of the public hearings and a 90-day extension of a
public comment period following the Energy Department's Aug. 21
release of a preliminary site suitability report on Yucca
Mountain.
The DOE argues that the report's data has been available to the
public in the past, so an extended comment period is not
necessary, said spokesman Joe Davis.
Public hearings also are scheduled for Sept. 12 in Amargosa
Valley and Sept. 13 in Pahrump.
Abraham is expected to decide late this year whether to
recommend Yucca Mountain as a repository site after reviewing the
results of site studies and environmental assessments prepared by
DOE scientists.
Photos: Yucca Mountain protesters | Eugenio Dellasala | Jason
Halprin Las Vegas SUN main page
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
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21 Lawsuit threatened as Yucca hearings near
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 04, 2001 at 11:11:05 PDT
By Mary Manning
<>
Environmental activists say they will sue the Energy Department
if the agency fails to delay a public hearing on a proposed
nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain.
The hearing, the first of three, is scheduled at 5 p.m.
Wednesday at the DOE's Nevada Operations Office at 232 Energy
Way, west of Losee Road, in North Las Vegas. The public comment
period begins at 6 p.m.
The hearing was originally scheduled for the Suncoast, but the
DOE changed the venue after resort officials said the hotel could
not accommodate or provide security for the hundreds expected to
attend.
Judy Treichel, executive director of the Nuclear Waste Task
Force, a Las Vegas-based organization that distributes
information on Yucca, said two East Coast attorneys who
specialize in environmental issues have sent a letter to groups
across the country to protest the hearings.
"If the DOE refuses to stop the hearing, then we will go to
court," Treichel said.
DOE spokesman Joe Davis said he had not seen the letter today
and, consequently, could not comment.
"We are carrying out what Congress has ordered," he said. "The
information gathered at the hearing will be used in the
decision-making."
The public hearings will give the public a final opportunity to
comment on the Yucca Mountain project before Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham recommends the site -- which would serve as a
repository for 77,000 tons of nuclear waste -- to President Bush.
Public hearings are also scheduled Sept. 12 in Amargosa Valley
and Sept. 13 in Pahrump.
Gov. Kenny Guinn and the state's congressional delegation wants
Abraham to delay the hearings and extend the public comment
period beyond the Sept. 20 deadline, set by the DOE. On Aug. 21
the DOE released a 370-page report -- Preliminary Site
Suitability Evaluation -- that details ongoing work by scientists
and engineers at the site, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
Guinn last week threatened to go to court to stop the hearing,
but state attorneys did not have enough time to prepare a request
for an injunction, which would have been considered by the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. According to the
Nuclear Waste Policy Act, passed in 1982, all cases concerning
Yucca Mountain are sent to the appeals court in San Francisco.
The Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, the state agency
overseeing Yucca, is encouraging area residents to attend the
hearing in North Las Vegas and voice their opinions.
The DOE will broadcast Wednesday's hearing live on the Internet
beginning at 6 p.m. Residents can access the hearing at
www.ymp.gov.
The hearing will also be broadcast beginning at 6 p.m. on Cox
Cable channels Las Vegas 1 and 39.
Protests intensified Monday when about 40 demonstrators, dressed
in nuclear containment gear, marched for two hours on the Strip
from the Bellagio to the Fashion Show mall.
"Our main message is to get people out to the meetings," said
Kalynda Tilges, nuclear coordinator for Citizen Alert who
coordinated the march.
"The Department of Energy cannot mute public opposition,"
Wenonah Hauter, director of Public Citizen's Critical Mass Energy
and Environment Program, said.
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
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22 Letter: Safety foremost
[newsobserver.com, Raleigh, NC]
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2001
I wish to add my view to the many who are questioning the
legality and moral issue of storing used nuclear fuel rods in
water [at CP's Shearon Harris nuclear plant] if dry cask storage
is safer.
Though many of us are not nuclear specialists, as Ben Franklin
said, "there was never an issue too dangerous to discuss it." I
would at least like to hear what the experts have to say; and
more importantly, I would like the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
to listen to what the experts have to say. Why is CP so afraid to
discuss the issue and willing to spend millions to skirt the
issue? That alone should raise red flags for our representatives
in Washington. Who were they elected to protect? I thought it was
the citizens -- not the utilities or big business.
N.C. WARN is not a group of crackpot naysayers. They are
concerned citizens trying to learn all they can about a danger to
us all. They do not oppose all storage; merely unnecessarily
dangerous transportation and storage of nuclear waste that has
the potential of destroying an area the size of our entire state
for generations to come. Is that so foolish? Their vociferousness
is the basis of our country.
As I and my family live in the shadow of the nuclear plant we
are particularly concerned, but if the plant's storage is
compromised that becomes a state and national disaster -- not
just a local one. How can U.S. Sen. John Edwards find any balance
with the "utilities' needs" in view of this threat to the "public
safety" [Edwards was quoted in an Aug. 19 N article as saying "My
view is there needs to be balance between public safety and what
the utilities need")? Public safety should never have to balance
with the needs of the utilities! Public safety should never have
to balance with anything. It should always be foremost.
LUCILLE ZANE Moncure
Observer. All material found on newsobserver.com is copyrighted
The News & Observer and associated news services. No material may
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23 Shipments to state more a matter of when, not if
| The Sun News - Myrtle Beach, SC The Associated Press"> The
Associated Press">
Tuesday, September 4, 2001
The Savannah River Site was picked to process the plutonium
in 1998. The Energy Department wanted one site to consolidate the
plutonium. SRS agreed to process it, and a site in Nevada was
picked to store the plutonium that wasn't converted into fuel.
But this year, Gov. Jim Hodges and other state leaders said they
began to notice a shift away from converting the plutonium. They
worried Energy officials might decide to skip the processing step
and just store the plutonium at SRS in order to save money.
Mr. Hodges threatened to block the first shipment to the site
unless he had a written agreement on when the plutonium would
leave. The Energy Department agreed to talk, but said
Undersecretary Robert Card told Mr. Hodges that in order to free
up the $650 million being spent at the Rocky Flats, Colo., former
weapons plant, the plutonium stored there would need to be
transferred to SRS.
U.S. Rep. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., described South Carolina's 1998
agreement to house plutonium disposal as ''a unique opportunity
in history.''
''Let's not blow it. If we don't get the plutonium, it will be a
disaster internationally and locally. We need to do this to make
the world safer,'' Mr. Graham said.
The Augusta Chronicle
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31 Austrian minister demands closure of disputed Czech nuclear
plant
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 1, 2001
Text of report in English by Czech news agency CTK Linz, Austria,
1 September: Austrian Finance Minister Karl-Heinz Grasser demands
that the Czech Temelin nuclear power plant be closed, he said at
this year's trade fair in Ried, Upper Austria.
He said he was for European Union enlargement, but added that
"all conditions of admission have to be harmonized". Grasser is a
member of the populist Freedom Party (FPOe), which wants to make
the Czech Republic's admission to the EU conditional on non
putting Temelin into operation.
Grasser stressed that the Temelin issue was of "essential
importance not only for Upper Austria but also for the whole of
Austria". According to Grasser, good neighbourly relations must
be based on "fair acts", which include the need to find "a just
distribution of costs of EU enlargement."
Regarding Temelin, the only "joint" solution that would satisfy
Austrian people is not to put Temelin into operation. Temelin,
situated some 60 km from both the Austrian and German borders and
operated by the CEZ power utility, is opposed by the Austrian and
German governments as well as environmentalists in the two
countries and in the Czech Republic. They say the plant is not
safe because it combines a Soviet design and western fuel and
safety technology.
Source: CTK news agency, Prague, in English 1241 gmt 1 Sep 01
/BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
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32 Newspaper denies Russian secretiveness about nuclear dumping
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 1, 2001
The image of Russian indifference and secretiveness about buried
nuclear waste is a false one as there is in fact scrupulous
monitoring of burial sites and a detailed database on dumping at
sea has been compiled, according to the Rossiyskaya Gazeta
newspaper. A European-funded international project has been
collecting data on the Soviet and Russian nuclear fleet's
radioactive waste since 1995. Among the secrets unearthed is the
real location of the reactor of the icebreaker Lenin, the report
on whose 1967 dumping en route to its designated Novaya Zemlya
burial site had been falsified.
Thus, according to the newspaper, "very important work is being
done with no false secrecy or peering into keyholes". The
following is the text of the article by Sergey Ptichkin,
published in the newspaper on 29 August under the headline
"Mystery of the disappearance of the Lenin's sarcophagus". The
subheadings are the newspaper's own:
In October 1967, the damaged reactor compartment, weighing 350
tonnes, of the world's first nuclear-powered icebreaker was sunk
off the shores of Novaya Zemlya. Time passed and they began to
look at how the highly radioactive load was preserved on the
bottom of the ocean - there was nothing there...
[newspaper's ellipsis]
One of our authors, Marcus Warren, the Moscow correspondent of
Britain's Daily Telegraph, writing on 8 August under the heading
"Fresh Mind", mentioned the article "Monitoring that is barely
acceptable" (Rossiyskaya Gazeta 4 August 2001). He suggested that
we return to the topic and take a closer look at it. The topic is
certainly interesting and almost inexhaustible.
What are we fussing about?
We recall that in the article which aroused Mr Warren's interest,
the issue was the start-up of intelligence operations by NATO
countries in the Barents Sea during the peak period of work to
raise the nuclear-powered submarine Kursk. As justification, our
Western neighbours express their usual concern about problems of
the Arctic's ecology.
Naturally, it was asserted that Russia is concealing the true
situation concerning the burial of nuclear waste in that region
and that is why it is necessary to keep one's eye constantly on
her, that is, Russia. And it would be better if this eye were
armed with all types of reconnaissance surveillance devices or,
to express it more correctly, monitoring devices.
Problems of ecology have become for some people, not only in the
West but in Russia, too, a unique eccentricity. For some reason,
a firm conviction has developed that the entire world is anxious
about the cleanliness of the Russian environment, whereas
Russians themselves, in the best case, regard it indifferently.
And if one tries to get trustworthy information, then one
immediately encounters the "iron curtain" and vigilant agents of
the Federal Security Service [FSB].
The scandalous process around the case of Capt 1st Class
[Aleksandr] Nikitin serves as proof of this. As his service
career waned, he became so "Green" that he offered to give (or
perhaps sell) to the ecological organization Bellona secrets on
all buried nuclear waste from spent reactors of the Soviet
nuclear-powered fleet. This was done with much pomp, as if only
Nikitin knew all the "terrible" secrets, revealed them and
suffered because of them.
In fact, Russia has been scrupulously monitoring its own nuclear
waste repositories for six years now. And this work has been
going on within the framework of a large international project!
The most unique and detailed computerized database has been
compiled on the dumping of radioactive waste in the sea for the
entire period of the Soviet/Russian navy's existence. Moreover,
in the process of the work a discovery was made, one could call
it sensational, albeit with a touch of scandal.
From the history of the problem
The problem of disposing of nuclear waste from ships with
nuclear-powered units and also damaged reactors arose in the USSR
at the moment of the birth of a nuclear-powered fleet, some 40
years ago (the first Soviet nuclear-powered submarine was
launched in 1957 and was commissioned in 1959).
The mass arrival of the first nuclear-powered submarines in the
navy began in the 1960s. At the same time, the first series of
accidents took place, in the majority of cases associated with
loss of coolant, over-heating and sintering of nuclear fuel.
Sometimes this led to radiation discharges, sometimes not. But
afterwards the nuclear reactors were no longer fit for
reconditioning. The mechanisms and power-unit systems contained
built-up radiation and as a rule were severely contaminated with
radionuclides and thus had to be buried somewhere.
Secluded bays on the eastern shore of Novaya Zemlya were selected
as the place for nuclear burials. The island itself was a nuclear
test range and its water expanses were closed to foreign
navigation. In addition, the selected bays were protected from
storm waves and had weak underwater currents. Depths exceeded 30
metres, which excluded the possibility of the dangerous objects
being harmed by drifting ice.
As containers (unique sarcophaguses) for the damaged reactors and
solid radioactive waste, the hulls of the submarines themselves
were used. These were manufactured from particularly strong steel
and are able to remain completely sealed for hundreds of years.
The facts of the burials were thoroughly documented, but alas,
not summarized in a separate file, but were kept individually. In
addition, it was completely natural that these documents should
be secret. Thus, no-one had a general picture of the nuclear
cemetery in the Kara Sea. In this sense, public concern was
completely understandable and justified.
The first systematic attempt to analyse the situation with the
waste was undertaken in the very beginning of the 1990s by a
governmental commission specially appointed by the president and
led by the well-known ecologist, Aleksey Yablokov. The commission
managed to overcome numerous bureaucratic obstacles and collected
as much information as was accessible at the time. Based on it
the "White Book" came out in 1993; however, it was prepared in a
compressed period of time and was marred with a number of
inaccuracies and objectively required augmentation and refining.
Lazurit's deep-water feat
The loss of the nuclear-powered submarine Komsomolets and now the
submarine cruiser Kursk, brought worldwide, although somewhat
dismal, fame to the Rubin Central Design Bureau in St Petersburg,
where these submarines were designed. Meanwhile, two other design
bureaux remained in the USSR and Russia at which nuclear-powered
submarines were also designed - St Petersburg's Malakhit and
Nizhniy Novgorod's Lazurit. As experience has shown, the
submarines of these design bureaux were and still are
distinguished by their very high reliability and they often
exceed American submarines in their combat characteristics.
In addition, it is essential to add that at Lazurit back in
Soviet times, along with nuclear-powered strike submarines, they
began to design the world's first rescue submarines, the Lenoks.
These were built in Komsomolsk-na-Amur.
Unfortunately, the last Lenok which was fully repairable and
ready for deep-water modernization had been quietly towed to
China, having been sold for scrap metal. This occurred by a
tragic coincidence of events on... [newspaper's ellipsis] 12
August of last year, on the day when the Kursk was sinking in the
Barents Sea. And in fact, only the Lenok was ideally suited for
conducting an effective rescue operation in the situation in
which the Kursk ended up.
Nizhniy Novogord has not abandoned its work on means of rescue.
Considering the latest catastrophes at sea and the prospects for
intensified work on exploiting petroleum and natural gas deposits
on the Arctic shelf, Lazurit proposed a project for a
fundamentally new universal rescue ship. Without doubt, the given
project should receive state support. Russia simply cannot afford
to repeat the tragic mistake of a careless attitude towards
rescue ships.
However, there was a period when it was necessary to save the
unique design bureau itself, which was on the verge of being left
to the mercy of fate. But, by definition, the collective headed
by the first Hero of Russia in the shipbuilding industry, Nikolay
Kvasha, could in no way, apparently, "go to the bottom". This
collective learned to bring submarines to the surface in any
situation. In addition, it was Lazurit that began to shovel
through the nuclear rubbish accumulating in the fleet since the
beginning of the 1960s.
