*****************************************************************
07/05/01 **** RADIATION BULLETIN(RADBULL) **** VOL 9.166
*****************************************************************
RADBULL IS PRODUCED BY THE ABALONE ALLIANCE CLEARINGHOUSE
*****************************************************************
NUCLEAR POWER CONTENTS
1 NRC Extends Comment Period to September 6 for Turkey Point
2 NRC Order Halts Shipment of Large Radioactive Sources by JL
3 Nuclear cargo hits Iowa
4 Taiwan and other countries reach deal on radioactive waste treatment
5 Cooperation eyed on nuclear waste
6 Nuke site reaches milestone
7 Texas A University: Nuclear waste disposal -- A safer solution?
8 EU energy commissioner calls for new generation of clean nuclear reactors
9 NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Company to Discuss Safety
10 Maine Yankee gives tour of nuclear storage facility
11 Is the Nuke paying off?
12 Operator of nuclear plants in settlement with Delaware
13 BNFL Reports Huge Losses
14 Law Allows Pacts on A-Plant Taxes
15 BNFL Cover-Up Alleged Over Thorp Fuel Incident
16 Political Fight Heats Up Over MOX
17 Your Views: More on trust of government - Susan Arnold Kaplan
18 NRC to Meet with FirstEnergy Company to Discuss Safety
19 Revival of nuclear power faces several hurdles
20 Nuclear fuel plant closes but waste remains
21 Protesters march against radioactive waste discharge into the
22 EPA rule for Yucca Mountain faces two lawsuits -
23 NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Co. To Discuss Safety
24 Yakima nuclear plant back on line
25 NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Co. To Discuss Safety
26 NRC to Meet with Entergy Nuclear Northeast to Discuss Performance
27 NRC to Meet with FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Company to Discuss
NUCLEAR WEAPONS CONTENTS
1 Resource center for Nevada Test Site workers opens in Las Vegas
2 Scientist raises new radiation fear
3 The Navy's mess | July 4, 2001 | SFBG News
4 Hunter's Point Contamination: in this issue
5 Alameda Naval Installation Contamination: Hot property
6 Crew Of Soviet Nuclear Submarine K-19 Saves World From Nuclear
7 Discounted Casualties book
8 Budget increase may allow more staffing in inspector general's
9 Kursk salvage operation gears up - July 4, 2001
10 British atomic test subjects urged to register with Veteran Affairs
11 Updated facilities are in DOE's future
12 Commentary: DOE must fess up, clean up and pay up if we are to
13 Whatever happened to Israeli 'atomic spy' Vanunu?
14 Row brewing over nuclear compensation payments
15 Industry chief to visit SRS
16 Amarillo Voices: Environmental ignorance keeps going and going...
*****************************************************************
*****************************************************************
NUCLEAR POWER ARTICLES
*****************************************************************
1 NRC Extends Comment Period to September 6 for Turkey Point
License Renewal Draft Environmental Impact Statement
Press Release 2001 - 078 -
U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
Office of Public Affairs Telephone: 301/415-8200
Washington, DC 20555-001 E-mail:
Web Site:
No. 01-078 July 03, 2001
Seeking to increase stakeholder input, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission is extending the public comment period to 75 days on
the draft environmental impact statement for the Turkey Point
Nuclear Plant license renewal application. Earlier, the agency
had announced the comment period would be 45 days. The statement
is now open for public comment until September 6, and, as
previously announced, will be the subject of public meetings July
17 in Homestead, Florida, near where the facility is located.
The NRC has been reviewing the application for extension of the
Turkey Point operating licenses since Florida Power & Light
Company, which operates the plants, filed it in September 2000.
Under NRC regulations, the original operating license for a
nuclear power plant is issued for up to 40 years. The license may
be renewed for up to an additional 20 years if NRC requirements
are met. The current operating licenses for Turkey Point will
expire July 19, 2012, for the facility's Unit 3, and April 10,
2013, for Unit 4.
On Tuesday, July 17, the NRC staff will hold two meetings to
obtain comments on the draft environmental statement. The
meetings will be held at the Harris Field Complex, Homestead
YMCA, 1034 Northeast 8th Street in Homestead, from 1:30 to 4:30
in the afternoon, and from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., or until all
interested people have an opportunity to speak. An open house is
scheduled to begin one hour before the start of each meeting.
Written comments on the draft statement will also be considered
by NRC staff. Comments should be submitted either by mail to the
Chief, Rules and Directives Branch, Division of Administrative
Services, Mail stop T-6 D 59, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, D.C. 20555-0001, or by Internet to . At the
conclusion of the extended public comment period on September 6,
the NRC staff will consider and address the comments provided and
issue a final supplement to the agency's Generic Environmental
Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Power Plants,
(NUREG-1437). That supplement will contain a recommendation
regarding the environmental acceptability for license renewal.
*****************************************************************
2 NRC Order Halts Shipment of Large Radioactive Sources by JL
Shepherd & Associates
Press Release 2001 - 079 -
U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Office of Public Affairs
Telephone: 301/415-8200 Washington, DC 20555-001 E-mail:
opa@nrc.gov Web Site: http://www.nrc.gov/OPA
No. 01-079 July 5, 2001
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued an order,
effective immediately, that essentially halts the shipment of
large radioactive sources in certain packages by JL Shepherd &
Associates, a manufacturer of industrial and research irradiators
and instrument calibrators located in San Fernando, California.
The NRC action follows complaints from foreign authorities that
Shepherd irradiators were not packaged for shipment in
conformance with NRC regulations, which initiated an NRC
inspection at the Shepherd facilities May 29-31. NRC inspectors
identified several concerns with the manner in which the company
conducted its approved quality assurance program, which is
designed to assure safe design, use, maintenance, and repair of
transportation packages for large radioactive sources. These
deficiencies resulted in the shipment of packages that did not
meet NRC requirements established to prevent them from breaking
open should they be involved in a transportation accident. As a
result, the order states that NRC officials "lack the requisite
reasonable assurance that [Shepherd's] current operations can be
conducted . . . in compliance with the Commission's requirements"
and are protective of the health and safety of the public,
including the [company's] employees.
The order withdraws NRC approval of Shepherd's quality assurance
program. Without this approval, the company will not be allowed
to package and ship large radioactive sources in certain
packages. The company can continue to ship some smaller
quantities of radioactive materials.
The irradiator involved in the shipment contained large
quantities of highly radioactive materials, 18,000 curies of
cobalt-60, which has the potential to cause serious injuries or
death if the shielding is breached; however, no one was exposed
to radiation as a result of an improperly packaged irradiator.
The company must, within 20 days, submit an answer to the order,
either consenting to it or explaining why it should not have been
issued. The company may also request a formal hearing to
determine whether the order should be sustained.
*****************************************************************
3 Nuclear cargo hits Iowa
DesMoinesRegister.com | News
Secret convoy said to haul waste safely
By
Register Staff Writer
07/04/2001
The federal government secretly sent a convoy of three trucks
hauling nuclear waste through southwest Iowa last week, state
officials confirmed Tuesday.
The radioactive cargo was placed in heavily protected containers
built to withstand crashes without leaking, said Tom Sever,
hazardous materials coordinator for the Iowa Department of
Transportation. The convoy was escorted by a state hazardous
materials specialist and passed through Iowa without incident, he
said.
Sever said there have been five to six shipments of significant
amounts of radioactive materials through Iowa this year and about
150 to 200 such shipments over the past decade. Some of the
convoys have passed through the Des Moines area on Interstate
Highway 80, he said.
The recent convoy crossed the Missouri state line into southwest
Iowa on Thursday and headed north on Interstate Highway 29, Sever
said. Upon reaching the Council Bluffs and Omaha area, the trucks
followed a circuitous route in which they headed northeast on
Interstate Highway 80 to Interstate Highway 680, then west into
Nebraska around the most populous parts of the metro area.