In 1992 in accordance with an international agreement between
Russia, the EU, the USA and Japan, the International Science and
Technology Centre was formed. One of the priority directions of
this international organization's work was to solve problems
connected with the ecological legacy of the Cold War. Experts of
the European Commission immediately valued the unique
possibilities of the centre's Project No 101 announced by Lazurit
on the collection and systematization of trustworthy information
on the real influence of radioactive waste from the activities of
the nuclear fleet on the actual and potential radio-ecological
situation in the seas washing Russia's territory. The European
Union took responsibility for the basic share of the project's
financing, the execution of which, naturally, was assigned to the
Nizhniy Novgorod design bureau. The work began in 1995.
First of all, Lazurit resolved all problems with the, so to
speak, competent organs. The FSB held the importance of the
assigned task in complete understanding and raised no obstacles,
and in fact rendered assistance in overcoming all difficult
spots. Thus, the Nikitin pattern was excluded from the beginning.
Included in the comprehensive investigation of the problem were
145 specialists from such solid centres as, for example, the
Kurchatov Institute Russian Scientific Centre; the Tayfun
scientific-production association; all Ministry of Atomic Energy
design bureaux which created the nuclear reactor designs for
submarines and surface ships; Murmansk's Atomflot; the navy's
medical service; and a number of other organizations. Experts and
consultants from the European Commission's Joint Research Centre
(Italy) and the national nuclear centres of France and Great
Britain were also drawn in. The leader of this highly competent
collective and project, unusual for the creators of
nuclear-powered combat ships, was the greatest specialist in the
field of nuclear-powered shipbuilding, Stanislav Lavkovskiy. For
six years colossal and genuinely investigative research
was conducted. Data on the burials through the whole history of
the Soviet (Russian) nuclear fleet was gathered one grain at a
time; mathematical models were worked out predicting scenarios
for all possible breaches of containers and escape of
radionuclides into the surrounding environment; and risk
estimates were drawn up.
As of summer 2001, the database on objects with radionuclides
contained information on 185 ships and vessels with nuclear-power
units; 44 equipment-servicing ships; and 355 containers holding
33,000 units of equipment and structures and other radioactive
contaminated objects.
When the Russian Federation Ministry of Atomic Energy became
acquainted with this database and examined it for completeness
and accuracy, a decision was made immediately to use it in
preparing the new ecological "White Book 2000".
Lazurit's service was not only in that it managed to bring
together and declassify all these individual and secret reports,
but the creators of nuclear-powered submarines dug up secrets,
the existence of which no-one had suspected.
The secret trail of the icebreaker Lenin
The nuclear-powered icebreaker Lenin had three nuclear reactors.
In 1965 one of them overheated. Although there was no explosion,
the reactor went out of service and was not restorable. A
decision was made to cut out the entire reactor compartment and
bury it - the compartment and the shielding assembly (the
radioactive insides of the reactor) separately.
A container was prepared in the form of a special barge weighing
350 tonnes. They welded the container with the shielding assembly
containing nuclear fuel in it and began to tow it to Novaya
Zemlya. All this happened in the autumn of 1967. According to the
official report in September the barge was sunk to the prescribed
depth in Tsivolka Zaliv. If everything had happened as it was
recorded in the official document, there would be no occasion for
alarm.
After a year of the first Russian-Norwegian expeditions to the
sites of the nuclear-powered submarine burials, the huge barge
could not be detected. At the same time many small sarcophaguses
were lying where they were supposed to be lying in accordance
with the old report. And no alien from a different planet stole a
container weighing 350 tonnes! Lazurit conducted its own
investigation and the secret of the disappearance of the most
dangerous nuclear burial in the Kara Sea was revealed.
It turned out that the report was falsified. It was established
that the beginning of the towing dragged on right up until
October, a time of prolonged storms. Most likely, a critical
situation developed and it was decided on the tugboat that it was
better to cut the rope than to drown together with the barge.
This happened not in September, but on 1 November 1967.
Nevertheless, the official report indicated the coordinates of
Tsivolka Zaliv, ideally suitable for dumping a container and
where it was supposed to be resting in peace and also a September
date, when the disposal operation was to have occurred based on
the schedule. An unusual conspiracy of silence reigned for 10
years.
However, there was one detail that only the Lazurit specialists
knew. A representative of the navy's medical service was required
to be present during such operations to certify the final death
of the "nuclear genie". And he had the indisputable right to his
own signature. In that official report of long ago, the military
doctor did not go against his conscience, but indicated the exact
date that the cables were cut and the exact coordinates of the
sinking of the barge with the highly radioactive waste.
The place for the "funeral" was more than unfortunate! The barge
could have ended up in the coastal zone of the open sea and not
in the gulf, but in a zone of the strongest storm waves and sea
currents and in addition, in shallow water. And this means it
could be damaged from collisions with drifting ice or from moving
across the rocky bottom. Considering that this damaged assembly
alone contained around 60 per cent of the total radioactivity of
all (!) the waste dumped in the Kara Sea, the situation is by no
means a joke, but it is also not at a dead end.
The European Union and Norway, which today are financing the
International Science and Technology Centre's Project No 101,
showed great interest in the problem which arose. Considering
this, Lazurit and Tayfun association specialists from Obninsk
suggested to them that the work be expanded within the framework
of the international project and a new expedition be organized
the next year to the place where the coordinates established the
sinking of the barge in order, first, to find the ill-fated
sarcophagus and secondly, to study thoroughly the condition of
the container. And then work out the means for protecting the
ocean expanses from a very real threat of radioactive pollution.
Thus, very important work is being done with no false secrecy or
peering into keyholes. One would like to believe that the
International Science and Technology Centre will not lose
interest in this project which is unique in its openness and
complexity and that the Russian Federation government will render
constructive assistance in solving the given ecological problem
with its many unknowns. Monitoring in the interests of not only
Russia, but the entire community of northern nations, is by no
means unacceptable and continues honestly and professionally.
Source: Rossiyskaya Gazeta, Moscow, in Russian 29 Aug 01 /BBC
Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
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33 Bulgaria: Nuclear plant negotiates transportation of spent
fuel to Russia
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 1, 2001
Text of report in English by Bulgarian news agency BTA web site
Kozloduy (on the Danube), 31 August: The Kozloduy nuclear power
plant is negotiating with companies that may ensure electricity
exports as a way of covering the costs of transportation of spent
nuclear fuel to Russia, the plant's business manager, Tencho
Popov, said.
The proceeds from the export of a mere 1,000 kWh of electricity
can cover the transportation and processing of reactor fuel,
Popov said. At present, the plant utilizes less than 60 per cent
of its capacity and generates 18,000 million kWh of electricity a
year. If it operates at full capacity, the plant can generate
22,000 million kWh, Executive Director Yordan Yordanov said.
By 2003 the plant will have filled up all spent fuel storage
areas. "This problem is becoming a major cause for concern to us.
Unless it is solved by 2003, we will shut down the plant
ourselves," Yordanov said.
The management wants to export the entire amount of radioactive
material, and negotiations are under way with Russia, which
manufactures the fuel.
"We are negotiating with both BNSL and Kozhema. The Russians have
offered us very attractive terms of spent fuel storage and
processing. We believe it should go where it came from in the
first place - Russia," Yordanov said. The option of temporary
storing reactor fuel on the plant's site will prove commercially
unviable in the long run because the place will become highly
radioactive and dangerous, representatives of the nuclear power
plant said. A decision on spent fuel transportation will be made
at a 12 September meeting of the consultative council on the fuel
cycle.
A decision on the early decommissioning of Units 3 and 4 may
create prerequisites for a rise in electricity prices because in
2005-2006 the plant will start servicing a loan for the upgrading
of Units 5 and 6. The decommissioning of the first two units
starts on 31 December 2002, representatives of the plant said.
Source: BTA web site, Sofia, in English 31 Aug 01 /BBC
Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
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NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARTICLES
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1 Nuclear science flourishing in Kazakhstan
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 2, 2001
As Kazakhstan marks the 10th anniversary of the closure of the
Semipalatinsk nuclear test range, the nuclear industry is
flourishing. A nuclear reactor on the former test range is ready
to carry out research to create nuclear rocket engines for the
Mars space programmes, and talks are under way with Russia and
the USA, Kazakh Khabar TV reported. Meanwhile, a reactor complex
at the site is involved in research for the International
Thermonuclear Energy Reactor project. An excerpt of the report,
broadcast on 30 August, follows. Subheads have been inserted
editorially.
Research is being carried out on the Semipalatinsk test range [in
East Kazakhstan Region, closed 10 years ago and now the National
Nuclear Centre], where a solid scientific base remained after the
stopping of nuclear tests. Grigoriy Bedenko reports.
[Grigoriy Bedenko, standing near equipment, captioned as a
journalist] This complicated equipment is called a
graphite-impulse-type reactor or, in short, a GR. At the moment,
it has no equals in the world. According to some data, the US
(?TRIS) unit with identical parameters has not been operating for
a long time.
Quite fantastic research on the creation of a nuclear rocket
engine used to be carried out by the GR reactor 30-40 years ago.
The most amazing is that it can be continued in the near future.
Scholars say that a piloted flight to Mars will become real in
2017.
[Passage omitted: research belongs to future science; video shows
people testing equipment]
The GR reactor complex is situated on platform No 100 of the
Semipalatinsk test range. There are legends about the unit among
scholars. The GR reactor was built in 1961. Initially, the topic
of research was limited by fast-flowing physical processes. At
that time, the world's science was trying to understand what
nuclear energy proper was. The GR is said to have been built to
explode. They tried to simulate an uncontrolled nuclear reaction,
which resulted in the [Ukrainian] Chernobyl catastrophe a quarter
of a century later, on this.
Mars Space Programme
However, the reactor unexpectedly demonstrated unique
characteristics. It displayed an instinct of self-preservation
like a living being.
[Valeriy Gaydarchuk, captioned as deputy chief engineer of the
GR] Energy release occurs in the active zone of the reactor,
which results in its preheating. The rate of the reactor's
capacity, which is building up, falls with the increase in
temperature and then the capacity begins to decrease at a certain
temperature and reaches zero.
[Bedenko] The GR's unique characteristics assisted in having it
included in a nuclear rocket engine creation programme. It was
the height of the space race between the Soviet Union and the
USA. Having won the moon, mankind seriously thought of piloted
flights to Mars. An engine was needed to this end that could
release a large quantity of energy at minimum fuel consumption.
As a matter of fact, a prototype of such an engine had been
built. The fuel, nitrogen and hydrogen, was heated up to a
temperature of 3,000 degrees [C] with the help of nuclear
reaction and created jet thrust. Soviet scholars achieved better
results with the GR than Americans. The subject was closed in the
1980s, but now it is topical again.
[Gaydarchuk] In principle, at present the GR reactor allows
research into the building of nuclear rocket engines under the
Mars space programmes to continue. The reactor is ready for the
continuation of this work; talks are being held between US,
Russian and Kazakh scientists to conduct demonstration tests at
the GR reactor to confirm results received earlier.
[Bedenko] The GR reactor is currently providing for the safety of
nuclear power engineering. Japanese firms have been seriously
interested in its unique characteristics. The first, oldest
nuclear unit in Kazakhstan will serve for the creation of
reactors of a new generation.
Thermonuclear Reactor
Another more impressive construction of the Semipalatinsk test
range is the Baykal-1 reactor complex. An IVG-1M unit, a research
high-temperature gas-cooled reactor [the IVG-1M is normally a
water-cooled reactor], is situated underground at a depth of 10
m. The construction is so unique that it has an association with
the Hollywood blockbuster.
One understands here how large-scale Soviet scientific programmes
were. The IVG-1M was commissioned in 1975 and nuclear rocket
engine elements were tested there until 1990. Some records were
set: the highest temperature and the highest energy release
level.
Research is being held at the unit as part of the ITER programme
on the creation of the first thermonuclear energy reactor.
[Passage omitted: Vyacheslav Ganzha, engineer, says design work
being completed; then construction and commissioning of the
reactor]
[Vyacheslav Ganzha, captioned as engineer of the Baykal-1 reactor
complex] The role of our reactor in the programme is testing and
researching construction materials of the future thermonuclear
reactor. Of course, that will help to choose these materials in
future. That is to say, Kazakhstan plays a sufficiently notable
role.
[Bedenko] It is not nucleus decomposition but its synthesis which
results in energy release in the thermonuclear reactor. The
isotope of hydrogen, D3 [deuterium 3], which can be received from
ordinary water, serves as fuel for it. The thermonuclear reactor
is secure, unlike the nuclear one.
Scholars say that this is the future of power engineering when
reserves of uranium and hydrocarbon run low. The ITER programme,
which involves the USA, Russia, Japan and the European Union, is
very expensive. One state cannot individually resolve the issue.
It is pleasant to realize that Kazakhstan has managed to preserve
the most advanced science. [Video shows people in white overalls
working at a research workshop in the town of Kurchatov, people
testing equipment, parts of the reactor; the Baykal-1 reactor
complex, people in white overalls working the complex command
point, a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor, parts of the
gas-cooled reactor; a man implementing an experiment using a
remote conrol device]
Source: Khabar TV, Almaty, in Russian 1400 gmt 30 Aug 01 /BBC
Monitoring/ © BBC.
World Reporter All Material Subject to Copyright
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2 International Atomic Energy Agency official unlikely to visit
North Korea soon
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 4, 2001
Text of report in English by South Korean news agency Yonhap
Seoul, 4 September: A visit to Pyongyang by Director of the
International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) Safeguards
Department, Olli Heinonen, is unlikely to take place for the time
being as he failed to receive an invitation from the North.
His visit was originally scheduled for late August to monitor the
North's freeze of its nuclear facilities.
"Heinonen was planning to visit North Korea before the IAEA
directors meeting in Vienna in mid-September to check if the
country is carrying out the required nuclear safety measures,"
IAEA Chief Spokesperson David Kyd said in an e-mail reply to
questions from Yonhap News Agency. "But the visit is unlikely to
come off in the near future as he has yet to receive any
invitation from the North."
The IAEA director's planned visit was of particular note as it
was to come ahead of the Vienna meeting and the 17th
working-level talks between officials from North Korea and the
IAEA. The United States has also demanded the communist state's
"verification" of its nuclear development programmes.
Source: Yonhap news agency, Seoul, in English 0543 gmt 4 Sep 01
/BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
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3 Pakistan's Restraint
SEP 03, 2001
Pakistan's Restraint
o the Editor:
Re "India and the Bomb" (editorial, Aug. 28):
You stress nuclear restraint in South Asia, but end up advocating
the same double standard that is mainly responsible for the
failure of all nonproliferation efforts in the region. While you
urge American "appeals" to India to restrain its nuclear weapons
program, you advise Congress to continue nuclear sanctions on
Pakistan, even though you acknowledge that it was India's nuclear
tests in 1998 that forced Pakistan to respond. Selective policing
of the nonproliferation regime is the problem, not the solution.
The question of nuclear sanctions on Pakistan should not be
confused with other issues. President Pervez Musharraf has
announced a detailed road map for the restoration of democracy by
October 2002. Pakistan's cooperation with international
counterterrorism efforts is well known. Pakistan continues
forcefully to advocate nuclear restraint so that South Asia can
avoid a destructive arms race and our resources can be spent on
urgent economic and social objectives.
MALEEHA LODHI
Ambassador of Pakistan
Washington, Aug. 28, 2001
Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
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4 Castro recalls apartheid South Africa's nuclear capability
during Angola war
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 1, 2001
Durban, 1 September: The Cuban government knew during the Angolan
conflict about apartheid South Africa's nuclear capability, and
took steps to protect its troops there, Cuban President Fidel
Castro said on Saturday [1 September].
In a marathon address at the closing ceremony of the NGO forum on
racism in Durban, he said Cuban troops fighting on the Angolan
side had adopted special tactics and deployed a thousand
anti-aircraft units in a bid to reduce the effect of a nuclear
strike.
"While we were fighting close to the Namibian border where there
was the possibility of great battles to be fought in that area,
the forces of the apartheid regime had seven nuclear warheads,
and Europe was aware of that," he said.
He said the technology for the devices had been supplied by
Israel, which in turn had had aid from some European countries in
developing its own programme. Although there had been reports
that South Africa had the bomb, this was admitted only long after
the end of the Angolan conflict, by then-president FW de Klerk.
He announced in 1993 that South Africa had made six warheads and
that all had been dismantled. Castro, who spoke for an hour and a
half while Deputy President Jacob Zuma waited patiently on the
dias behind him for his turn, was greeted by a sea of Cuban paper
flags, and shouts of "Cuba, Cuba" from the several thousand NGO
delegates in his audience.
He said the forum was a "symbol of the future", and that he
realized people were trying to build a new world, in which
justice prevailed. "We should be hopeful, that is how we conceive
the world of tomorrow, that is how we conceive the United Nations
of tomorrow," he said. "There are many obstacles to overcome but
we are hopeful that a new United Nations system is emerging,
really new, without the privileges of the veto."
He was referring to the power of veto enjoyed by major powers in
the UN security council...
The closing ceremony, which began late and was still continuing
as night fell, was due to be followed by a delayed plenary to
adopt a final declaration and plan of action. The adoption, which
was to have happened on Saturday morning, was postponed because
of problems in translating and duplicating draft documents.
Source: SAPA news agency web site, Johannesburg, in English
1705 gmt 1 Sep 01
/BBC Monitoring/ © BBC.
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5 'Waging Modern War'
September 2, 2001
FIRST CHAPTER
'Waging Modern War'
By WESLEY K. CLARK
'Waging Modern War': A Defeated Victor Reflects on Kosovo
(September 2, 2001)
I entered military service during the Cold War. Fortunately, we
never had to fight the war in Europe that NATO was formed to
deter. Nevertheless, we saw a continuing evolution in the conduct
of war. Modern war, as defined here, emerged as a function of
history and culture, as a result of NATO, the media, and
technology. Local factors, such as the environment or the
particular characteristics of the enemy forces, had a significant
impact as well. From the Korean War of 1950-53, through the
American war in Vietnam, and into the United Kingdom's 1982
campaign in the Falklands, the U.S. 1989 intervention in Panama,
and the 1991 Gulf War, and into Kosovo in 1999, the divergence
from the World War II model of warfare has grown more and more
pronounced. The evolution hasn't been linear or particularly well
understood, even within the armed forces in most Western
countries—but it's there.
The divergence began with the Soviet Union's acquisition of
nuclear weapons. After the wholesale tragedy of World War II and
the advent of the nuclear age, it soon was obvious that many
conflicts could not be pushed to "unconditional surrender." It
was too risky, or too expensive, or too much in conflict with
other goals and priorities. Lesser objectives usually had to
suffice. When contemplating conflict with the Soviet Union, it
became axiomatic in the West, as the Soviet Union acquired
greater numbers of nuclear weapons, that nuclear war wasn't
winnable in the usual sense; the consequences of widespread use
of nuclear weapons by both sides would simply be too destructive.
The point was to deter it. The absence of war was the victory;
because if you fought, you couldn't win. If fighting did begin,
the idea was to defend as long as possible using conventional
weapons without resorting to the use of nuclear weapons. Then, if
conventional defense wasn't succeeding, use nuclear weapons in
some limited way and hope the other side would see the results as
so terrible that the conflict could be terminated. You would have
to convince the other side that if the aggression wasn't called
off, we would use all of the nuclear weaponry in our arsenal. To
put it another way, crossing the threshold to use force wasn't
necessarily a decision for all-out war. Hearkening back to World
War II and the mutual decision among the major belligerents not
to use chemical weapons in Europe, this theory rested on the
belief that if the belligerents were rational, both sides would
see that that it was in their best interests to limit a war once
it had begun.
This strategy in NATO was known as Flexible Response. Defend
with conventional weapons for as long as possible, then use
nuclear weapons selectively, keeping full-fledged nuclear strikes
in reserve. Naturally, the strategy had to be trained and
rehearsed. In its nuclear exercises, NATO had established
procedures for political decisionmaking and ordering the use of
nuclear weapons, and these were extensively practiced. The
procedures were immaculate: clear, carefully controlled, double
checked, and carefully secured. Entire communications systems
were constructed to meet the needs of "nuclear release." NATO was
defensive. It didn't seek victory, it sought "conflict
termination."
As a major at Supreme Headquarters, Allied Powers Europe
(SHAPE) in 1978-79, I watched NATO go through training and
exercises for this strategy. Observing the heavy emphasis on the
decisionmaking and procedures for the first nuclear releases, I
was one of many who sensed that our approach was incomplete. We
never seemed to work our way through what happened after the
first nuclear release. Disturbingly, during this period and into
the 1980s, the evidence began to accumulate that the Soviets
didn't always have the same view, but rather might believe that
with adequate preparations and stout, integrated air and missile
defenses around Moscow, the center of their military-industrial
complex, nuclear war might be survivable and for the best
prepared, "relatively" won.
We recognized a growing asymmetry in the Western and Soviet
view of the problem, but NATO stuck with its strategy. There was
another strand of thought that had crept into the thinking of
some of the European members of NATO, from work done in the
United States in game theory. This work aimed to take the
influence of the military beyond "deterrence"—causing someone to
refrain from doing something by threat of punishment or threat of
taking away his means to act—and into something called
"compellence," which was to cause someone to act in a certain
way. It was a peculiar, or perhaps more generalized form of
limited war, a conflict not necessarily fought for territory or
to turn back aggression but perhaps for other purposes. In
military terms compellence seemed to translate into a certain
implicit or explicit bargaining through the graduated use of
force, inflicting ever increasing punishment to convince an
opponent to change his behavior. It was to be applicable against
the smaller, nonnuclear states.
Many of us in the United States and the Armed Forces had seen
early on the fallacies of gradualism. It was, after all, the
thinking that lay behind the early, unsuccessful years of the
deepening American involvement in the Vietnam War. My personal
concerns stemmed from an analysis of the 1965-68 air campaign in
Vietnam known as Rolling Thunder. Writing a thesis for a master's
degree in military art and science as a captain and student at
the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, I reviewed as
much as I could find about Vietnam, reread the Pentagon Papers,
and researched the problem of contingency operations—operations
in unanticipated areas that had political aims less sweeping than
unconditional surrender.
It was clear that the U.S. effort to halt North Vietnamese
support of the fighting in South Vietnam by "signalling" U.S.
resolve through carefully constrained, politically designed
bombing, which avoided seeking decisive military impact, had been
a failure. The question was, why? The answer seemed to have to do
with the pace and intensity of the campaign, in relation to North
Vietnamese willpower and determination, and North Vietnam's
ability to build up resistance to the strikes and repair the
damage even as it was being inflicted. To successfully "compel,"
I realized, the force applied must be much greater than we had
been willing to commit at the time, must be intensified more
rapidly, and must be directed at achieving significant military
ends. Only when the targeted state realizes that its military
efforts cannot succeed will it be "compelled" to consider
alternatives.
But apparently this was quite difficult, as I reflected on
such operations, because in modern democracies, the political
leaders were usually too hesitant, imposing tough constraints on
military actions, and military leaders were not bold enough in
pushing for the real military muscle required to achieve
significant military objectives. The results, I thought, were
extended campaigns that could leave democratic governments
vulnerable to their own public opinion. Forbearance in the
strikes could be misinterpreted at home or abroad as irresolution
or incompetence. As mistakes and losses accumulated, the policy
would appear incompetent in application and foolish in design.
Campaigns like this were therefore subject to domestic political
defeat. And that was part of what happened to the United States
in Vietnam. Once fighting had begun, you had to escalate rapidly
and achieve "escalation dominance" over an adversary, if you were
to succeed. And you had to go after meaningful military
objectives.
I came out of the study convinced that the United States
would again find itself engaged in problems of not only
deterrence but also "compellence." Little did I suspect that I
would be in the middle of the action as Supreme Allied Commander,
Europe, when it occurred.
I had my first chance to weigh in with my concerns about
gradualism when I was a lieutenant colonel. One afternoon in late
May 1983, I sat in a basement office of the Pentagon with
Brigadier General Colin Powell as we put the finishing touches on
a transition plan for the incoming Chief of Staff of the Army,
General John Wickham. Powell was a rising star, even then, a man
who had commanded a brigade in General Wickham's division in the
mid-seventies and was considered one of the best among his
contemporaries. He had been put in charge of the project. The
papers had been prepared, addressing such topics as personnel,
relations with Congress, force structure, and so on. The group of
fourteen officers who had worked the report had broken up. But as
we put the papers together in a substantial volume, I noticed
that we seemed to be missing an introduction.
I suggested to Powell that we add a "one-pager" up front,
containing the two or three most important things for the new
Chief to consider, and he agreed. Emboldened, I suggested a line
of argument: "Isn't the most important thing never to commit U.S.
troops again unless we're going in to win? No more gradualism and
holding back like in Vietnam, but go in with overwhelming force?"
Again, Powell agreed, and we put it in the introduction. This
argument captured what so many of us felt after Vietnam. Perhaps
this idea made it into U.S. military action, when we intervened
with overwhelming forces in Grenada in 1983. Certainly the work
General Powell did leading up to the Gulf War and the Powell
Doctrine of decisive force were a wholehearted refutation of the
failed gradualism of Vietnam.
Unfortunately, the idea of decisive force never quite made it
into NATO thinking. It seemed incompatible with nuclear
realities, and perhaps the limitations of the armed forces of our
European allies. And, if not well understood, it could seem to be
a kind of naïve throwback, to an earlier, simpler era of warfare
that saw a relatively clear separation between the political and
the military: the fighting started when the talking ended, it
seemed, and the talking would resume when the fighting stopped.
This was the kind of misinterpretation that American military
students and some of their leaders could hang onto, though,
because it seemed to reflect our American military
traditions—that when the war begins the civilian leadership will
turn us loose to win it, applying all the skills and judgment of
our many years of accumulated professional military experience.
In fact, that was a misinterpretation: the doctrine of decisive
force was not incompatible with continued diplomacy, explicit or
implicit. On the contrary, decisive force—rather than
gradualism—was precisely what was required to make "compellence"
a sure success, along with the diplomacy to produce the "way out"
for the loser.
One factor that did make its way into the diplomatic and
military dialogue within the Alliance was the century-long trend
to establish legal and diplomatic barriers against the outbreak
of war, and then to limit war's destructiveness. Extraordinary
institutions were established to smooth the flow of
communications between governments. The European Union was itself
first and foremost a means of binding nations' interests together
so that they would never again want to go to war against each
other. For states outside the EU, various legal and political
confidence-building measures were put in place, intrusive
measures that made it awkward and difficult for nations to take
the opening moves of conflict. Building on precedents set at the
Nuremberg War Crimes Trials of 1946, the prosecution of war
crimes became a fact, in several different venues, and the
standards of permissible military actions—the so-called accidents
of war—were tightened. The use of military force was increasingly
constrained. The Allies' hideous firebombing of Dresden, which
reduced the city to ashes and rubble in February 1945, would
never recur.
Hand-in-hand with the growing effort to restrict, hobble, and
outlaw war-making was a revolution in communications. American
and European leaders were acutely sensitive to the vast change in
the flow of information. In Vietnam the battlefield was isolated
in space and time from the policymakers at home. Instructions and
guidance from Washington was transmitted electronically, of
course, but in what we would consider today very small "pipes."
Military communications thirty years ago flowed in organized
channels, controlled and monitored by the military itself. The TV
reports and press copy that came out of Vietnam were also delayed
for hours or days. It took years for the media to build the
reporting networks and data flow to bring battlefield events in
Vietnam out to the public.
In the 1990s, all of the information age technologies were
available—satellite transmission of TV imagery, fax, the
Internet, a plethora of long-distance phone lines, and cellular
telephones.
The new technologies impacted powerfully at the political
levels. The instantaneous flow of news and especially imagery
could overwhelm the ability of governments to explain,
investigate, coordinate, and confirm. We called it the "CNN
factor," and people began to speak jokingly of the need to follow
the itinerary of CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour, whose
stunning on-the-scene visuals and reporting could make a distant
crisis an instant domestic political concern. It was clear that
the new technologies could put unrelenting heavy pressure on
policymakers at all levels from the very beginning of any
operation.
New technologies also changed warfare for the military. The
advent of twenty-four hour news coverage and satellite relays for
TV meant that the world would certainly be present on every
battlefield where Western forces were engaged. During the U.S.
operation against Manuel Noriega in Panama in 1989, the entire
focus of attention for several hours was the action by U.S.
forces to rescue a civilian aircrew and others trapped in a
hotel. Then the whole world heard the daily doses of
psychological warfare as Noriega attempted to take refuge inside
the Papal Nuncio's residence and was bombarded out with
unrelenting rock music. The bright lights of the TV crews that
observed the U.S. Marines coming ashore in Somalia in December
1992 were a foretaste of the spotlight under which all NATO
actions against Yugoslavia would be assessed. Future actions
could anticipate even more intrusive information collection and
more intense top-down, media-driven focus. There would be few
spaces in which blunders or mistakes could remain unnoticed.
The technical side of war changed, too. The Gulf War brought
the first public awareness of new precision-guided,
aerial-delivered weapons. Though only a small percentage of the
total weapons used, these systems accounted for a
disproportionate share of the targets destroyed. It was clear
within the U.S. Armed Forces that these were the weapons of the
future. The Navy, which had possessed only a limited
precision-strike capability in 1990, rushed to retrofit the
capabilities of much of its air fleet.