The radioactive waste came from a German nuclear reactor plant,
Sever said.
The convoy traveled through the United States on the interstate
highway system from South Carolina to the U.S. Department of
Energy's National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory in
Idaho.
Lisa Cutler, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Energy in
Washington, D.C., said spent nuclear fuel is sent to the United
States from research reactors in foreign countries to make
certain it will not be used to produce nuclear weapons. Uranium
in the spent fuel was originally enriched in the United States,
she said.
Federal energy officials work with state and local officials to
determine the best and safest routes for transporting nuclear
waste, Cutler said.
The timing of such shipments is not disclosed to the public for
security reasons, she said. The shipments are monitored by a
satellite tracking system.
Ellen Gordon, administrator of the Iowa Division of Emergency
Management, said her agency has done extensive planning on public
safety in the event of an accident involving such convoys. State
public health experts also have been involved.
"We have made a really strong effort over the last few years to
equip and train first responders," Gordon said. Those first
responders include regional hazardous materials teams.
Kevin Kamps, a spokesman for the Nuclear Information and Resource
Service in Washington, D.C., said his watchdog group has concerns
about the shipment of radioactive waste on interstate highways.
"Just to give some perspective on the radioactive content, these
containers hold many times the radiation that was released by the
Hiroshima atomic bomb," Kamps said.
He calls such convoys "mobile Chernobyls," referring to a 1986
explosion at a nuclear reactor in Ukraine.
The frequency of such shipments across Iowa could increase
dramatically if plans are approved for a proposed Yucca Mountain
nuclear waste repository in Nevada, Kamps said.
Jim Johnson of Des Moines, an anti-nuclear activist, thinks the
public should be worried about such shipments across Iowa.
He questions whether the shipping containers can withstand a
catastrophic accident, and he wonders whether security is
sufficient.
"Boy, this would be a big fat target of opportunity for any
terrorist," Johnson said.
Cutler said over the past 40 years there have been more than
2,500 shipments of spent nuclear fuel in the United States.
"Although there have been some incidents, there has never been a
release of radioactive materials," she said.
There are two types of shipping containers, and both have
undergone extensive testing, Cutler said.
One weighs 17 tons and has 9-inch walls. The other weighs 8 tons
and has 8½-inch walls. "They are all designed and constructed to
retain their contents in the event of an accident," she said.
Copyright © 2001, The Des Moines Register. Use of this site
*****************************************************************
4 Taiwan and other countries reach deal on radioactive waste treatment
The Taipei Times Online:
Thursday, July 5th, 2001
OUT OF SPACE: A US Department of Energy spokeman said that the
program will focus research on topics related to underground
nuclear waste burial
CNA, TOKYO
Taiwan, the US, Japan, South Korea and China have reached a basic
consensus on cooperation in radioactive waste treatment research,
a Japanese newspaper reported yesterday.
The Asahi Shimbun said in a dispatch from Washington that the
basic consensus was forged among representatives from major
nuclear energy research institutes in the five countries at a
recent meeting held in the US.
The report quoted a spokesman for the US Department of Energy as
saying that the cooperation program will focus research on topics
related to underground nuclear waste burial and that a joint
research center will be opened in Las Vegas.
According to the spokesman, nuclear energy specialists,
administrative staff and legal experts from the five countries
will meet in South Korea in August to discuss concrete research
items, cost-sharing, intellectual property rights and other
relevant issues.
Noting that burying radioactive waste hundreds of meters beneath
the earth is widely believed to be the most practical way to
handle such hazardous waste, the spokesman said which kind of
stratum of earth is most suitable for accommodating radioactive
waste and how to prevent nuclear waste from contaminating
underground water are key subjects for future technical study.
The spokesman further said if the new cooperative project
proceeds smoothly, China would be likely to handle Taiwan's
radioactive waste under its so-called "one China" policy.
Nevertheless, the spokesman said the just-concluded five-way
meeting didn't touch on such issues as whether radioactive waste
should be disposed of in each country's own territory or should
be shipped abroad for permanent disposal.
Taiwan has had a hard time finding suitable sites to store
radioactive waste from its three existing nuclear power plants as
its current storage facility on Orchid Island will reach its
capacity in the not-too-distant future.
Taiwan's state-owned Taipower company had at one time reached an
agreement with North Korea on shipping its low-level radioactive
waste to the reclusive communist country for permanent disposal,
but the agreement has so far not been implemented due to
complicated political issues.
Taiwan has also explored the possibility of cooperating with
Russia or China in handling nuclear waste, but none of these
efforts have borne fruit.
This story has been viewed 242 times.
Copyright © 1999-2001 The Taipei Times. All rights reserved.
*****************************************************************
5 Cooperation eyed on nuclear waste
asahi.com news
The Asahi Shimbun
By TORU OMUTA
July 5, 2001
WASHINGTON-Researchers in five countries and regions have agreed
in principle to take part in a joint research project on
disposing of spent nuclear fuel deep underground.
The agreement was reached by the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory in the United States, the Japan Nuclear Cycle
Development Institute, the (South) Korean Atomic Energy Research
Institute, the Beijing Research Institute of Uranium Geology and
Taiwan's Institute of Nuclear Energy Research.
Although China and Taiwan often clash on diplomatic issues, the
need to deal with the ever-growing mountain of spent nuclear fuel
has pushed the two traditional rivals together in a cooperative
venture, observers said.
According to officials of the U.S. Department of Energy, who have
played a leading role in preparing for the project, a joint
research center is expected to be built near Las Vegas, Nevada.
Whether the spent nuclear fuel is disposed of untreated or
reprocessed by having its plutonium extracted, it will have to be
buried several hundred meters underground. The aim of the
research project is to tackle such issues as determining what
type of rock foundation is most suitable for disposal and
preventing radioactive material from contaminating underground
water supplies.
A meeting is scheduled for August in the Republic of Korea (South
Korea) to discuss funding for the project and how to deal with
any intellectual property that results from it. South Korean
officials have already proposed that joint research be conducted
at an underground experimental facility that Seoul plans to
build. Chinese and Taiwanese officials have expressed interest in
participating.
Officials from the Japan Nuclear Cycle Development Institute and
the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have proposed
providing academic papers and computer programs for the joint
research project.
A joint statement was issued at a meeting in the United States in
the fall of 1999 calling for international cooperation on
underground disposal of spent nuclear fuel.
Cheng-Kong Chou, associate director of the Energy and Environment
Directorate at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, said:
``The United States has already spent about $5 billion (625
billion yen) for an underground disposal project at Yucca
Mountain, Nevada. We want to take advantage of that knowledge.
Nations with advanced nuclear power generation technology have a
responsibility to propose a way to dispose of spent nuclear fuel,
while also promoting nuclear reactor safety.''
Sources close to the project said there was a possibility China
would accept spent nuclear fuel from Taiwan from the standpoint
of the one-China policy if negotiations on the project proceed
smoothly.
However, the project is not expected to deal directly with the
disposal policies of each of the five participants, some of which
dispose of spent fuel within their borders, while others send it
to other countries.
Copyright 2001 Asahi Shimbun. All rights reserved. No
*****************************************************************
6 Nuke site reaches milestone
©2001 MassLive
Tuesday, July 3, 2001
By BETSY CALVERT
ROWE —
After 4½ years of planning, the Yankee Nuclear Power Plant has
finished building 16 110-ton casks to store plutonium-laced, used
fuel rods that have been cooling on the site for as long as 30
years.
This milestone, reached on June 22, marks the completion of $20
million in design and construction costs for an outdoor storage
system to replace the indoor, heavily guarded underwater system.
So-called dry storage is expected to save Yankee and electric
ratepayers an estimated $2 million a year once the
decommissioning plant is completely dismantled.