Consider the almost revolutionary impact of precision strike
weapons. These pinpoint bombs and missiles were able to strike
within a few feet, and sometimes a few inches, of the designated
aim point on a target. The first-generation weapons were
optically guided, and they required clear weather conditions for
some portion or perhaps all of their flight. The second
generation used lasers for precision guidance and also required
clear weather. The third generation, available during Operation
Allied Force, relied on the satellite-based Global Positioning
System, enabling the weapons to work at night or in bad weather.
Precision weaponry greatly reduced the number of weapons and
aircraft needed to bring destruction to the battlefield or to a
strategic target array. This meant that the days of the massed
air fleets were over. And this, in turn, meant a more rapid
buildup of forces against a potential adversary, a buildup that
could occur without national mobilization—political, economic, or
military.
Long-range delivery of precision weaponry further extended
the reach and blurred the distinctions between war and peace.
With air-to-air refueling, long-range strike aircraft can strike
across continents and around the world, reducing even further the
preparation time before launching an attack. The U.S. Air Force
reformulated its doctrine, titling it Global Reach-Global Power.
The precision bombs and long-range delivery platforms were
just the tip-end of a system that relied on precision
intelligence, much of it imagery, that enabled the weapons
strikes to be planned, checked, and approved. This system, in
turn, was a result of long-term, sustained investment in
high-speed global communications, imagery, and analysts. And this
technology made more detailed and stringent civilian,
political-level control possible. When political leaders can
receive updates in real time, they can take a more active role in
directing the pace and conduct of military engagements.
Ground forces had a few new weapons also, but they lacked the
combination of reliable striking power, action from a distance,
and controlled risk-taking that airplanes and missiles can
provide. Ground combat retained the possibility of turning nasty
and unpredictable at close quarters; its weapons—tanks, ground
artillery, and infantry fighting vehicles—tend to be more
numerous and less controllable than the air platforms; and the
crews are less experienced, and more vulnerable. No wonder that
political leaders conditioned by the twentieth century's
profligate losses of military manpower tend to opt first to use
airpower.
One consequence of all these factors was that the old
separations in time between the military and the political and
between the echelons of military command were no longer the same.
Political leaders don't give orders and wait days and weeks for
results. What we discovered increasingly was that the political
and strategic levels impinged on the operational and tactical
levels. Or, to put it another way, any event in modern war has
four distinct, unequal components: tactical, operational,
strategic, and political. Sometimes even insignificant tactical
events packed a huge political wallop. This is a key
characteristic of modern war.
These common perceptions of the needless slaughter of
warfare, the impact of NATO and its Cold War doctrine, the
efforts to restrict the violent nature of war and to limit its
effects, and the impact of the new technologies on policymakers
and the military itself converged to shape the operations in
Kosovo. Modern war is the response developed by the democratic
West after a century of trauma in Europe. It is the answer to the
trenches and wholesale slaughter of World War I, and it is the
answer to the devastation of civilian populations by the "total
war" of World War II. But its concept has been incomplete, and
the application of military and diplomatic means to wage it and
win it have not been well understood.
Modern warfare is likely to recur in the years and decades to
come. It remains a fact that military force is the ultimate
arbiter in international affairs. Diplomacy, the process of
international relations, has always required the use of influence
and power, played out to achieve gains or protect against losses.
In classic diplomacy, military power has always been the ultimate
card. But there were also diplomatic suasion, economic relations,
and all other measures of intercourse between nations. Ideally,
diplomacy relies on the positive, as nations cooperate for their
mutual benefit. But sometimes issues arise for which positive
inducements to cooperation don't suffice, or in which positive
inducements are simply inappropriate. International legal
pressures, such as war crimes indictments, have now also begun to
be used to augment diplomatic pressures.
In recent years, economic pressures, such as trade and
investment restrictions, and even cutoffs of trade have become a
staple of international affairs. During the past decade and a
half the United States has become accustomed to using its
economic muscle to sanction nations whose behavior we wish to
change. But the limitations of the economic instruments of power
have become increasingly apparent. In the Balkans, for example,
the economic sanctions implemented against Serbia during the
early 1990s are widely credited with helping Serb President
Slobodan Milosevic strengthen his control, through the
encouragement of black market and smuggling activities. At the
same time these sanctions imposed burdens on neighboring
countries like Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Romania, whose leaders
were unanimous in opposing any extension of the sanctions regime.
The imminent entry of China into the World Trade Organization
will spell the end of trade sanctions as an element of coercion
against that country. Iraqi oil is back on the world market
today, though the proceeds are supposed to be used only in
procuring humanitarian goods. The experience with the total
economic embargo imposed against Haiti was also instructive, in
that after the Aristide government was restored to power in 1994,
economic recovery was made far more difficult by the impact of
the preceding embargo on small and family-owned businesses. While
economic sanctions have certainly produced punishment for the
affected nations, the punishment has often been indiscriminant,
causing economic deprivation and in some cases contributing to
more hunger and poverty without impacting those directing the
offensive policies and practices of the targeted state.
If other means of diplomatic suasion fail, the limited
efficacy of economic sanctions will leave military power as the
last recourse when pressure is required. It may not be used, or
even threatened, overtly. In Korea, for example, U.S. forces have
been stationed in the south for almost fifty years, since the end
of the Korean War, and demonstrate the determination of the
United States to assist the Republic of Korea in the event of
renewed aggression from North Korea. Though the troops have never
been used, there can be no doubt in the minds of potential
adversaries what they represent.
And there are cases where the deployment of military forces
can be threatening but still ambiguous. In March 1996 Chinese
missiles fired toward Taiwan led to American naval deployments
into the immediate area. No specific public threats were made,
and no commitments were given, so far as is known, to Taiwan. But
the deployments nevertheless gave leverage to achieve the desired
Chinese de-escalation of the crisis.
Finally, there are likely to be cases where, for one reason
or another, it will be necessary to make a more open statement of
possible military action. U.S. actions against Iraq are a case in
point, where a continual series of air strikes have been
conducted since the four-day series of strikes against Saddam
Hussein's special weapons programs in December 1998. Here the
United States and its allies have continued to enforce the no-fly
zones in northern and southern Iraq that were established after
the Gulf War. When Iraqi forces challenge the air patrols with
air defense radars or manned aircraft, American and British
aircraft are directed to strike designated targets. These actions
serve as a continuing reminder to Hussein that military power
will be brought against any move to threaten his neighbors, or
the Kurdish tribes in the north that have been protected by the
West since 1991.
In each of these cases, U.S. and Allied military power is in
use, will be, or could be, in order to deter, to dissuade, or to
compel. These, too, are examples of actions that could become
modern war: not a fight for national survival, but carefully
restrained and limited action, widely observed and reported by
the media, and under real-time political control.
When it can, the United States will use military power in
conjunction with its friends and allies. It is a matter of
distributing the risks and burdens of military action, as well as
securing essential access and support. And in the case of allied
action, the United States will have to recognize that its own
national interests will seldom be the same in nature, intensity,
scope, or duration as those of its allies and partners. This is
the unchangeable truth about groupings of states: they have
differing interests. These may derive from different degrees of
exposure to the damages of war, varying economic interests in the
affected region, historical or cultural relationships with
adversaries, or even different national election procedures or
timing. Sustaining a common interest sufficient to support
military power and its use is therefore a matter of high
statesmanship. The United States will be fortunate indeed if it
has alliance political and military "machinery" like NATO to
assist in forging and sustaining shared interests and common
commitments.
NATO has survived numerous crises over its half century of
existence, crises arising from the differing perspectives and
interests of its member nations. There was a crisis in 1956,
caused by the U.S.'s refusal to support British and French
military actions against Egypt, a crises in the early 1960s
associated with the U.S.'s reneging on promises to share nuclear
weapons technology with allies, and a crisis in 1966 when France
withdrew from the NATO military structure. There were
longstanding European questions about whether Washington would
really risk American cities to deter attacks on Western European
cities. There was a perception of neglect as the United States
turned its attention to Vietnam, and another crisis brought on by
the buildup of Soviet theater nuclear forces and NATO's need to
respond in the late 1970s and early 1980s. With the end of the
Cold War and the breakup of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union,
there was concern that NATO would have no purpose, and that the
profound underlying differences between nations on each side of
the Atlantic would overshadow their common interest in security.
Yet, NATO has survived and adapted, binding together member
nations on both sides of the Atlantic through its Charter
document, its consensus-building institutions and procedures, and
the continuing common interests of its members. NATO is a
"consensus engine." It was designed and has evolved to harmonize
varying opinions into a workable, cohesive whole. Economics,
language, culture, and politics create rifts and rivalries from
time to time, but on military matters the Atlantic Alliance has
proved a durable force for teamwork. Leaders and staff from its
nineteen member nations know each other through the frequent—some
say, too frequent—meetings. There are summit meetings for heads
of state, meetings for foreign ministers and defense ministers
twice each year, and a third meeting only for the defense
ministers. The top military leaders in each country, the Chiefs
of Defense, or CHODs, meet separately three times per year and
then accompany their defense ministers to their meetings. And
each meeting has its social event the evening before, with the
transatlantic participants sometimes numbed by jet lag and
looking for the door early.
The mechanics of the Alliance are designed to promote
agreement on essential minimums. NATO is led and represented on
the diplomatic level by the Secretary General, always a European,
normally someone with previous experience as a defense minister
or foreign minister. The military work at the headquarters is led
by the Chairman of the Military Committee, always a European
general who has led his nation's military. This military work is
the essential preliminary in generating agreement. Issues are
identified, parsed out, worked, and resolved at the military
level first in order to facilitate the subsequent political-level
discussions and agreements that then become orders for NATO's
military. The Supreme Allied Commander, Europe—known as the
SACEUR—commands the Alliance's European-based military forces on
land, sea, and air in accordance with approved directions and
restrictions from NATO headquarters. He is always an American,
due to the leading U.S. role in the Alliance and the coupling of
its deterrent mission in Europe to the American strategic
deterrent elsewhere.
NATO operates bilingually, with English and French as its two
languages. But in truth, NATO has its own language of acronyms,
out-of-syntax constructions, and insider code. There is a
subtlety that reflects not only the nuances of complex issues but
also the tortuous process of consensus building. Agreements are
not voted; they are place "under silence." Disagreement is noted
by "breaking silence" on a proposal. The North Atlantic Council
meets in different groupings, "ambassadors only," or "ambassadors
plus four," tailored to promote the most effective exchanges.
Javier Solana, NATO's Secretary General, proved himself to be
a master at using the machinery and language to shape policies
and build consensus. In a rare quiet moment, I once asked the
Secretary General the secret of his success. He reflected
briefly, then said, "Two things. Make no enemies. And ask no
question unless you know what the answer will be and it is the
answer you want."
The complexities of forging common purpose are today
compounded by the emergence of the European Union's efforts to
create a Common Foreign and Security Policy and by the fact that
Russia is no longer perceived as a military threat to Western
Europe or the United States. Many in the United States, over the
past decade, looking at the rapidly growing economic strength of
countries in the Pacific and east Asia, and especially China,
have sought to reduce American foreign policy's long-term
orientation toward Europe. This has added to the stress on
transatlantic relationships and institutions like NATO.
War, of course, is first and foremost a political act. The
U.S. Constitution assigns the power to declare war to the
Congress, while the President serves as the U.S. Commander in
Chief. Other Western nations see the problem similarly. During
World War I, French Premier Georges Clemenceau famously said,
"War is too important to be left to the generals." In fact, this
realization is one of the points of origin for modern war.
Political leaders make the ultimate decisions, decide the key
policies, develop or approve the strategy, and supervise the
execution. Even limited war requires the acceptance of risks and
losses, embarrassment, and potential failure. Warfare disrupts
peacetime patterns of commerce and political discourse and can
consume alternate political goals and efforts. Warfare is thus
one of the supreme tests for political leaders, and for leaders
in democracies, it is something to be avoided if possible.
Each NATO nation has its own system for providing national
guidance on matters affecting its security, including direction
of its armed forces in war. In some parliamentary governments
there are special groupings of ministers. In France the president
had unique responsibilities in foreign affairs. In the United
States, the Armed Forces are directed by the National Command
Authority, consisting of the President and his Secretary of
Defense. But the directives and orders themselves usually emerge
from a system of interagency coordination that brings together
the information, perspectives, and resources of the Department of
State, the intelligence agencies, the Department of Defense, and
sometimes others, under the coordination of the National Security
Council staff. Issues are raised and developed, options
considered, and consensus is formed. In some cases, where
differing agency positions cannot be reconciled or the stakes are
so high, the decisions are pushed upward, for resolution in small
meetings of the cabinet secretaries or in the Oval Office itself.
Of course, differing agency perspectives always remain, to
bedevil policy execution or to resurface when similar issues
arise in the future.
Thus within the U.S. system, military leaders receive their
orders from a clear chain of command, but the orders may be
influenced by a broader set of personalities and agencies. The
military chain of command provides the hierarchy of leaders,
institutions, and communications that actually commands the
forces. Military leaders must give information and advice,
prepare plans as directed, and respond to queries. However, this
exchange of information also goes beyond the strict confines of
the military chain of command. While it may seem desirable in
theory to separate the military decisionmaking from policy
formulation, in practice it is impossible. At the top levels the
generals and admirals stay abreast of the issues and arguments,
anticipating requests for information or orders for action, and
engage in a variety of informal exchanges with members of the
diplomatic community, policymakers in other agencies, and members
of Congress and their staffs. The top leadership therefore not
only carries out the orders it receives, it may heavily influence
their formulation.
Military advice is not without profound professional and
personal implications for the military itself, as well as
civilians. War risks the loss and destruction of carefully honed
armed forces, the disruption of well-laid plans for the future,
and of course, personal embarrassment, failure, defeat, and loss
of life. None knows better than the military leaders themselves
the dangers of war; consequently, they are usually the last to
advocate it.
The difficulties and complexities of modern war can be
measured in part by the difficulties faced by the American
military in coming to grips with Kosovo. The top leaders in the
American Armed Forces were still heavily impacted by their early
experiences in the Vietnam War. We knew about the dangers of
"political micromanagement," when bombing targets were picked by
Lyndon B. Johnson's White House and pilots were restrained from
attacking key enemy airfields and air defense sites. All of us
knew from personal experience the incredible power of the media,
which, at least in Vietnam, turned increasingly adversarial to
the Pentagon and the leadership of the Armed Forces as the long
war continued. And in the Army, it had long been an article of
resolve that there would be "no more Vietnams," wars in which
soldiers carried the weight of the nation's war despite the lack
of public support at home.
Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
*****************************************************************
6 Japan to reconsider A-bomb law
Saturday, September 1, 2001
Korean survivors likely to get medical aid, minister says
SEOUL (Kyodo) Chikara Sakaguchi, minister of health, labor and
welfare, pledged Friday to review a Japanese law following a
demand by Korean survivors of the 1945 atomic bombing of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki that the Japanese government grant them
medical allowances.
"Undoubtedly, the measures taken so far have not been sufficient.
But better late than never, we hope to review it," Sakaguchi was
quoted by Japanese officials as telling Kim Won Gil, South Korean
health and welfare minister, in Seoul.
Sakaguchi also told Kim that he envisions inviting a South Korean
representative to join his ministry's planned panel to study the
review of the Atomic Bomb Victims Relief Law, they said.
Kim welcomed Sakaguchi's remarks, according to the officials.
A number of Korean survivors returned to Korea after the U.S.
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, and
there are currently some 2,200 survivors in South Korea.
Japan has refused to provide medical allowances to survivors of
the atomic bombing who live outside Japan.
In June, however, the Osaka District Court ordered a local
government to pay medical allowances to a Korean survivor who
lives in South Korea. The local government and the Japanese
government appealed the ruling the following month.
Commenting on bilateral relations between Japan and South Korea,
Kim expressed regret that the ties have not been on a "normal
track" because of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visit Aug.
13 to Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo and the ongoing dispute over
Japanese school textbooks, the officials said.
Japan rejected South Korea's demands to make revisions to the
textbooks, which Seoul says gloss over Japan's wartime aggression
in neighboring countries.
Sakaguchi arrived in South Korea on Thursday. He is the first
Japanese Cabinet member to visit Seoul since Koizumi's visit to
the Shinto shrine, where 14 convicted Class A war criminals are
honored. Sakaguchi, a member of the ruling coalition's New
Komeito party, plans to travel to Singapore on Saturday before
returning to Japan on Tuesday.
The Japan Times: Sept. 1, 2001
*****************************************************************
7 Baby bones used in nuclear test study
The West Australian
September 01, 2001
By Norman Aisbett
PATHOLOGISTS collected bones from up to 20,000 bodies of babies
and other Australians for use in a little-known nuclear fallout
study.
Details of the study, which ran from 1957 to 1978, are in a
report being prepared by the Australian Radiation Protection and
Nuclear Safety Agency.
An agency spokesman said the report would be sent soon to Federal
Health Minister Michael Wooldridge.
The agency was bracing for the report's public release, because
there could be an avalanche of calls from people wanting to know
if dead relatives were involved.
A protocol for the handling of inquiries was being developed but
it was a difficult task, given the need to avoid inadvertent
breaches of privacy.
Dr Wooldridge called for the report in June after the Daily Mail
newspaper in London alleged that babies and infants who died in
hospitals throughout the world, including Australia, were used as
human tissue fodder for radiation testing commissioned by the
United States Department of Energy. The bodies were reportedly
sent to the University of Chicago for 15 years from hospitals in
Australia, Britain, Canada, Hong Kong, the US and South America.
The Daily Mail report also prompted Australia's radiation agency
chief executive John Loy to confirm that pathologists in Perth,
Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane had provided bone
samples for the study, but gave no hint of the numbers involved
Dr Loy said that the study ran for 21 years and was launched as
part of a review of safety issues surrounding British atomic
weapons testing in Australia in the 1950s.
The aim was to measure Strontium 90 levels in human bones.
Strontium 90 is the most dangerous element of radioactive weapons
fallout.
Dr Loy said that the bone samples were taken from people up to
the age of 40, including babies - but he gave only a qualified
denial that the bodies of Australian stillborn babies were
transported to the US.
The radiation agency "does not appear" to have any evidence to
support the claim, he said. Another agency spokesman, Brendan
Elliott, has told The West Australian that most bone samples were
probably taken without the knowledge of next of kin, and this
could have legal implications for the Commonwealth. WA health
authorities declined to comment.
© 2000 West Australian Newspapers Limited
*****************************************************************
8 Labor peace at the Flats
Denver Post.com
Monday, September 03, 2001 -
Cleaning up the Rocky Flats atomic bomb factory near Golden
depends on labor-management cooperation. Fortunately, the
contract inked this year by the government contractor,
Kaiser-Hill, and the plant's largest union, United Steelworkers
Local 8031, encourages just that.
The U.S. Department of Energy wants Kaiser-Hill to decommission
Rocky Flats by 2006, a goal that will save Uncle Sam billions of
dollars and make Colorado safer from terrorist attacks and
nuclear accidents. But Kaiser-Hill faced a daunting challenge:
getting employees to work harder so they can lose their jobs.
Moreover, the cleanup process requires a lot of grunt work under
difficult conditions: Draining miles of pipes clogged with toxic
chemicals and radioactive wastes. Scrubbing out glove boxes
containing plutonium scraps that can spontaneously fission if
mishandled. Repacking weapons-grade plutonium in high-tech
containers. Loading tons of nuclear wastes. The workers spend
long hours on their feet, running dangerous machinery and
maneuvering heavy loads of some of the world's most dangerous,
finicky elements.
To stay safe during these physically intensive tasks, workers don
special protective suits, including close-fitting hoods and
respirators. Sometimes, they're assigned to enclosed rooms
jam-packed with barrels of intensely radioactive plutonium;
there, their mandatory garb resembles a spacesuit, complete with
thick oxygen lines that look like spacewalk tethers.
Between the high temperatures inside the protective suits and the
stress of working with radioactive materials, it's no wonder
steelworkers often come off their shifts glistening with sweat.
But most are smiling.
DOE guaranteed Kaiser-Hill large bonuses if deadlines and safety
standards are met. Under the new union contract, Kaiser-Hill
promised to share those rewards with the rank and file - giving
the steelworkers a direct monetary incentive to finish the
mission.
Under the contract's enhanced benefits, t middle-aged workers
(the average Rocky Flats employee is 47) will get full pensions
when they're handed pink slips by 2006. Two-thirds of Rocky
Flats' steelworkers will be eligible for that package. Younger
workers receive beefed-up 401(k)s.
Steelworkers Local 8031 has made itself the kind of
forward-looking union that American labor must be in the 21st
century, one focused on members' safety and long-term interests.
Kaiser-Hill has something to teach American management, too. The
idea that when a company prospers it should share the wealth with
workers who made the success possible is rare in today's
corporate world. But as Rocky Flats' managers discovered, it's
the only way to get a tough job done right.
All contents Copyright 2001 The Denver Post or other copyright
*****************************************************************
9 Y-12, ORNL workers not getting fair shake
KnoxNews: Columnists
Sunday, Sep 2
Which of the government's Oak Ridge nuclear facilities - the K-25
uranium-enrichment complex, Oak Ridge National Laboratory or the
Y-12 nuclear weapons plant - posed the greatest hazard to
workers?
This type of question has floated about for years, drawing debate
and speculation in the Oak Ridge workforce. Interest grew after
the U.S. Department of Energy acknowledged (belatedly) that
workplace exposures caused health problems and after Congress
authorized a compensation program, albeit a limited one, for sick
workers.
The comparative risk of one facility vs. another is not easy to
gauge. Hazards undoubtedly varied according to job title and
location, even within the same plant. Indeed, it probably makes
little sense to compare one plant to another except in broad
overviews.
But here's something truly nonsensical:
Although thousands of former workers at the Oak Ridge nuclear
facilities are eligible for free medical screenings, thousands of
others are not.
For example, DOE has funded a screening program for hourly
workers at the K-25 plant. The DOE has funded a similar program
for former construction workers on the Oak Ridge reservation.
But, for whatever reason, the federal agency has not coughed up
money for a screening program to identify health problems among
thousands of retired laborers at the Y-12 nuclear weapons plant
and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Why?
Well, that's not clear. DOE did not respond to repeated questions
about whether a grant was available to the Atomic Trades and
Labor Council, the umbrella organization that represents union
workers at Y-12 and ORNL.
Some retired blue-collar workers are upset with the ATLC
leadership, pointing out that union leaders at K-25 and the
construction trades went to bat early for their workers and got
help without a hitch.
Carl "Bubba'' Scarbrough, president of the ATLC, said he's doing
everything he can to get the $500,000 needed to start a permanent
center for health evaluations. He said it's critically important
because the medical screening can identify some of the problems
before symptoms take hold and improve the chances of recovery.
"I've got 40 pages of paperwork I've generated,'' Scarbrough said
this week.
The union boss said he has tried to push the proposal before the
DOE officialdom, but he said the contacts keep changing at agency
headquarters in Washington. On the local front, Scarbrough said
he's gotten no help at all from DOE or the National Nuclear
Security Administration, which oversees the Y-12 defense
activities.
"DOE has taken absolutely zero action,'' he said. *
HOT WATER: Some progress has been reported in the evaluation of
water quality at the Oak Ridge K-25 plant, but the issue remains
as contentious and controversial as ever.
Also, the project could be stalled for lack of money. A number of
current and former K-25 employees came forward last year with
evidence that cross-connections in the water pipelines created
the potential for contamination of drinking-water supplies.
A sampling program by DOE contractors found that the plant's
current water system is safe, and the federal agency sanctioned a
project to review the historic water operations at K-25.
The investigation team recently issued a progress report that
confirmed there were problems, including cross-connections with
chemical-laden water systems used for cooling operations or
fire-fighting. But the duration of these events or the health
implications to workers have not been assessed at this point.
Meanwhile, DOE has not committed money beyond the study's second
phase, which is nearing completion, and even if the water probe
continues there will be plenty of challenges.
The Coalition for a Healthy Environment has accused DOE of
covering up information and has chastised federal officials for
not notifying Rust Engineering workers they probably drank
contaminated fire water when working out of trailers at the site.
Several activists are pushing for a criminal investigation and
want to halt DOE's current demolition of buildings at K-25 until
the hazards have been fully evaluated.
Senior Writer Frank Munger covers the Department of Energy for
the News-Sentinel. He can be reached at 865-482-9213 or at
twig1@knoxnews.infi.net. This column is also available on the Web
at www.knoxnews.com/editorsview/munger/
Copyright 2001 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co.
*****************************************************************
10 Publication of Regulatory Guide G-225, Emergency Planning at
Class I Nuclear Facilities and Uranium Mines and Mills
[Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission]
Emergency
Planning at Class I Nuclear Facilities and Uranium Mines and
Mills.
Regulatory Guide G-225 provides guidance for licence applicants
on the development of emergency measures that satisfy the
requirements given in the Nuclear Safety and Control Act and its
regulations. The document describes the elements of emergency
preparedness and response that licence applicants should
typically consider when they are developing plans and programs to
prevent or mitigate the effects of accidental releases. It takes
into account the comments received on the draft version of the
guide that the predecessor to the CNSC, the Atomic Energy Control
Board, issued for public consultation in November 1999.
The guide applies to applicants for a CNSC licence to operate a
Class I nuclear facility, and to applicants for uranium mine and
mills licences.
Regulatory Guide G-225, Emergency Planning at Class I Nuclear
Facilities and Uranium Mines and Millsis available in English
or French on the CNSC website (www.nuclearsafety.gc.ca). A paper
copy of the document in either official language may be ordered
from:
Communications Division Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission P.O.
Box 1046, Station B 280 Slater Street Ottawa, Ontario K1P 5S9
CANADA
Telephone: (613) 995-5894 or 1-800-668-5284 (Canada only) Fax:
(613) 992-2915 E-mail: publications@cnsc-ccsn.gc.ca
© Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission
*****************************************************************
11 For the Nuclear Submarine Kursk, Plans for a Risky Resurrection
SEP 04, 2001
By PATRICK E. TYLER
T. PETERSBURG, Russia — For nearly 400 days since two mysterious
torpedo room explosions ripped open the nuclear submarine Kursk,
causing the deaths of all 118 Russian crewmen, the 505-foot
vessel has been nestling into the sediments on the bottom of the
Barents Sea.
Periodically, Russian warships on guard above the wreck have
thrown live hand grenades into the water, to ward off any prying
foreign submarines that may be interested in scavenging the
Kursk's weapons, codes or electronics.
Now, a fleet of high-tech salvage vessels is taking over from the
warships. If all goes according to plan — and little has so far —
a Dutch lifting barge called the Giant 4, tethered by eight
anchor lines, will raise the Kursk from the seabed later this
month using 26 computer-controlled hydraulic jacks in an
operation that, its designers say, can be accomplished in 12 to
16 hours.
But the raising of the Kursk, one of the largest and most complex
salvages ever attempted, is fraught with dangers. The crews must
avoid disturbing the Kursk's twin nuclear reactors and jostling
its lethal payload of unexploded torpedoes and 22 supersonic
cruise missiles, still snug in their 30-foot launching canisters.
Each carries a warhead packed with nearly 1,000 pounds of high
explosives.
Russian officials say the risks are outweighed by their duty to
the perished crew as well as the Arctic environment. In November,
during the first examination of the interior of the submarine by
Russian divers since the Aug. 12 explosion, 12 bodies were
recovered, but perhaps 100 more remain entangled in the wreckage
of the control room or locked in the rear compartments, where
sailors fled the onrushing sea, then waited in darkness — some
writing farewell notes to loved ones — for the rescue that never
came.
President Vladimir V. Putin, criticized in an emotional encounter
with the families of Kursk crew members for the navy's inability
to stage a rescue, returned to the Kremlin and told Russia's
leading submarine designer, Igor D. Spassky, that the sub had to
be lifted to pay tribute to the crew and to give proper burial to
the bodies that could be found.
"He promised that to the relatives, and our president is from a
category of people who keep their word," Mr. Spassky said in an
interview at the Rubin Design Bureau in St. Petersburg last week.
Looking on is a nervous Europe, where there are always fears of
another Chernobyl-style radiation spill. Big salvage projects can
produce big disasters. In 1974, when the Hughes Glomar Explorer
latched onto a Soviet Golf-class submarine that sank in 17,000
feet of water northwest of Hawaii — part of a secret recovery
scheme conceived by the Central Intelligence Agency and the Navy
— the stresses of the lift broke the submarine apart, sending
large pieces crashing back to the bottom.
The Kursk will be raised from relatively shallow waters, less
than 350 feet, but the Kursk weighs nearly 10 times as much as a
Golf-class submarine. And if Kursk breaks apart and spills the
highly radioactive contents of its reactors in the Barents Sea,
the results will threaten one of the most productive fishing
grounds in the Arctic.
"This is a big, supermodern military object which has 22
supermodern missiles on board with big warhead charges — not
nuclear — but powerful charges, and two reactors, and all this in
the center of an area which is in economic use in shallow
waters," Mr. Spassky said. "I cannot conceive that such an object
could be left on the ocean bottom."
Even recoveries from shallow depths can be tricky. The United
States Navy recovered the submarine Squalus after it went down in
243 feet of water off Portsmouth, N.H., in May 1939, but the
recovery vessels dropped the boat twice before getting it back
into port, where it was renamed the Sailfish and served in World
War II.