The remaining task involves moving the most hazardous element of
a nuclear power plant, the so-called spent fuel rods. Transfer is
expected to begin this fall, Yankee spokeswoman Kelley C. Smith
said yesterday.
Old fuel is more dangerous than new fuel — uranium —
because it has been bombarded and destabilized by nuclear
particles to produce heat. In an elaborate and slow-moving
process, the spent-fuel will soon be moved a few hundred feet
away in 13-foot hollow casks made of 21 inches of concrete and 3½
inches of steel.
The only holdup now, Smith said, is waiting for auxiliary
equipment to arrive, and for carefully choreographed procedures
to be finalized. Also, she said, two dry runs must be completed
as well before an actual transfer. One dry run will be in-house,
and the second will be done before staff from the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission.
Transferring fuel to the casks will take more than a week per
cask, Smith said. The process requires placing 36 fuel assemblies
in a transfer cask using underwater robotics. A crane will then
move the 40-ton transfer cask to a storage cask and then to the
fuel transfer enclosure building.
In that building, workers will weld on tons of lids, again using
robotics to limit their exposure to radiation. Water from the
spent-fuel pool is evacuated and later de-contaminated by
evaporation. The cask is filled with helium, and then moved
slowly by truck the short distance to the storage pad.
Yankee Rowe is one of the nation's first nuclear power plants,
and one of the first to undertake the decommissioning process.
The plant shut down in 1992 when its owners decided it was not
economical to keep the aging and undersized plant running.
Despite a recent surge of renewed interest in nuclear power,
Smith said she believes Yankee Rowe was too small to be viable in
today's market. It was designed as a prototype, she said.
The plan for Yankee Rowe is to remove all evidence of a nuclear
power plant, and return the site to its rustic look of 1958. The
buildings cannot go, however, Smith said, until the old fuel is
safely out of the pool.
Even when the buildings are gone, the 16 casks could remain, in
theory, for centuries. The company, however, is hoping that the
U.S. government will take over responsibility before then.
Currently, the U.S. Department of Energy hopes to open a site in
Nevada in 2010, Smith said. Environmental arguments could hold
that up.
© 2001 UNION-NEWS. Used with permission.
*****************************************************************
7 Texas A University: Nuclear waste disposal -- A safer solution?
[M2 Communications Ltd.]
Story Filed: Wednesday, July 04, 2001 3:52 AM EST
COLLEGE STATION, Jul 04, 2001 (M2 PRESSWIRE via COMTEX) --
Disposal of nuclear waste has always been a hot topic, but a
Texas A University chemist`s new approach could lead to new waste
treatment procedures - and even a boost to nuclear medicine.
A main component of President George W. Bush`s energy policy is
to increase use of nuclear energy. However, according to Abraham
Clearfield, a professor of chemistry at Texas A, "to accept this
part of Bush policy, the general public must be confident that
nuclear waste disposal will be effectively dealt with." One of
the most common ways to dispose of highly radioactive waste is to
use devices similar to water softeners called ion exchangers,
which are either inorganic - mineral-type - compounds or
synthetically produced organic resins.
An ion exchanger usually contains a harmless element such as
sodium, present in ordinary salt, which is exchanged for a
harmful element such as cesium 137, present in radioactive waste,
says Clearfield.
Clearfield has been developing inorganic ion exchangers for more
than 30 years.
He has been studying their role in nuclear waste for 10 years in
collaboration with Pacific Northwest National Laboratories and
the Savannah River Site, a weapons research facility based in
South Carolina.
Nuclear waste coming from nuclear weapons plants is made of
highly radioactive elements, mainly strontium 90, cesium 137 and
plutonium 239 and 240, as well as other less radioactive
elements.
The highly radioactive waste is either extracted by a solution
that does not mix with the waste solution - a process called
solvent extraction - or is removed by ion exchangers.
The high-level wastes are then to be immobilized in a special
glass, placed inside steel drums and buried about 1,000 feet deep
in salt mines, in sites to be designated. The remaining low-level
waste may then be encased in cement and stored on site at
Hanford, Wash., and the Savannah River Site, S.C.
The inorganic ion exchangers remove cesium and strontium 90,
while plutonium is handled separately. Clearfield and his
collaborators have devised more than a dozen of these exchangers.
Among them is a class of crystals called titanium silicates that
have tunnel structures containing sodium ions.
One of the most important was developed at Sandia National
Laboratory, by the late Robert Dosch and Rayford Anthony of Texas
A`s Department of Chemical Engineering.
"In these tunnels, sodium ions are very loosely held," explains
Clearfield. "Because cesium ions are bigger than sodium ions,
when a cesium ion goes in and replaces a sodium ion, it cannot
move around like the sodium ion.
Instead it gets trapped." In other inorganic ion exchangers, the
ingoing and outgoing ions can each have different charges or the
channels have different sizes. To study the exchangers`
properties, Clearfield and his collaborators study their crystal
structure by X-ray diffraction before and after the exchange of
different types of ions.
"We try to make compounds in which either a sodium or a potassium
ion is exchanged, and then we do the crystal structure," says
Clearfield. "We try to exchange a given ion species with these
crystals and then we do the crystal structure again, and we see
what has happened to the ingoing and outgoing species. It can
take from a few weeks to many months before we understand what
happened." Inorganic ion exchangers can also be used in nuclear
medicine.
Radioactive elements with short half-lives currently are used to
determine blood flow or to locate a tumor. With the ion
exchanger, it might be possible to better target the tumor by
sparing surrounding healthy cells. "If you could target a
radioactive species directly into the tumor," says
Clearfield, "and the health physicist would calculate, from the
size of the tumor, how much radioactivity to inject, you would
not damage the healthy tissue around." Work is in progress and
part of a project with Lynntech, Inc., a technology development
company based in College Station, where most of the scientists
are Texas A alumni.
"The first phase of that work has just been completed,"
Clearfield says. "We are now waiting for a second phase of
funding on the project." Clearfield has shown that inorganic
materials exchange ions more efficiently than organic materials,
and they can better withstand radiation as well.
"For applications in nuclear waste and nuclear medicine, organic
exchangers can only do part of the job," he says," because
radioactivity may destroy the carbon-carbon bonds, which are
essential in organic compounds." Clearfield is eager to
participate in a major project currently being set up by the
European Commission, called the European Consortium. Focusing on
the many applications of inorganic ion exchangers, the project
will be led by the University of Helsinki in Finland, with groups
at the University of Aveiro in Portugal, and the University of
Salford in the United Kingdom, and four industrial firms.
Clearfield says that work on inorganic exchangers is far from
being over.
"There are thousands of naturally occurring inorganic materials
that can be used," he says. "Some of them are clays, others are
natural minerals. Having solved their structure, we can use the
information to synthesize materials that could select, by
removing them, harmful species from the environment or industrial
processes."
CONTACT: Abraham Clearfield Tel: +1 979 845 2936 e-mail:
clearfield@mail.chem.tamu.edu
*****************************************************************
8 EU energy commissioner calls for new generation of clean nuclear reactors
[AFX News - UK]
Story Filed: Thursday, July 05, 2001 1:00 PM EST
BRUSSELS, Jul 05, 2001 (AFX-UK via COMTEX) -- EU energy
commissioner Loyola de Palacio said the EU should develop a new
generation of clean nuclear reactors, without which it will be
impossible to meet its goals for energy production and the fight
against climate change.
In a speech prepared for delivery at the French Institute of
International Relations in Paris, she said nuclear energy has
prevented the production of 300 mln tonnes of harmful gas
emissions, as well as producing 35 pct of Europe's electricity.
But to maintain the nuclear energy option, there must be
transparency towards public opinion, heightened research efforts
for radioactive waste management, as well as the development of
new, clean, reactors, she said.
This is a priority of the EU's scientific research programme, she
said. To meet its energy needs, the EU must make use of all
energy sources in an integrated single EU policy, she said.
An important part of the policy is to explain to the public that
while fossil fuel supplies remain an important component of total
supply, they are limited. Alternative energy sources also have
only limited potential and are not competitive, whereas the
nuclear option has many advantages for price stability, energy
independence and in emissions reduction.
On fossil fuels, she stressed the need for the EU to ensure it
gains access to all the nearby sources such as the Caspian Sea,
and to "work to disenclave resources in the Middle East which are
under political or economic embargo - (such as Iraq, Iran and
Libya.)"
It should also concentrate on building the infrastructure to
transport the oil and gas by pipeline, she said. bm/kgd
Copyright 2001. AFX News Ltd. All rights reserved.
*****************************************************************
9 NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Company to Discuss Safety
Performance at the Lasalle Nuclear Plant
Region III -- 2001 - 033 --
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, REGION III
801 Warrenville Road, Lisle IL 60532
No. III-01-033 July 5, 2001
CONTACT: Jan Strasma (630)829-9663/e-mail: rjs2@nrc.gov
Pam Alloway-Mueller (630)829-9662/e-mail: pla@nrc.gov
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will meet with Exelon
Generation Company officials July 11 to discuss the NRC's annual
assessment of safety performance at the LaSalle County Station
near Seneca, Illinois.
The meeting will begin at 9:30 a.m. CDT and will be held at the
Brookfield Township Hall, 2099 E. 27th Road near Seneca,
Illinois.
The annual assessment, referred to as the End-of-Cycle
assessment, evaluates safety performance at the LaSalle plant
from April 2000 through March 2001, and informs plant officials
of the NRC's plans for future inspections at the facility.
The LaSalle assessment letter and inspection report are available
at http://www.nrc.gov/OPA/ppror from the Region III Public
Affairs Office. Current performance information for the plant is
available at http://www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/index.html.
*****************************************************************
10 Maine Yankee gives tour of nuclear storage facility
Jul 05, 2001 "
Vol. 126-No. 27
Greg Foster
Maine Yankee gave media and area officials a chance Friday to
view first hand the $60 million spent nuclear fuel facility going
up at the site for supposedly temporary storage. The company is
having to store the high level radioactive waste before
transporting it elsewhere because of the U.S. Department of
Energy's lack of provision of a federal depository.
Known formally as the Independent Spent Fuel Storage
Installation, construction continues along the plant's
preparation to transfer the greater than class C (GTCC) level
waste and radioactive spent fuel rods from the spent fuel pool
for placement in 64 concrete silos or casks surrounded by two
security fences and earthern berm. There are currently 1,432
spent fuel assemblies, each containing 176 spent fuel rods.
Security at the ISFSI, which has caught media attention lately,
although largely top secret much to the chagrin of people who
would like to know specific plans, is high tech enough to pick up
the slightest movements at the site, Project Manager Paul Plante
said "We have a system that will pick up on animals," he said.
"I suspect it will be mostly squirrels or other such animals,
possibly foxes." A command center inside the security operation
building, originally designed for storage of low level nuclear
waste before shipping is somewhere, monitors and screens any
movement detected to determine the nature of it.
The building features such electronic devices like a piece of
equipment right out of a sci-fi film that identifies authorized
personnel when they place the palm of a hand on it. Also inside
is an emergency communications area. The concrete structure
itself is actually a building within a building, affording added
security, Operations Director Bill Odell said. He told media
people there is one floor of the building which has nothing in it
except surveillance equipment monitoring the entire ISFSI.
Although mostly empty Friday, Odell said the building will be
ready for operations within two weeks.
Double security metal fencing is attached to the building and
circles the entire area where the 28 inches thick, 17 feet high
casks with steel liners will house the metal canisters, each of
which contain many spent fuel rods. Between the two fences is a
stip of pavement known as the isolation zone. "No one is supposed
to be there," Odell said. The outer fence is known as the
"nuisance fence" and the inner fence will have surveillance
equipment in use on it, according to Odell.
There are four rows of concrete pads on which four of the 64 will
rest on each one. This month Maine Yankee will begin removal of
the GTCC waste material from the spent fuel, place the cannister
in casks designing for transporting them and lifted via crane
aboard a specially-designed truck made to travel at very low
speeds, according to Odell.
As for the spent fuel, which will occupy most of the dry casks,
Odell said that transfer will begin in late August. The entire
project of transferring of all the radioactive waste from the
spent fuel pool will take about 18 months, according to him.
Manufacture of the casks is done on site and takes about a week
for two casks, according to Plante. He explained that the casks
have inlet vents at the bottom of the casks and outlet vents at
the top. The design of the casks provides for a passive air
cooling system between the steel liners and concrete. Air enters
through the bottom vents and rises through the top where it is
monitored for temperature.
Each of the steel canisters contains helium, instead of air, to
eliminate the possibility of a reaction with oxygen. Helium makes
a suitable gas for the canister since it is inert, according to
Plante. "If oxygen were in there, there could be a reaction with
the fuel pins and pellets," he said. "There are a lot of unknowns
with that."
Odell reported that to date, Maine Yankee has removed 32 million
pounds of waste representing only 14 percent of the total that
has to be removed, mostly non-radioactive material. Low level
radioactive material goes to Barnwell, S.C. where is it buried in
a shallow disposal area. That is where the reactor vessel will be
transported via barge later this year, thanks to water levels
increase enough to now make it possible, according to officials.
While construction continues at the ISFSI, Maine Yankee is moving
ahead with its $508 million decommissioning process, which is
supposed to be nearly 50 percent complete, based on benchmarks
the company uses to determine the progress. Target date for total
completion is the fall of 2004, according to Odell.
Lincoln County News Editor@LCNews.Maine.Com Lincoln County News
PO Box 36, Damariscotta, ME 04543 Tel: 207.563.3171
http://lcnews.maine.com/2001-07-05/maine_yankee.html rev
2001-07-05
*****************************************************************
11 Is the Nuke paying off?
Austin American Statesman
Wednesday, July 4
By Leah Quin
American-Statesman Staff
Wednesday, July 4, 2001
Depending on your politics and tenure in Austin, an item in the
shiny flier folded inside this month's utility bill could prompt
a raised eyebrow, a guffaw or a satisfied nod. At the very least,
the headline -- "Nuke Big Money Saver" -- deserves a double take.
The Nuke? The $5.9 billion South Texas Project that cost sixfold
its original price, took eight years longer to build than
promised and was shut down half the time during its first few
years of operation?
The one that prompted five major lawsuits, federal
investigations, protesters on the steps of City Hall, comparisons
to Vietnam and a final price tag that still eats up 35 percent of
every bill mailed out by Austin Energy?
Yes, that Nuke. Thirty years after the twin-reactor plant was
conceived as a means to get cheap, reliable electricity in an age
of rising natural gas and coal prices, the South Texas Project
may finally be living up to that oft-broken pledge.
In the flier, Austin Energy is claiming that the Nuke has saved
customers $5 million over the past year.
"From a fuel standpoint, it's always been the cheapest," said
Andy Ramirez, vice president of power production for Austin
Energy.
That much is undisputed. The Nuclear Energy Institute estimates
that one 7-gram uranium pellet contains as much energy as 3 1/2
barrels of oil, 21,200 cubic feet of natural gas or a ton of
coal.
But utility officials refused this week to release the Nuke's
annual debt payments and operating costs, citing a need to keep
the data private as the state prepares to open many of its energy
markets next year. So, it's difficult to answer the question: Is
the Nuke really saving us money?
Nationwide, nuclear energy is enjoying a public relations boost
not seen since the days before the Three Mile Island partial
meltdown in 1979.
Natural gas prices soared exponentially in the past year and were
followed by rising coal costs and blackouts across California.
Meanwhile, nuclear projects have reduced accident rates and
shutdowns, and they now provide 20 percent of the country's
electricity.