"This is the biggest lift ever made from the seabed," points out
Malcolm Dailey, the senior contracts manager with the Dutch heavy
lift and transport company Mammoet who is directing the Kursk
lift. But even so, he seemed to be full of confidence last week
that — weather permitting — it will be done safely.
"Our idea is to peel the Kursk off the bottom," said Mr. Dailey,
49, a Briton who now lives in Houston. "The sub is laying at a
five-degree angle and her bow is stuck into the mud that is the
consistency of chewing gum." In the year since the sinking, the
mud has risen nearly 10 feet around the bow.
Standing on the deck of the Giant 4 the other day as it prepared
to depart Amsterdam for the Arctic waters near Kursk, Mr. Dailey
said that while he worried about radiation accidents and torpedo
and missile explosions during the lifting of the Kursk, his
biggest worry was how to break the suction force of a 17,000-ton
ship stuck in the mud. Explosions are one thing, but "mud is
mud," he said. The slimy bottom sediments may make the hull seem
as if it were glued to the earth.
Moreover, Mammoet must ensure that it does not pull harder than
the hull of the Kursk can withstand. One great unknown is what
hidden structural damage the Kursk suffered along the hull, its
ribs, frames and bulkheads when the second and most devastating
explosion went off with the force of 10,000 pounds of TNT and
produced a shock wave as powerful as an earthquake of 3.5
magnitude.
Much of Mr. Dailey's strategy is focused on the first three to
four hours of the lifting sequence when he will raise only the
tail of the Kursk, then slide a cable underneath the hull that
two auxiliary ships on the surface will pull along the keel
trying to separate the Kursk from the mud.
"This is to create a gap to get water between the submarine and
the soil so she will want to come up and we can minimize the
breakout force," Mr. Dailey said.
This "breakout force" is his nightmare. In the worst case, the
lifting barge would pull with thousands of tons of pressure
against the Kursk only to have it suddenly pop free of the
bottom, surge upward like a yo- yo toward the barge, then fall
back to the bottom, yanking the barge with a tremendous whiplash
that could damage or destroy the lifting equipment. Working with
Mammoet are Smit Tak, a marine subsidiary of Smit International
and Halliburton Subsea, a Norwegian subsidiary of the American
energy and construction giant formerly headed by Vice President
Dick Cheney. Mammoet won the contract on the strength of its
pledge to raise the submarine this year; the company said only
bad weather could excuse failure.
The preparation for raising the Kursk has taken months, and a
complex choreography of engineering tasks must be executed in the
next few weeks, or the threat of Arctic storms will shut down
operations until spring.
"Good weather is a rare thing in this region," said Timur B.
Amirov, the engineer who commissioned the Kursk from the
Severodvinsk shipyard in 1994. Working in double shifts,
Severodvinsk workers this summer built the two submersible
pontoons that will slide under the port and starboard sides of
the Giant 4 after it has lifted the Kursk. The extra flotation
will help with the transport of the Kursk to a drydock at
Roslyakovo 150 miles away.
Russian and European divers, meanwhile, working from mid-July to
the end of August, cut 26 holes in the Kursk's hull to provide
lifting points for the expandable plugs that will be lowered from
the Giant 4 and inserted into the hull.
The engineers had two options to lift the Kursk, cranes or
hydraulic jacks. Mammoet opted for jacks, which can lift a
greater load, with more than two dozen of them spread along the
submarine's hull.
The lifting lines are actually bundles of 54 steel cables
attached to the plugs that, once inserted into the submarine,
will expand hydraulically and wedge themselves under Kursk's ribs
for the lift.
No holes were cut in the Kursk's sixth compartment — where the
twin 190 megawatt reactors sit, still generating a low level of
heat — because the reactor containment vessels are so close to
the hull that the huge lifting plugs could not be inserted
without damaging them.
Each of the 26 lifting units will bear about 750 tons of the
Kursk's weight. Tests conducted at Russia's Krylov Institute in
St. Petersburg demonstrated that each bundle of cables could
actually bear at least 2,000 tons each — nearly triple the load
that should be necessary to do the job — before the testing
device broke.
Before the lift, the most important task is slicing off a 45- to
50-foot section of the Kursk's destroyed bow, where torpedo
fragments and even complete warheads could be hidden in the
debris.
"In the area where the slicing of the compartment will take
place, I can say with confidence there are no torpedoes left,"
said Rear Adm. Mikhail Motsak, chief of staff for the northern
fleet. "But there may be torpedoes in the other corners of the
first compartment, which are littered with metal debris. That is
why we take serious security precautions." No divers will be in
the water during the cutting.
So much of Kursk's bow is destroyed, and so much mud has settled
in the first compartment, that Mammoet's engineers feared it
might break off during the lift, or start shimmying in a way that
would destabilize the lift. The Russian navy plans to raise the
bow section separately next year as part of its investigation
into the explosions.
Still, the cutting could be tricky and already has caused delays.
The cutting tool is actually a huge chain saw of abrasive
cylinders strung on a cable stretched between two suction
moorings and operated remotely by Smit Tak engineers.
The moorings are really just giant pipes that stand on the bottom
and then suck themselves into the seabed mud as water is pumped
out of their interior.
The saw is operated remotely between the moorings in a back-and-
forth motion controlled from the MT Carrier barge that Smit Tak
towed to the Barents Sea. Last month, however, the MT Carrier was
forced to retreat to Kirkenes, Norway, for modifications when
tests showed that the Kursk's hull — a sandwich of high-tensile
steel and sound dampening material — was tearing up the cylinders
on the chain saw, threatening to break the carrying cable. The
solution was to add spacers between the cylinders.
After more tests on the saw, the cutting operation could begin
this week. When the Giant 4 barge arrives from Amsterdam, the
stage will be set for the lift.
A Global Positioning System accurate within a meter will be fixed
on the front and rear of the barge to help the crew keep it
precisely over the Kursk.
As the 26 lifting units are attached to the sub by divers, echo
sounders and radiation monitors will be mounted on the Kursk to
provide a real-time stream of data to the computers aboard the
Mayo, the support ship that will serve as a command center for
the lift.
That's where Mr. Dailey will be, surrounded by a fleet of
civilian support ships and Russian warships charged with
responding to dozens of contingencies that might arise if
something goes wrong.
If Mr. Dailey succeeds in coaxing the Kursk out of the mud,
engineers on the barge will test the load on each of the 26 jacks
to determine the weight of the Kursk minus its bow. They will
also try to locate its center of gravity, a critical calculation
so as to avoiding stresses that could cause the hull to snap and
to keep the boat level in the ascent.
As the estimated 15,000 tons of steel and machinery rise, the
barge will continue to ride up and down on waves up to 10 feet
high, but the jacks and the Kursk will stand in isolation from
the motion of the sea surface. They will be able to do so thanks
to computer-driven "heave" compensators on the barge. The heave
compensators operate like huge shock absorbers mounted under the
lifting jacks, which are suspended high above the deck of the
Giant 4. The shock absorbers are filled with liquid nitrogen,
chosen because it is not explosive and is quick to respond to the
motion of the sea.
"Oil is too slow and air will explode in some circumstances," Mr.
Dailey said.
It will take 12 to 16 hours to travel a little more than 300 feet
from the bottom to a submerged position directly underneath the
Giant 4, whose underside has been modified to conform to the
Kursk's contours, with shaped sockets cut out to receive the tail
fin and conning tower of the Kursk like a glove.
"If all of the systems they have lined up work as they are
designed to work, then it ought to work out nicely, but like any
other engineering feat, there are likely to be some glitches,"
said J. Brad Mooney Jr., a retired rear admiral who in 1964 was
the test pilot for the bathyscaph Trieste II more than 8,000 feet
down into the Atlantic to find the United States nuclear
submarine Thresher, which had sunk the year before.
The Kursk will be squeezed with 2,000 tons of pressure against
the Giant 4 and the contoured supports welded on its hull to hold
the Kursk in place for the 150-mile ride into port, where the sea
and current will create some of the most complex and dangerous
"hammering" forces between the sub and the Giant 4 as they are
towed at four knots.
Two routes have been selected for this risky passage. One, in
open sea, would take less than two days. A second, hugging the
coast and passing behind Kildin Island, could take much longer,
if the Giant 4 has to evade Arctic storms and high seas.
Finally, when the Kursk, lying hidden under the sandwich of barge
and pontoons, prepares to slide into drydock at Roslyakovo, just
north of Murmansk, the submarine will be raised high enough to be
visible.
Once the Kursk is in drydock, Giant 4 and the pontoons will
detach and slide out, leaving the Kursk like a silent leviathan
for the post-mortem of the Russian navy.
The first task will be the removal of the bodies still aboard.
Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
*****************************************************************
12 Broken Cable Halts Russian Sub Job
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 04, 2001 at 12:00:35 PDT
MOSCOW (AP) - Workers used a remote-controlled saw to start
cutting through the sunken Kursk's mangled fore section Tuesday
but had to stop abruptly because of a broken cable, delaying a
crucial stage in the operation to raise the Russian nuclear
submarine.
The underwater saw sliced 5 feet deep into the steel hull early
Tuesday before a cable guiding its chain of drum-shaped teeth ran
across a rock and broke, said Larissa van Seumeren, spokeswoman
for the Dutch company Mammoet, which is working to raise the
Kursk.
The delay was the latest of several setbacks in the ambitious
international operation to lift the massive submarine from the
Barents Sea floor, where it has sat since explosions on board
sank it last August, killing all 118 men aboard.
"We have 25 percent of the cutting completed," Van Seumeren said
in a telephone interview. "We used the cutting equipment for two
hours and fifteen minutes, but after that we had a little
setback, because the guideline that guides the sawing chain
broke."
Van Seumeren said divers and remote-controlled submersible
vehicles were working to fix the problem, but would not say how
long it might take.
The saw, a line of cylindrical drums covered with an abrasive
layer and strung on a cable between two suction anchors, had
encountered some problems during tests but representatives of
Mammoet said they had been fixed.
Despite its speed, the saw has so far only cut through the
Kursk's light outer hull, the chief of staff of Russia's Northern
Fleet, Adm. Mikhail Motsak said Tuesday during a video conference
from the Peter the Great cruiser, parts of which were broadcast
on Russian television.
Tackling the far stronger inner hull will be tougher. Salvage
workers want to cut off the submarine's damaged first compartment
and leave it on the seabed because Russian officials fear
unexploded torpedoes may remain in the bow. Experts involved in
the rescue effort also fear the fore section could be torn off
while the Kursk is being raised, throwing it off balance.
Mammoet is raising the Kursk in a joint venture with another
Dutch company, Smit International, under a contract with the
Russian government estimated to be worth about $65 million.
Most officials are still sticking to the original Sept. 15 target
date for raising the submarine to the surface. However, with the
weather expected to worsen, they have warned that a slight delay
is possible.
Deputy Prime Minister Ilya Klebanov, who is overseeing the
operation, said Tuesday that the Kursk would be brought to a dry
dock near the port of Murmansk by Sept. 25 - five days behind the
original plan. Motsak was less optimistic, saying it could be
delivered between Sept. 25 and Oct. 2.
The Russian Navy's weather service said Tuesday that it expected
cyclones to rage in the area in the second half of September,
complicating the salvage effort.
The operation to raise the Kursk, which is expected to last
approximately eight hours, will require calm seas. Storms could
also disrupt efforts to bring the submarine to dry dock.
On the Net:
Official Web site for salvage operation: http://www.kursk141.org
Dutch consortium's Web site: http://www.kursksalvage.com
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
13 Radiation Safety Service To Be Set Up During The Kursk's Docking
In The Ship Yards
Pravda.RU
Sep, 03 2001
For the period when the Kursk nuclear submarine will stay in
the dock of the ship yards of the Roslyakovo township, a special
radiation safety service will be created with the attraction of
leading specialists from the garrisons of the Northern Fleet, the
Russian Hydro-Meteorological Service and the Russian Kurchatov
Research Institute (Moscow). The journalists were informed about
it on Monday by the head of the Radiation Protection Service of
the Northern Fleet, Alexander Denskevich. According to him, this
Service will control the radiation background in the territory of
the ship yards and the Roslyakovo township, and will also take
water samples. Apart from that, all the members of the Radiation
Protection Service will be given individual dosimeters. Alexander
Denskevich said that the radiation situation in the area of
lifting the Kursk submarine is being controlled round-the-clock.
At the present time it is estimated as normal.
The appearance of an abnormal situation, according to him, is
hardly possible. However, it cannot be fully excluded. If it
happens, there is a plan of actions to be followed.
Only the submarine's reactor poses a potential danger for the
life and the health of the people, say the specialists from the
Northern Fleet. According to their assurances, the unloading of
the combat charges, which will be carried out in the Roslyakovo
ship yards in conditions of the fully hermetically sealed
reactor, does not pose any danger.
RIA 'Novosti'
Copyright ©1999 by "Pravda.RU". When reproducing our materials
*****************************************************************
14 Atomic museum changing its target
The Dallas Morning News: Texas/Southwest
Albuquerque center increasing exhibits on peacetime nuclear uses
09/04/2001
By ED TIMMS / The Dallas Morning News
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. A menacing collection of missiles and
aircraft, along with one of the largest U.S. nuclear bombs ever
built (minus the parts that go boom) surround a nondescript
building on Albuquerque's Kirtland Air Force Base.
National Atomic Museum James K. Walther shows one of the most
recognizable exhibits: a copy of "Fat Man," the bomb dropped on
Nagasaki.
Nonfunctional versions of "Little Boy" and "Fat Man," the atomic
bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II, are
on display inside,along with other nuclear weapons developed by
the United States to counter the threat of the former Soviet
Union's nuclear arsenal.
The National Atomic Museum is touted as having the world's
largest unclassified collection of exhibits chronicling the
development of nuclear weapons. For most of its history, other
uses of nuclear technology received much less attention.
But that's in the process of changing.
Plans call for moving the museum off the Air Force base, doubling
its size and dramatically increasing the space dedicated to
nonmilitary nuclear technology. And to reflect the changed
emphasis, the National Atomic Museum ultimately will become the
National Museum of Nuclear Science and History.
"There just has not been a very strong attempt, until now, to
create a facility that can adequately tell the whole story," said
museum director James K. Walther.
Some of the museum's exhibits already focus on more peaceful uses
of nuclear technology, such as one that describes the scientific
contributions of Nobel laureate Marie Curie, co-discoverer of
radium. But Mr. Walther said there's simply not enough room to
feature more exhibits on non-weapons technology, such as nuclear
energy or the use of nuclear technology in food preservation.
The heavy emphasis on weapons also was a natural outgrowth of its
heritage. Created in 1969, the museum is owned by the U.S.
Department of Energy and operated by the nearby Sandia National
Laboratories. The museum's charter, however, is much broader.