On the Texas coast, the Nuke is quietly churning out electricity
for cities across the lower half of the state without the
horrendous headlines that marked its construction and startup.
Since 1994, it has improved its up-and-running time to 90
percent, according to the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
which has also given the South Texas Project high marks for
safety.
Skeptics say they're still not comfortable with the potential for
environmental hazards, particularly the nagging question of where
to put radioactive waste. And without the numbers behind Austin
Energy's claim, there's no way to make sure its $5
million-in-savings figure is accurate. "I hope that flier's
right, but if it is, well, that's one beneficial year out of 25
or more," said Shudde Fath, a veteran member of the citizen
Electric Utility Commission and a longtime Nuke opponent. "It's
kind of a joke."
Cheap power
Indeed, much of Austin's history with the South Texas Project
reads like a comedy of errors.
In 1973, Austin voters -- drawn by a slogan of electricity "too
cheap to meter" and scared by a near citywide blackout because of
a lack of natural gas -- narrowly decided to invest in a nuclear
plant co-owned by utilities in Houston, San Antonio and Corpus
Christi.
For its 16 percent share, voters authorized the city to borrow up
to $161 million to pay for the estimated $964 million plant,
consisting of two reactors that would open in 1980 and 1981.
Five years later, the openings were pushed back a year, and the
final price had doubled to $2 billion. In 1979, just days after
the Three Mile Island accident, voters approved spending $215
million more on the South Texas Project, thanks in part to a
pro-Nuke media blitz by then-Mayor Carole McClellan (now state
Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander).
But delays and overruns continued, as did other bad news items
ranging from the appalling to the bizarre, detailed in
American-Statesman stories from 1979 to 1996: "FBI investigates
Nuke complaints," "Nuke inspectors fired for taking pep pills,"
"Tales of buried Nuke worker denied," "Weekly Nuke cost put at
$2.1 million," "Austin's bill tops $1 billion mark."
That bill didn't include the city's legal fees. Between 1978 and
1996, Austin was embroiled in five major lawsuits over the Nuke,
including two against Houston Lighting &Power, the plant's
managing partner.
The final suit, filed after the reactors lay idle for more than a
year in the early '90s, was settled during trial in Houston in
1996. Austin got $20 million from HL, plus a promise that the
Houston utility would step down as manager. Since 1997, the Nuke
has been run by the STP Nuclear Operating Co., a nonprofit
founded by all four owners.
Technically, Austin's share of the plant has been up for sale
since 1988, when a jubilant City Council voted unanimously to get
rid of it. Despite ads in the Wall Street Journal, the city got
no serious offers -- nor would it accept them now, utility
officials said.
"There are no plans to sell it," said Bob Kahn, a lawyer for
Austin Energy. "The Nuke's a good deal right now."
In debt till 2025
Austin Energy's premier watchdog says that won't last long, given
the volatility of the gas market -- nor is $5 million that
impressive, given last year's annual budgeted revenue of more
than $769 million.
"Even if you grant them all these charitable assumptions, $5
million out of $700 million -- I mean, big deal," said
environmental activist Paul Robbins. Actually, a straight fuel
comparison -- uranium to gas -- yields an annual savings of $146
million, according to the flier.
The rub is the construction bill, a debt Austinites won't finish
paying off until 2025. Until last year, when natural gas prices
shot into orbit, that debt easily eclipsed any fuel savings.
But right now, the fuel difference is extreme: Austin Energy
officials calculate that the same amount of energy would cost $5
in gas or 50 cents in uranium, Ramirez said.
So the Nuke, which supplies a third of the city's year-round
power needs, is economical for once, he said.
Apart from the savings claim, others point to specific
improvements in the past few years as the South Texas Project
became Austin's energy source of first resort.
"It's not that it was unsafe," said Bill Cottle, the Nuke's CEO
since 1993. "There just wasn't very good cooperation between
departments, and the plant wasn't reliable."
Since 1994, the Nuke has reduced a maintenance backlog from 3,000
items to 300, Cottle said. The time it takes to refuel and
maintain the reactors every 18 months -- which takes one or the
other out of commission -- has shrunk from three months to three
weeks.
Officially, all nuclear plants have lifespans of 30 to 40 years,
but a handful have received 20-year extensions after creating
schedules for replacing aging parts, said Breck Henderson,
spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's region west of
the Mississippi River. Some cities are considering adding
reactors to existing plants, he said.
More troublesome is radioactive waste disposal.
Two possibilities, Nevada's Yucca Mountain -- on which $4 billion
to $5 billion has already been spent -- and a request by a Utah
Indian tribe to store waste on their reservation, are bitterly
opposed by their respective states.
With such clouds on the horizon, "Nuke Big Money Saver" may be
the plant's brief moment in the sun -- particularly if gas prices
settle down further. But Ramirez predicts that the plant will
consistently be economical as the debt spirals to a close in the
next quarter-century.
"Once that debt stream is gone, we'll have a powerful unit online
that no one will be able to touch for cost-effectiveness," he
said.
You may contact Leah Quin at lquin@statesman.com or 445-3621.
*****************************************************************
12 Operator of nuclear plants in settlement with Delaware
Thursday, July 5, 2001
The operator of three nuclear power plants in South Jersey has
agreed to give Delaware $8 million to protect fisheries and other
Delaware River habitats.
Fish, plants, and other aquatic life are sucked up with the 3
billion gallons of river water used each day to cool the Salem
plants.
The settlement satisfied Delaware's objections to conditions in
a renewed water-discharge permit for the plants and is similar to
an earlier five-year agreement signed in 1995.
"The fish lost at Salem don't belong to the state of New Jersey
alone," said Roy Miller, fisheries manager for Delaware's
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control
(DNREC). "They're our fish along with everyone else's fish."
PSEG Nuclear LLC agreed to pay $5.7 million for aquatic habitat
restoration, construction of additional artificial reefs in the
bay, monitoring of fish species, and other programs.
The company will spend $2.3 million more to monitor and maintain
fish ladders, which give migratory river herring access to other
spawning habitats, and to build two additional ladders.
The money also will help control phragmites weeds in southern
New Castle County, Del.
PSEG agreed to nominate two representatives from DNREC to serve
on the Estuary Enhancement Oversight Committee, which advises
PSEG on natural resource and biological monitoring programs.
"We worked very hard to meet all the conditions of the existing
permit, and we think the settlement is a reasonable resolution,"
company spokesman Neil Brown said.
The utility has three 1,100-megawatt plants at its complex along
the Delaware River in Lower Alloways Creek Township, about 35
miles south of Philadelphia across the river from Port Penn, Del.
The reactors, which employ about 1,800 people, supply power to
parts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland.
In 1994, Delaware objected to conditions that New Jersey
proposed for an operating permit for the plants. The conditions
called for some environmental monitoring and enhancement
programs.
Delaware threatened to sue, and PSEG settled for a little more
than $10.5 million.
Copyright © 2001 North Jersey Media Group Inc.
*****************************************************************
13 BNFL Reports Huge Losses
The Whitehaven News
Thursday, July 05, 2001
BNFL says it must improve performan-ces in order to protect jobs
- following another huge operating loss of £210 million.
Sellafield only managed to break even last year on what should be
its biggest earner - fuel reprocessing.
BNFL's anxiety to get its expensive Sellafield Mox plant in to
production and safeguard Cumbrian jobs comes over loud and clear
in an annual financial report. The government has to give the
go-ahead before production can start.
Reprocessing from Thorp and Magnox is part of BNFL's spent fuel
management and business engineering group. The latter, according
to the company, "produced a significantly worst financial
performance in comparison to the previous record output year".
Low throughputs in the Thorp and Magnox plants, caused by
"technical difficulties" which halted reprocessing, are being
blamed.
New chairman Hugh Collum said there has been significant success
in rebuilding customer confidence, following the Mox fuel data
falsifications.
However, chief executive Norman Askew said: "We are determined to
keep raising our game.
"I am pleased we have made substantial pro-gress but we cannot
afford to become complacent about the challenges that lie ahead.
"BNFL has an important strategic role to play in the UK energy
market and we are determined to turn the business around as
swiftly as possible.
"A good start has been made.
"The company is also a major employer and many thousands of jobs
depend on its success.
"This is particularly true of Cumbria and is another important
reason why agreement to open the new Mox plant at Sellafield is
vital."
BNFL made an overall pre-tax loss of £66 million (£46m net).
Although the actual operating loss amounted to a massive £210m
before tax and "exceptionals" (one-off payments on the debit
side), most of this - £199m - came from the shutdown of Wylfa,
the company's biggest nuclear power station.
Only £3 million profit was achieved in the spent fuel
(reprocessing group) on a turnover of £549m - a £50m drop.
BNFL has recorded a good performance in its fuel manufacture
business as well as much improvement in decommissioning and
nuclear clean-up work.
But Mr Collum warn-ed: "Although there has been a significant
im-provement in operating performance in some parts of the
business there are areas where performance was unacceptable."
He describes the longer-term picture for the global nuclear
industry as being brighter.
"In the short term, as we build on more robust foundations we
must continue to improve our operating performance and agree the
way forward," he said.
*****************************************************************
14 Law Allows Pacts on A-Plant Taxes
July 4, 2001
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALBANY, July 3 — Gov. George E. Pataki signed legislation today
allowing local governments to make long-term payment deals with
the new owners of nuclear power plants in the state.
The law lets the local entities collect payments in lieu of taxes
negotiated with the new owners of power plants. The payment
arrangements can last 10 to 15 years.
"It is just a tool," said the chief sponsor of the legislation in
the State Assembly, Sandra Galef, Democrat of Westchester County.
"They don't have to do it."
Ms. Galef's district includes the three nuclear power plants at
Indian Point. The New York Power Authority has sold its Indian
Point 3 reactor to Entergy, which is also buying the other
reactors from Consolidated Edison.
The local taxing entities around the plant have sought to
establish payments in lieu of taxes with Entergy rather than
charge property taxes based on the assessed value of the
properties.
In recent years, utilities and industries in New York have won
cases challenging the assessments as too high.
The alternative payments would be advantageous for nuclear plant
owners because they will almost certainly make agreements to pay
less than under an assessment process, Ms. Galef said. Local
governments benefit because the payments mean stable and
predictable revenue, she said.
Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
*****************************************************************
15 BNFL Cover-Up Alleged Over Thorp Fuel Incident
The Whitehaven News
Thursday, July 05, 2001
A Sellafield "whistleblower" has claimed that BNFL tried to cover
up an incident involving a highly radioactive fuel element in
Thorp.
The worker, who regularly gives tips to the anti-nuclear group
CORE about Sellafield incidents, has made another allegation that
the fuel element was left dangling from a machine in Thorp's fuel
handling plant.
Says the mystery source, in a letter to CORE: "The machine
collided with a fuel container, causing it to lift from its
tracks, while the fuel element was bent against the container
taking the weight of the machine.
"This operation was supposed to be under managerial and operator
supervision at the time of the incident. It shows that BNFL are
still operating carelessly even though there is a 'new' safety
regime in place and management are attempting to keep quiet any
thing that happens in the interest of getting back business."
Martin Forwood, for CORE - Cumbrians Opposed to a Radioactive
Environment - said BNFL had failed to report the incident in the
weekly (public) Sellafield Newsletter or at last week's
Sellafield Local Liaison Committee meeting.
Mr Forwood has written to Sellafield's chief Brian Watson asking
for an explanation and that the incident will not be repeated.
Sellafield spokeswoman Tracey Riley said: "There was an incident
but nothing like it has been made out. The fuel element was
travelling along, tilted and caught the fuel removal machine,
jamming the process. The machine was not derailed and neither was
the fuel rod trapped or bent.
"The rod was not damaged and a few days later it was chopped up
ready for reprocessing.
"There was appropriate managerial supervision at all times."
The Nuclear Installations Inspectorate was informed but the
incident was not serious enough to be reported publicly as any
event with radiological implications.
*****************************************************************
16 Political Fight Heats Up Over MOX
The Whitehaven News
Thursday, July 05, 2001
Copeland's MP Jack Cunningham has been accused by local Tories of
trying to make them scapegoats if the Government gives the thumbs
down to Sellafield's Mox plant which holds the key to thousands
of local jobs.
Tory councillors are incensed by a "venomous" claim by Dr
Cunningham that Copeland Conservatives had shunned the recent
public consultations over whether or not Sellafield's £460
million Mox production plant should get the go ahead after a
four-year wait.
The MP alleged: "A list of respondents to the fourth round of
public consultations has revealed that Copeland's Conservative
representatives failed to express their support for BNFL in its
efforts to get the go ahead for the plant from government - they
are sending out extremely worrying signals regarding BNFL,
Sellafield and the nuclear industry."
He also claimed that "no Copeland Conservatives wrote in support
of the Mox plant" during the crucial consultations.
One of Copeland's leading Tories, David Moore, dismissed the
claims as untrue.
"We have always supported Mox. It could be that Jack is looking
for scapegoats, people to blame if things go pear shaped.
"All his own efforts appear to have been fruitless so far."
Mike Graham, Copeland's Tory candidate in the last General
Election, said Dr Cunningham had made a dreadful mistake.
"We were part of Copeland Council's formal response to the latest
consultations and separately wrote in support of Mox to Claire
Herdman, the government official dealing with the
representations. She confirms that our letter was received.
"This is the latest in a series of venomous press releases from
Dr Cunningham.
"He is putting up verbal smokescreens and shouldn't be playing
politics with people's jobs. I have no idea why.
"I do know that our community has great expectations of Mox but
some people are worried over whether or not the plant will
actually get licensed.
David Moore, chairman of the Sellafield Local Liaison Committee,
said: "We have always supported Mox because we know how
absolutely vital it is. I have also made representations, both as
a parish and district councillor. At Copeland Council's meeting
last week I succeeded in getting the council to agree to send a
letter expressing our concerns about the latest delay."
Coun Moore revealed that BNFL was in "a very precarious position"
with customers over two of the Mox contracts.
"The longer this thing drifts away the more likely it is that
BNFL will lose out to its main competitor, the French.
He warned: "There is a real danger if the plant is not licensed
very soon that orders will start to disappear and blow a hole in
the financial case.
"This plant is not just vital to BNFL but to the whole of the
area because we are talking about thousands of jobs at stake."
nJack Cunningham said he was hoping to get new energy minister
Brian Wilson to have an inspection of the Mox plant shortly. "I
will continue to do everything in my power to ensure it is given
the green light."
*****************************************************************
17 Your Views: More on trust of government - Susan Arnold Kaplan
Story last updated at 11:34 a.m. on Thursday, July 5, 2001
More on trust of government
To The Oak Ridger:
In a previous letter, I discussed reasons for the public's
distrust of the government and other large bureaucracies. Here I
will continue the discussion of government and organizational
ethics that are the source of the distrust, and will discuss why
public oversight is so important to maintaining ethics, which are
necessary for trust.
Is it naïve to believe that ethics apply even when money is
involved, that lying is wrong, and that governments and
corporations need to be overseen by independent parties who
cannot be controlled by threats of loss of funding?
Perhaps it is, and maybe I learned the simplistic childhood
lesson of "The Golden Rule" a little too well for my own good.
While I do realize that nothing is black or white, but rather
many different shades of gray, I strongly believe an individual's
goal is to try to stay as light gray as possible.
I also believe it is our job as members of a democracy to
challenge authority -- even the government's -- despite the risk
of economic sanctions from those being challenged (or from others
who are susceptible to pressure from them as well).