Roughly half of the exhibition space in the new building, to be
located in Albuquerque's Balloon Fiesta Park, will be dedicated
to nonmilitary nuclear technology. As exhibits that deal with
no-military applications of nuclear technology are developed, the
benefits and potential problems such as dealing with nuclear
wasteand the risks of radiation exposure will be addressed.
The other half of the exhibition area will incorporate much of
the weapons technology currently on display.
National Atomic Museum
Features: Displays of nuclear weapons, missiles and aircraft.
Exhibits include the Manhattan Project, nuclear weapons
development during the Cold War, Russian nuclear weapons, the
scientific contributions of Marie Curie, the history of arms
control and nuclear medicine.
Location: Wyoming Boulevard, Kirtland Air Force Base,
Albuquerque, N.M. A visitor must show a driver's license, vehicle
registration and proof of insurance to Air Force personnel at the
Gibson or Wyoming gates of Kirtland to receive a car pass.
Hours: 9.a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, except Christmas Day and New
Year's Day.
Admission: Adults, $3; Youth (7-18) and Seniors, $2; Children 6
and younger, free.
Web address: www.atomicmuseum.com
"It's important to inform the public about the history of the
atomic bomb, the very early work in nuclear physics," said Ben
Benjamin, 78, a museum volunteer who was part of the Manhattan
Project, the massive wartime effort to develop an atomic weapon.
"The bomb, I think, was one of the greatest scientific
achievements in our history." Mr. Benjamin witnessed the
detonation of the world's first nuclear device on July 16, 1945.
As a civilian, he had worked on precision optics in Minneapolis.
After he joined the Army, he ended up working on photo-optics for
the top-secret project.
Before the explosion, Mr. Benjamin recalled, rumors about what
would happen were rampant.
"There was lots of speculation, from it being a dud to ...
fissioning the nitrogen in the air, which would consume the
nitrogen all around the Earth."
The museum's current exhibit also details the role of nuclear
weapons through the Cold War, a time when the specter of a
nuclear war was very real and schoolchildren, in "duck and cover"
drills, were taught to crawl under their desks in the event of a
nuclear attack.
Mr. Walther said that the museum strives to present a balanced
view on nuclear weapons.
"We're not in the opinion business," he said. "We present the
material, the facts as we can best determine ... and let people
draw their own personal conclusions."
When the museum relocates, perhaps by 2005, government support
will decline and a private nonprofit foundation will have an
increasing role. Mr. Walther said the new location will be more
accessible and should draw in more visitors, especially during
Albuquerque's annual balloon festival. About 80,000 people now
visit annually.
Some foreign visitors, Mr. Walther said, are surprised that they
can walk through the museum and view the weapons. But everything
on view is unclassified.
"If you see the outside of a nuclear weapon from 1950, you're not
going to be able to build one," Mr. Walther said. "In fact, the
Internet contains much more material than we're allowed to
present."
2000 EPpy Award for Best specialized selection in a newspaper
*****************************************************************
15 Group Seeks Strict Rules on Beryllium
JS Online:
Associated Press Last Updated: Sept. 3, 2001 at 4:44:18 a.m.
WASHINGTON - A watchdog group wants government to lower the
amount of the metal beryllium that U.S. workers can be exposed to
while on the job. The metal has been linked to a fatal lung
disease.
Public Citizen, a nonprofit group founded by Ralph Nader, argues
that the current standards set by the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration are lax and put workers at risk.
The metal is used in electronics, recycling, machining and dental
industries because it is lightweight and resilient. Public
Citizen wants the exposure standard for beryllium particles
changed from 2 micrograms per cubic meter to 0.2 micrograms per
cubic meter.
``OSHA's failure to adopt a standard that will protect workers
from unnecessary beryllium exposure is unconscionable,'' said
Peter Lure, director of Public Citizen's health research group.
``Every day the agency ignores this issue, tens of thousands of
workers are needlessly exposed to this life-threatening hazard.''
Public Citizen said it was filing a petition with OSHA seeking
the changes. OSHA spokeswoman Bonnie Friedman said the agency had
not received the petition as of Friday afternoon and declined to
comment on it.
Public Citizen is also asking for rules that would mandate annual
blood testing for all workers who deal with the metal.
Beryllium disease once was associated primarily with the defense
industry, where the metal was used in nuclear weapons, but it is
increasingly common among workers in private and consumer
industries.
The disease, caused when the metal's dust slowly damages the
lungs of people who have been exposed, is rare, incurable and
often fatal.
The number of beryllium disease cases among workers in private
industries has increased in the past few years, according to the
National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver, a leading
respiratory disease hospital.
The Labor Department is providing compensation for workers who
contracted beryllium disease while working at weapons plants. The
law provides medical care and $150,000 to sick workers.
On The Net:
Public Citizen: http://www.citizen.org
Occupational Safety and Health Administration:
http://www.osha.gov/
*****************************************************************
16 Stamp honors father of the atomic bomb
September 3, 2001
BY JIM RITTER STAFF REPORTER
Fermilab, U. of C. plan centennial tributes -->
Fermilab scientists thought it was a long shot when they asked
the U.S. Postal Service to issue a stamp honoring the lab's
namesake, Enrico Fermi.
Fermi directed the first nuclear chain reaction, designed atom
smashers, helped build the atomic bomb and won the Nobel Prize.
But he doesn't have the commercial appeal of Elvis Presley,
Marilyn Monroe and other pop culture icons commemorated by the
postal service.
To the scientists' surprise, the stamp was approved, and it will
be issued during the upcoming centennial celebration of the great
physicist's birth on Sept. 29, 1901.
Fermilab, near west suburban Batavia, is planning a symposium,
and the University of Chicago, where Fermi worked, will hold a
stamp ceremony, lectures, a Fermi memorabilia display and a Web
site contest. The high school student who develops the best
Enrico Fermi Web site will win $700.
During the 1930s, Fermi and colleagues in his native Italy
bombarded uranium with slow neutrons. Fermi later realized he had
split the atom. Fermi won the Nobel Prize in 1938 for that work.
His family accompanied him to Sweden to receive the prize, and he
took the opportunity to escape Italy's fascist regime.
In 1942, Fermi came to the University of Chicago, where he built
the first controlled, self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction. The
experiment, under the west stands of the university's Stagg
Field, led to atom bombs and nuclear power plants.
In a chain reaction, a uranium atom splits apart, releasing
neutrons. These neutrons smash into other uranium atoms and split
them apart, releasing more neutrons, which split more atoms, and
so on. Fermi's crew created a chain reaction by assembling a
large pile of purified uranium. When an occasional atom
spontaneously split apart, the neutrons it emitted would hit
other atoms. The pile also contained graphite bricks, which
controlled the speed of neutrons, and control rods, which stopped
the chain reaction by soaking up neutrons.
Fermi conducted the experiment on Dec. 2, 1942. At 3:36 p.m., he
looked at the instruments, computed the increasing neutron counts
on his slide rule and announced, "the reaction is
self-sustaining." Then he uncorked a bottle of Chianti.
After World War II, Fermi established the Institute of Nuclear
Studies at the U. of C., later renamed the Enrico Fermi
Institute.
He helped design the university's synchrocyclotron, at the time
one of the world's most powerful atom smashers.
Fermi was among the few physicists who excelled at both theory
and experiment. He also was a popular teacher, said retired U. of
C. physicist James Cronin, who took several of Fermi's courses.
"He was an extremely clear teacher," Cronin said. "All of the
principles he talked about were very simple."
Fermi died in 1954. In 1969, the Fermi National Accelerator,
better known as Fermilab, was named in his honor.
The Fermi stamp shows a 1948 photo of the physicist at his
chalkboard. The stamp also depicts a model of the carbon atom.
Graphite is a form of carbon, and without it, Fermi could not
have produced the chain reaction that ushered in the Nuclear Age.
Daily Southtown Pioneer Press Post-Tribune Star Newspapers
Suburban Chicago Newspapers Copyright 2000, Digital Chicago Inc.
*****************************************************************
17 D-Day for French nuclear sector (Jour J pour le nucleaire
francais)
Le Figaro - France; Sep 3, 2001
Slightly nine months after the creation of Topco, the holding
intended to head the whole of the French nuclear power sector,
the industrial group is expected to be created today following
the shareholder assemblies of each of the companies involved. The
new name for the company will be officially unveiled this
afternoon.
This will mark the culmination of the rationalisation of the
sector, leading to the birth of the world number one in the
sector, with a consolidated turnover of 10bn euros. The operation
will have been concluded a month and a half ahead of the
provisional timetable. This comes as both China and the US have
committed themselves to nuclear power.
Abstracted from Le Figaro
*****************************************************************
18 Fallen Heroes: Daghlian, Slotin, Bragg, & Meigs
Children of the Manhattan Project
In Memoriam
Peter N. Bragg Douglas P. Meigs Harry K. Daghlian Louis P.
Slotin
Sept. 2, 1944 Sept. 2, 1944 Sept. 15, 1945 May 30, 1946
The above four men, three Americans and one Canadian, all died
in the line of duty. By any interpretation, they were heroes.
However, one of them has never been so honored. Please help us
correct this injustice. Read Here!
The Philadelphia Incident
On September 2, 1944, a group of engineers, some civilian, some
military, were working on an experimental facility at the
Philadelphia Navy Yard when, without warning, it exploded. Peter
Bragg and Douglas Meigs, both civilian engineers assigned to the
Manhattan Project, were killed; five others were critically
injured. If you do nothing else on this web site - YOU MUST
READ
The Dragon Bites...Twice!
In August of 1945 and again, in May 1946, two Los Alamos
scientists were exposed to lethal doses of radiation while
performing experiments to determine critical mass. These
experiments, performed at the Omega Site, were commonly referred
to as "Tickling the Tail of the Dragon". Although several months
apart, both accidents occurred on a Tuesday and both on the 21st
of the month...and, both men died in the same hospital room at
the U.S. Engineers Hospital at Los Alamos.
Send mail to gadget1945@msn.comwith questions or comments about
this web site. Copyright © Jan. 1, 2000, 2001; Society for the
Historical Preservation of the Manhattan Project
*****************************************************************
19 International Conference on Topical Isues in Nuclear Safety
Vienna, Austria
3 - 6 September 2001
INFORMATION SHEET
[View the Programme, Timetable, Poster Session and Poster Guidelines]
1. BACKGROUND
Topical Issue Papers
Risk informed decision making (247k)
Influence of external factors on safety (57k)
Safety of fuel cycle facilities (102k)
Safety of research reactors (84k)
Safety performance indicators (91k)
In 1991, the IAEA organized an international conference on ’The Safety of
Nuclear Power: Strategy for the Future’. Recommendations from the 1991
conference prompted actions in subsequent years to advance nuclear safety
worldwide. One of those actions was the establishment of the Convention on
Nuclear Safety, which entered into force in October 1996. The first review
meeting of the Convention’s Contracting Parties was held in April 1999. The
meeting identified a number of external factors and circumstances which could
have a significant impact on nuclear safety if they were not counteracted.
These included: (a) deregulation of electricity markets; (b) maintaining
competence in industry, regulators and research institutions; and (c) lack of
economic resources in some countries.
In 1998, the Agency held an ’International Conference on Topical
Issues in Nuclear, Radiation and Radioactive Waste Safety’. The
nuclear safety issues discussed during the conference were: (1)
safety management; (2) regulatory strategies; and (3)
backfitting, upgrading and modernization of nuclear power plants.
Senior nuclear safety decision makers at the technical policy
level reviewed these issues and formulated recommendations for
future actions by national and/or international organizations. On
the safety management issue, recommendations were made to monitor
safety performance by using indicators.
Recommendations on the regulatory strategies issue indicated the
need for further work on utilizing PSA and on optimizing the
prescriptive nature of regulations, as well as on the future
availability of competent professionals. Substantial progress has
been made, and continues to be made by Member States in enhancing
the safety of nuclear power plants. At the same time, more
attention is being given to other areas of nuclear safety. The
safety standards for research reactors are being updated and new
standards are planned on the safety of other facilities in the
nuclear fuel cycle. It seems appropriate at this time to analyse
current topical issues and determine priorities for future work
and areas needing international consensus building.
2. OBJECTIVES
The objective of the conference is to foster the exchange of
information on topical issues in nuclear installations safety,
with the aim of consolidating an international consensus on:
+ the present status of these issues;
+ priorities for future work; and
+ needs for strengthening international co-operation,
including recommendations for future activities for the IAEA.
3. THEMATIC SCOPE
Five current topical issues have been identified by the
Conference Programme Committee as subjects for technical
sessions. Each topic encompasses both general ‘policy’ issues and
more specific technical issues. The topics and a selection of
related issues are listed below.
Issue papers have been prepared in advance of the Conference to
provide an overview of each topic and the related issues. Further
information on the issues will be presented in the form of
invited keynote papers and contributed papers.
The Conference will cover the following main topics:
Topical Issue 1: Risk-informed decision making ( 247k)
General issues:
+ Risk-informed decision making: pros and cons.
+ The value and limitations of PSA techniques and results in
underpinning risk-informed decision making.
+ Consistency between risk-informed decision making,
defence-in-depth and good engineering practice.
+ Risk informed decision making: a way to improve regulatory
effectiveness?
+ Risk criteria and safety goals to be used in risk-informed
decision making: dealing with uncertainties.
Special issues:
+ Experience with risk-informed decision making.
+ The legal basis for risk-informed decision making.
+ Using risk indicators as the basis for safety
classification of structures, systems and components.
+ Quality requirements for a PSA to serve as a basis for
risk-informed decision making.
+ PSA expertise at the utility and the regulatory body when
using risk-informed decision making.
+ Ownership and updating of PSA by utilities.
+ Need for international standards for PSA to support
risk-informed decision making?
+ How to consider organizational factors and safety culture
in risk-informed decision making.
+ Concept of ‘risk neutral’ decisions.
+ Treatment of multiple changes in the installation.
Topical Issue 2: Influence of external factors on safety ( 57k)
General issues:
+ Pressures arising from economic deregulation and
competitive electricity pricing and their possible role in
encouraging or discouraging improved nuclear installation safety
in the long term.
+ Implications of political decisions on early closure for
the safety of nuclear installations.
+ Role of the regulator in not unnecessarily hindering the
competitiveness of nuclear installations while ensuring that
safety margins are not eroded under these changing circumstances.
Special issues:
+ Experience of utilities and regulators who have been
through or who are embarking upon these changes; lessons learned
in how to achieve a positive safety outcome while avoiding the
obvious pitfalls.
+ Downsizing utilities and/or regulatory bodies while
maintaining safety margins.
+ Effect of executive reward systems on safety.
+ The image of the nuclear industry among the business
community and during the economic transition of the electrical
supply industry.
Topical Issue 3: Safety of fuel cycle facilities ( 102k)
[Note: this topic excludes nuclear power plants, research
reactors, uranium mining, waste management and disposal
facilities] General issues:
+ Lack of international safety standards.
+ Extensive reliance on operator and administrative controls
to achieve safety.
+ Chemical and toxic risks associated with the nuclear risk.
+ The variety and diversity of technologies and processes
used;
Special issues:
+ The disposition of radioactive materials within the
facility.
+ The operator’s ‘hands on’ involvement in operations and the
frequent changes in operating modes.
+ Dominant risk to the facility operator: setting of
criteria.
+ Consideration of criticality accidents.
+ Emergency preparedness.
Topical Issue 4: Safety of research reactors ( 84k) General
issues:
+ Ageing of equipment and structures in operating research
reactors.
+ Uncertain status of many research reactors (more than 200)
that are shut down but not decommissioned without clear
definition of safety precautions and preservation measures.
+ Lack of regulatory oversight and in many cases lack of a
regulatory framework.
+ Insufficient independent peer reviews of safety.
+ Lack of an international convention to cover the safety of
research reactors.
Special issues:
+ Systematic (periodic) reassessment of safety.
+ Obsolescence of equipment and lack of maintenance.
+ Loss of expertise and corporate memory.
+ Lack of quality assurance programmes.
+ Lack of clear utilization programmes and consequent lack of
financial support.
+ Financing of safety measures (safety reassessment, safety
upgrading, dismantling and decommissioning).
+ Ownership of shutdown reactors.
+ Safety assessment of different modes of utilization,
including experiments.
+ Emergency preparedness.
+ Training and qualification of regulators and operators.
+ Safety implications of new fuels.
Topical Issue 5: Safety performance indicators ( 91k) General
issues:
+ Characterization of operational safety attributes through
safety performance indicators.
+ Comprehensive sets of indicators at plant, national and
international level.
+ Assessment of overall safety performance through
aggregation of indicators.
+ Safety performance indicators as mechanisms for public
communication.
+ Advantages and limitations of safety performance
indicators.
Special issues:
+ Adaptation of generic safety performance indicators to
plant specific circumstances.
+ Data collection for safety performance indicators.
+ Experience with selection of indicators, setting targets,
monitoring trends and triggering actions.
+ The use of safety performance indicator displays.
+ Indicators to monitor safety culture.
+ Development and use of qualitative safety performance
indicators.
+ Use of additional indicators to address issues such as
industrial safety attitude and performance, staff welfare and
environmental compliance.
+ Indicators of the effectiveness of the nuclear regulatory
authorities.
+ Communicating safety outside the nuclear community.
4. PARTICIPATION
The Conference is directed at a broad range of experts in the
area of nuclear safety, including professionals from the
different disciplines involved in the safety of nuclear power
plants, installations in other parts of the fuel cycle, and
research reactors. It is aimed at both licensees and governmental
officials, including persons from regulatory bodies and senior
policy makers.
All persons wishing to participate in the meeting are requested
to complete a Participation Form and send it as soon as possible
to the competent official authority (Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
national atomic energy authority) for subsequent transmission to
the Conference secretariat. A participant will be accepted only
if the Participation Form is transmitted through the government
of a Member State of the International Atomic Energy Agency or by
an organization invited to participate.
Participants whose designations have been received by the
Conference secretariat will be notified directly two to three
months before the meeting.
5. PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
The Conference programme will be structured as follows:
+ An opening session will address the Conference objectives.
+ Five technical sessions will address the topical issues
outlined in Section 3 above, based on:
+ summary presentations of the issue papers prepared in
advance of the Conference;
+ summary presentations by rapporteurs of contributed
papers; and
+ invited keynote presentations.
After the discussions in the technical sessions, conclusions and
recommendations will be drawn up.
+ Poster sessions will be organized for presentation of
contributed papers.
+ Panel discussion on ‘Maintaining Competence'.
+ A concluding session will summarize the main
conclusions and recommendations of the Conference.
6. CONTRIBUTED PAPERS AND POSTERS
Concise papers on issues falling within the scope of the
Conference may be submitted as contributions to the Conference.
These papers will not be presented orally, but will be summarized
and introduced by a rapporteur, as indicated in Section 5. A book
of contributed papers will be distributed to all participants
upon registration. The poster session will include topical poster
presentations by IAEA staff on recent major achievements in the
Agency’s nuclear safety programme, including the status of
revision of the Safety Standards Series. Comments or questions on
the contributed papers can be raised in the appropriate technical
sessions. Authors of contributed papers are encouraged to present
the substance of the paper in the form of a poster. Instructions
for the preparation and submission of contributed papers and
posters are given in the Appendix.
The deadline for the submission of contributed papers is 28
February 2001 .
7. DISTRIBUTION OF DOCUMENTS/PROCEEDINGS
A preliminary programme, together with detailed information on
accommodation and other relevant topics will be sent to all
officially designated participants in June 2001. The final
programme and the book of contributed papers will be distributed
during registration.
The Proceedings, which will be published by the IAEA after the
Conference, will contain the introductory presentations, summary
presentations of the issue papers (as well as the issue papers
themselves), rapporteurs’ reports of contributed papers,
chairpersons’ summary reports for each session, and the results
of the concluding session. The Proceedings can be ordered, at a
discounted price, during the Conference.
8. EXPENSES
There is no registration fee for participation in the Conference.
9. VENUE, DATE AND WORKING LANGUAGE
The Conference will be held from 3 to 6 September 2001 at IAEA
Headquarters in Vienna, Austria. The registration desk will be
open from 8:00 a.m. on Monday, 3 September 2001 and the opening
session will start at 10:00 a.m.. The working language of the
Conference will be English.
10. SECRETARIAT
The address of the Conference Secretariat is as follows:
Conference Secretariat
c/o International Atomic Energy Agency
IAEA-CN-82
Wagramer Strasse 5
P.O. Box 100
A-1400 Vienna
Austria, Europe
Telephone No.: (+43) - 1 - 2600(0) plus extension
Telefax No.: (+43) - 1 - 26007
Email: )
The General Co-ordinator of the Conference is Mr. J.Versteeg,
Safety Co-ordination Section, Department of Nuclear Safety
(telephone extension: 22551, e-mail: ). The technical programme
co-ordinator is Mr. L. Lederman, Division of Nuclear Installation
Safety, Department of Nuclear Safety (telephone extension: 26070,
email: ). Conference organization is provided by Ms.H. Schmid,
Conference Services Section, Division of Conference and Document
Services (telephone extension: 21316, e-mail: ). The Editor for
the conference proceedings is Mr. G. Ramesh, Publishing Section
(telephone extension: 22510, e-mail: ).
11. CONTACT POINTS AND REGISTRATION
The Participation Form should be sent to the competent official
authority (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, national atomic energy
authority) for transmission to the Conference Secretariat (see
item 10 above). Subsequent correspondence on technical matters
should be addressed to the Conference Co-ordinator and
correspondence on administrative matters to the IAEA Conference
Service Section.
12. VISAS
Designated participants who require a visa to enter Austria
should submit the necessary application to the nearest diplomatic
or consular representative of Austria as soon as possible. Please
note that Austria is a Schengen State and therefore persons who
require a visa will have to apply for a "Schengen visa" at least
14 days before entry into Austria. In States where Austria has no
diplomatic mission, visas can be obtained from the consular
authority of a Schengen Partner State representing Austria in the
country in question. [As of September 1999, the Schengen States
are: Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxemburg,
Netherlands, Portugal and Spain.]
A P P E N D I X
Guidelines for The Preparation and Presentation of A Poster
1. GENERAL
Information on a poster should attract attention. It should
therefore be limited to the most important facts only.
2. PREPARATION OF A POSTER Each poster author will be assigned
a poster board with the size 85 cm high and 115 cm wide.
All display material should be prepared in advance. It should
preferably consist of smaller sections which can be mounted on
the board in the poster area.
The top of the poster should display, in lettering not smaller
than 3 cm in height, the following information:
Title of Presentation, Names of Authors, Affiliations
The text of the poster should be easily readable from a distance
of 2 to 2.5 m. Machine typed characters are too small. Use heavy
lettering at least 1 cm high .
The poster should be divided into:
+ Introduction
+ Method
+ Results
+ Conclusions
or an equivalent division. It is advisable to leave details and
explanations for the face-to-face discussions.
3. PRESENTATION AT THE MEETING
Poster authors are kindly requested to be at their posters for
discussion with interested participants during the relevant
poster session on Wednesday, 5 September from 14:00 -15:30 as
indicated in the meeting programme.
Text and presentation should be in English.
PLEASE NOTE that further details on the possibilities for
arranging the displays in the POSTER area will be given at the
beginning of the meeting.
Back to listing of IAEA Meetings in 2001
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20 Antinuclear activist launches political party
ABC Politics - 04/09/01 :
Long-time antinuclear activist Helen Caldicott today launched her
own political party in Sydney.
Dr Caldicott is calling the party "Our Common Future" and is
waiting on registration.
She says regardless of registration, she will stand as an
Independent in the Senate in the upcoming federal election.
Dr Caldicott, who is opposed to the building of a new nuclear
reactor in Sydney's Lucas Heights, says she will also emphasise
her opposition to the privatisation of the health system and
other services.
"I founded it because as Gore Vidal says we have one political
party with two right wings in Australia and I don't think any
party is really looking at the full spectrum," she said.
"The Greens are good but I'm deeply concerned with the way
society is going and we're being privatised to the hilt and we're
losing everything we've ever owned, we're losing our compassion
and we're becoming Americanised."
© 2001 Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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21 Nuclear tests on thousands of Australian bone samples: report
ABC News - 04/09/01 :
A report has revealed bone samples were taken from tens of
thousands of Australians to test the effects of fallout from
nuclear testing.
Between 1957 and 1978, nearly 20,000 bone samples were taken from
post-mortem examinations in most states and territories, and
Papua New Guinea.
The samples were taken from stillborn babies and people aged up
to 80-years-old.
Research to determine the effects of nuclear fallout on bone
tissue were first carried out in the United States and Britain,
and then Australia.
A report by the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear
Safety Agency, reveals for most of the 21-year testing program,
samples were taken from every autopsy on people aged less than
40.
In 1969, hospitals were offered $50 bonuses for providing bone
samples.
The Federal Health Minister, Michael Wooldridge, says he is
concerned the informed consent of families was not sought.
Dr Wooldridge says the Government is looking at the best way to
inform family members of those involved.
Identification
The Federal Health Department is considering the best way to
inform families of people whose bones were used in an
international program to measure the health effects of nuclear
testing.
The head of the Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency,
John Loy says information will be provided to family members who
want further information about the program.
"As I understand it it was not uncommon practice for pathologists
in certain circumstances to remove organs and use them for other
purposes, and of course those things have been inquired into in
other contexts this was a program that had been set up for
certainly what was seen at the time and what still can be argued
as being a worthwhile thing to do in itself," he said.
border="0"> © 2001 Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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22 BRIT GIVES OK FOR KURSK LIFT
Daily Record
© 2001 Trinity Mirror Digital Media Scotland Limited or its licensors.
A BRITISH expert has flown out to Russia to decide whether to
give the go-ahead for the raising of the Kursk.
Dr John Large has been called in by the Dutch salvage consortium
Smit and Mammoet to advise on the radioactive safety of lifting
the submarine from the bottom of the Barents Sea.
Dr Large, head of the nuclear safety committee overseeing the
raising of the submarine, said the bow section - which still
contains a number of weapons - will be cut off in the next couple
of days.
It was in the bow that the explosion that caused the loss of the
118 crew last year happened.
Dr Large said: "I believe the risks are now minimal."
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23 Government secrets
[charlotte.com]
Published Monday, September 3, 2001
Proposed new law would do a lot of harm
A very bad piece of legislation is creeping forward in the
United States Congress. It would broaden punishment for those who
reveal government secrets.
It has been inserted in the Intelligence Authorization Act, an
appropriations bill that funds various intelligence-related
agencies and activities. It is this year's version of a bill
passed by both houses of Congress last year before being vetoed
by President Clinton.
The legislation would make it a felony, punishable by up to three
years in prison, for any active or retired government employee to
willfully disclose classified information knowing that the person
receiving the information was not authorized to have it.
Is it important to protect government secrets? Of course it is.
And current law already provides for that. However, criminal
prosecution requires that the information relate to the national
defense and that the individual leaking the information believe
that it would be used to injure the United States.
This proposed new law would extend punishment even to
whistleblowers who were seeking to serve the public's legitimate
interests. And it would ignore a central issue: Government
officials routinely abuse the classification process for their
own convenience or to cover up their own behavior. At the height
of the Vietnam War protests, the FBI was found to be keeping
classified files of newspaper clippings.
Among the matters that would not have come to light under the
proposed law: the Pentagon Papers; Iran-Contra abuses; government
radiation and biological warfare experiments on unwitting
Americans; safety violations in nuclear weapons manufacturing and
nuclear power plants.
The spirit of American law is that government information does
not belong to the government but, rather, to the people. This
bill is inconsistent with that spirit and should be rejected.
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24 Public Citizen seeks stricter rules on beryllium
Oak Ridger Online -->
Story last updated at 10:15 a.m. on Monday, September 3, 2001
from staff and wire reports
WASHINGTON -- A watchdog group wants government to lower the
amount of the metal beryllium that U.S. workers can be exposed to
while on the job. The metal has been linked to a fatal lung
disease.
Public Citizen, a nonprofit group founded by Ralph Nader, argues
that the current standards set by the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration are lax and put workers at risk.
The metal is used in electronics, recycling, machining and
dental industries because it is lightweight and resilient. Public
Citizen wants the exposure standard for beryllium particles
changed from 2 micrograms per cubic meter to 0.2 micrograms per
cubic meter.
"OSHA's failure to adopt a standard that will protect workers
from unnecessary beryllium exposure is unconscionable," said
Peter Lure, director of Public Citizen's health research group.
"Every day the agency ignores this issue, tens of thousands of
workers are needlessly exposed to this life-threatening hazard."
Public Citizen said it was filing a petition with OSHA seeking
the changes. OSHA spokeswoman Bonnie Friedman said the agency had
not received the petition as of Friday afternoon and declined to
comment on it.
Public Citizen is also asking for rules that would mandate
annual blood testing for all workers who deal with the metal.
Beryllium disease once was associated primarily with the defense
industry, where the metal was used in nuclear weapons, but it is
increasingly common among workers in private and consumer
industries.
The disease, caused when the metal's dust slowly damages the
lungs of people who have been exposed, is rare, incurable and
often fatal.
The number of beryllium disease cases among workers in private
industries has increased in the past few years, according to the
National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver, a leading
respiratory disease hospital.
The Labor Department is providing compensation for workers who
contracted beryllium disease while working at weapons plants. The
law provides medical care and $150,000 to sick workers.
Several current and former workers have said they were exposed
to beryllium while working at the Department of Energy's Oak
Ridge facilities.
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
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