It is important to realize that government agencies and other
bureaucratic organizations hate to fund watchdog organizations
such as the Oak Ridge Reservation Local Oversight Committee,
which they view as making trouble for them.
For those oversight groups that are funded, the organizations
being overseen desperately try to keep them under control with
threats of loss of funding, which are generally quite effective
since other sources of oversight funding are practically
non-existent.
As a result, many oversight efforts are extremely ineffective
and often become rubber stamp groups simply doing an agency's
bidding.
Shying away from asking the difficult questions is a
characteristic of ineffective oversight groups who are afraid of
retribution.
Regarding how to regain public trust, the government must allow
members of the public to oversee them and to ask the hard
questions without invoking economic sanctions and other penalties
against them.
It must provide effective whistleblower protections for workers
who speak out about problems.
In addition, employees in a government agency must strive to
enable the public to obtain what it needs (and certainly not
obstruct their obtaining it), even if it is not in that
particular agency's best interest regarding funding and
maintaining full-time equivalents.
Finally, the government must truthfully answer our questions and
provide the data we request, and perhaps even some information
not requested -- despite being counseled not to by their lawyers.
Only by doing these things will the government (and government
employees) ever regain the public's trust.
Unfortunately, trust reconstruction is going to be much, much
harder than the incredibly difficult task of dose reconstruction.
Susan Arnold Kaplan Knoxville
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
*****************************************************************
18 NRC to Meet with FirstEnergy Company to Discuss Safety
Performance at the Perry Nuclear Plant
Region III -- 2001 - 034 --
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, REGION III
801 Warrenville Road, Lisle IL 60532
No. III-01-034 July 5, 2001
CONTACT: Jan Strasma (630)829-9663/e-mail: rjs2@nrc.gov
Pam Alloway-Mueller (630)829-9662/e-mail: pla@nrc.gov
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will meet with FirstEnergy
Nuclear Operating Company officials July 11 to discuss the NRC's
annual assessment of safety performance at the Perry Nuclear
Power Plant in Perry, Ohio.
The meeting will begin at 10 a.m. EDT and will be held at the
plant's Training and Emergency Center, 10 Center Road, Perry. The
public is invited to observe the session. NRC officials will be
available afterwards to answer questions.
The annual assessment, referred to as the End-of-Cycle
assessment, evaluates safety performance at the Perry plant from
April 2000 through March 2001, and informs plant officials of the
NRC's plans for future inspections at the facility.
The Perry assessment letter and inspection report are available
at http://www.nrc.gov/OPA/ppror from the Region III Public
Affairs Office. Current performance information for the plant is
available at http://www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/index.html.
*****************************************************************
19 Revival of nuclear power faces several hurdles
ContraCostaTimes.com
Published Wednesday, July 4, 2001
+ Lowering the cost of generating capacity and finding a safe
place to store radioactive waste are important factors
By Matthew L. Wald
NEW YORK TIMES
WASHINGTON -- To provide more electricity and less carbon
emission, the Bush administration has revived talk of nuclear
power, with top officials discussing the possibility of hundreds
of new reactors.
But it has been nearly 30 years since the last plant was ordered
in the United States, and whatever policy-makers say, ending that
drought will depend largely on three numbers, industry experts
contend: natural gas at about $5 per million Btu, capital
expenses of $1,000 per kilowatt of generating capacity, and
ability to store 77,000 tons of radioactive waste. There is
substantial doubt that any of those numbers is realistic.
The last item, waste storage, has received new attention as the
Energy Department tries to finish its determination of whether
Yucca Mountain, about 90 miles from Las Vegas, is suitable for a
long-term repository. And the change of power in the Senate
brings a fierce Yucca opponent, Harry Reid, D-Nev., to the
position of deputy majority leader.
But whether Yucca can be built and can accept 77,000 tons of
waste -- the amount it is supposed to accept in coming years --
is not the only prerequisite for the industry to get started
again.
"Yucca is a necessary, but insufficient, condition," said David
Morris, a Minneapolis electricity expert who does not favor
nuclear power. He and others, including people who do want new
reactors, say the industry needs a licensing system that will not
subject them to the last-minute problems that increased costs on
the current batch of reactors. But most of all, they say, it
needs plants that are far cheaper to build than even the
optimistic current estimates.
A permanent increase in the price of natural gas would be nice
too, along with a consensus that the other competing fuel, coal,
is too dangerous for the global climate.
For the nuclear industry, the problem most under its control is
the price of a reactor. The people who want to sell reactors do
not yet have an acceptable new design on the market but say they
can develop one to compete with natural gas.
The Nuclear Energy Institute, the industry trade association,
figures that reactors would have to sell for no more than $1,000
for each kilowatt of generating capacity -- an industry measure.
(A kilowatt is the amount required to keep 10 100-watt bulbs
lighted; a kilowatt-hour, the typical unit on a homeowner's bill,
would keep those bulbs lighted for an hour.)
That $1,000 is substantially higher than the cost of natural gas
plants, which make up about 90 percent of the power plants built
in the last five years and which sell for $500 or $600 per
kilowatt of capacity.
But reactors are less costly to run, because uranium is cheap,
while a million Btu of gas -- enough to generate about 170
kilowatt-hours in the most efficient plant -- will sell for $4 to
$5 over the next few years, the nuclear industry believes. In
briefings for Wall Street analysts, the trade group has said that
reactors at $1,000 a kilowatt produce electricity more cheaply
than gas plants when gas hits $5. Westinghouse says the figure is
$4.
Not counting some sharp spikes in California lately, gas has
been in the $4 range lately, double what it was two years ago,
and has sometimes topped $5. But some people doubt that it could
say so high for long.
Among them is William T. McCormick Jr., chairman and chief
executive of CMS Energy Corp., which operates the Palisades
nuclear plant in Michigan, and runs an extensive system of
natural gas pipeline and distribution companies. CMS owns the
largest terminal in North America for unloading ships that carry
liquefied natural gas from abroad, in Lake Charles, La., which it
is doubling in size; it is also trying to build additional
terminals in Mexico.
If the price stays at $5, "on a long-term basis, you can find an
awful lot of gas," he said in an interview. And if drillers find
a lot of gas, he added, the price will come back down. "And you
can find LNG at a little over $3."
Indonesia, Australia, and countries in the Persian Gulf and on
the west coast of Africa will all drill, liquefy and export for
that price, he said, and their supplies are vast.
And is it possible to build a reactor for $1,000 a kilowatt?
Some of the 103 reactors now in service cost more than triple
that -- even more in today's dollars. But proponents are counting
on more efficient building techniques and lower interest costs.
Westinghouse Electric spent much of the 1990s designing a
reactor that would be easier to build and operate, with fewer
moving parts, and more parts that could be assembled at a factory
instead of in the field, cutting construction costs and problems
of quality. The plant, called the AP-600 -- for advanced passive,
600 megawatts -- would have cost $1,400 to $1,500, the company
said, but the real number is uncertain because nobody ordered
one.
Similarly, General Electric designed an Advanced Boiling Water
Reactor that it said would sell for $1,400 to $1,600, "depending
on the host country," but nobody in the United States ordered one
of those, either.
Now Westinghouse is redesigning the AP-600 as a 1,000-megawatt
plant. That increase in capacity, it says, will raise capital
costs only 10 percent, bringing the capital cost per kilowatt
down to $1,000. But that cost, Westinghouse says, can be brought
so low only after builders get practice in putting plants up
efficiently.
"We're quite comfortable in competing with both gas and coal,"
said Charles W. Pryor, chief executive of Westinghouse Electric
-- now a subsidiary of BNFL, the former British Nuclear Fuels.
The plants would largely be built in factories, to cut costs and
quality problems; legal questions would be settled before
construction started, he said. In fact, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission has already reformed its licensing process, although
no one has tested it yet.
"We've learned a lot," Pryor said.
There is some belief that not all the energy eggs should go in
the natural gas basket. In Georgia, for example, the Public
Service Commission requires utility companies to regularly ask
for bids from outside companies to provide new plants; this year
the commission demanded that Georgia Power mention nuclear energy
and coal in its requests for proposals.
One idea, said Daniel R. Cearfoss, a staff engineer, is fuel
diversity. The commission would like to know how much extra it
would cost to hedge the state's energy bets by building plants
that would use uranium or coal. But Cearfoss said that he doubted
anyone would propose a nuclear plant, and that even if someone
did, the bid would be hard to evaluate, because there is no
modern track record for construction costs. The state uses a
computer program that asks for estimated fuel cost, construction
cost, refueling time, plant reliability and other items, and
spits out an estimate of the best mix of choices.
But at least for the first few orders, nuclear plants present a
problem beyond those of coal or natural gas. "It's how much
confidence you've got in that number," he said. Planners can plug
in a number, he said, but "it's garbage in, garbage out."
Georgia is often cited as a possible ice-breaker for nuclear
power; its twin-unit Vogle plant has space for four reactors, and
the betting among experts is that if another reactor is ordered,
it will go next to an existing one.
At Southern Co., which owns Georgia Power, along with Alabama
Power, Mississippi Power and Gulf Power, and operates six
reactors, Laura Gillig, a spokeswoman, said, "Even though it is
going through some sort of renaissance, it still needs that
public support. And it does need to be competitive."
*****************************************************************
20 Nuclear fuel plant closes but waste remains
Augusta Georgia: Technology:
Web posted Wednesday, July 4, 2001
By Tim Rowden and William Allen
St. Louis Post-Dispatch/Scripps Howard News Service
A Missouri facility that produced fuel rods for the nation's
nuclear reactors for decades closed down last week, but its
legacy of radioactive waste could trouble its neighbors for
decades to come.
State and federal officials are concerned about possible health
and environmental threats posed by the Westinghouse Electric
Co.'s nuclear fuel processing plant in Hematite, Mo.
At the core of their worries is a mystery surrounding a
radioactive contaminant known as technetium-99, whose origins at
the site remain unknown.
The plant, located about 35 miles south of St. Louis, ceased
operations Friday. Workers there made nuclear fuel-rod assemblies
for commercial power plants and the military starting in the
1950s.
Westinghouse spokesman Vaughn Gilbert said the company was
consolidating its production at the company's plant in Columbia,
S.C., in response to overcapacity in the industry.
As part of decommissioning the plant, Westinghouse will work
with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to identify and deal with
radioactive materials and byproducts left behind from more than
four decades of operations. Officials said the cleanup is
expected to cost several million dollars and could take five to
six years.
State and federal regulators say tests on the plant's monitoring
wells in the early 1990s detected a low-level presence of
technetium-99, a fission product occurring in uranium that has
been irradiated. Subsequent tests on drinking water wells around
the plant show no contamination.
To understand how technetium might have gotten to Hematite, it's
important to understand a bit about the steps in the uranium fuel
cycle.
Put simply, uranium is mined, milled, converted chemically,
enriched and fabricated into fuel rods. The fabrication step is
where Hematite fit in.
After fabrication, the rods are used in a nuclear reactor. The
fission reaction in the reactor produces traces of technetium,
plutonium and other highly radioactive materials.
When the uranium fuel is spent, the radioactive waste left over
is disposed of. During part of the Cold War, the U.S. government
often reprocessed - or recycled - the spent fuel and used it
again.
The technetium apparently came to Hematite from Paducah, Ky.,
where the federal government ran a program to recover uranium and
other materials from spent nuclear reactor fuel. The aim of the
program was to reuse the recycled materials in reactors, weapons
and tank armor.
This unanswered question remains: How did the technetium get to
Hematite? Missouri officials didn't learn about the presence of
technetium until decades after it was released at Hematite.
In 1996 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission notified the Missouri
Department of Natural Resources that technetium had been found in
test wells at Hematite. The NRC said a private contractor working
for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency had found it five
years earlier.
The delayed notification was shocking enough to state officials.
Even more shocking was the fact that technetium isn't supposed to
be present in Missouri soil or water, said Ron Kucera, deputy
director of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.
''There was considerable folly in what happened down there,'' he
said. ''We tried to reconstruct the history of how this got into
Missouri ground water.''
State investigators analyzed public and private drinking water
wells in the area and found that technetium had not moved into
those wells.
The NRC told the state that the technetium came from
contaminated equipment or containers from the U.S. Department of
Energy uranium reprocessing facility in Paducah. It also could
have come from contaminated enriched uranium itself, the
commission said.
That was significant because the Paducah facility was part of
the nation's nuclear weapons complex. It also meant the Energy
Department bears some responsibility for cleanup of the Hematite
site, at least in the eyes of Missouri officials.
Energy Department records showed that thousands of pounds of the
enriched uranium had been shipped to Hematite in the 1950s, '60s
and '70s.
Federal officials speculate that the technetium contaminated the
soil at the plant when workers washed off cylinders that had
contained uranium. The NRC allowed the Hematite workers to
dispose of waste in a way that could affect the ground water,
officials say.
Records showed that the technetium levels in test wells at
Hematite violated federal drinking water standards.
Missouri wants the characteristics of the waste pits and the
rest of the site determined in detail. That would ''tell us what
all the radiation and hazardous waste risk is out there so we can
determine what to clean up and how and when, as well as to
establish adequate long-term monitoring,'' Kucera said. ''It
gives you a glimpse into a page of history on the nuclear weapons
complex,'' he said.
Westinghouse officials say the Hematite property is safe, and
they are committed to cleaning up the site.
All contents ©1996 - 2001 The Augusta Chronicle. All rights
*****************************************************************
21 Protesters march against radioactive waste discharge into the
Tamar
BBC Online - Devon - News -
Wednesday 4th July 2001
Campaigners say that the nuclear discharges could pose a threat
to public health and to the environment
Around 150 protesters marched across the Tamar Bridge today in a
battle against plans to increase nuclear discharges into the
River Tamar.
Traffic was brought to a standstill by the residents and
environmental campaigners who are opposed to a new refit
programme for nuclear submarines at Devonport Dockyard.
The marchers make their point as they cross the Tamar Bridge
The protesters were marking the final day for public consultation
over plans by DML to increase the amount of tritium discharged
into the river.
DML plans to increase the discharge of tritium by five-fold to
re-fit the new generation of nuclear submarines at the Plymouth
dockyard. Tritium is highly radioactive. It is said to occur
naturally in water.
Health officials say that the plans would pose little threat to
public health. But this afternoon, the protesters handed in a
5,000-signature petition to the Environment Agency, calling for a
public inquiry.
Devonport is base to several of the Royal Navy's fleet of
submarines
One of the campaigners, Ian Avent, said that if there was any
element of doubt concerning safety, then the agency should air on
the side of caution.
DML said that the firm had taken part in the consultation process
and was now awaiting the agency's decision.
The agency says that could take some months. Meanwhile, it has
promised to give the petition to the Secretary of State
responsible.
*****************************************************************
22 EPA rule for Yucca Mountain faces two lawsuits -
7/3/2001 - ENN.com
Tuesday, July 03, 2001 By Environmental News Network
Diagram of tunnels within Yucca Mountain where radioactive waste
would be stored.
The state of Nevada Nuclear Projects Agency and a coalition of
national and Nevada-based environmental and public interest
groups filed separate lawsuits June 27, challenging the new
radiation protection standards for the proposed Yucca Mountain
nuclear waste repository.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's radiation protection
rule, which takes effect July 13, sets the standards by which the
site's suitability to contain radioactive waste will be
determined. At issue is where the standards will apply and for
how long.
The petitions for judicial review were filed in the 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals in San Francisco, by the state agency and the
Citizen Action Coalition of Indiana, Citizen Alert, Natural
Resources Defense Council, Nevada Nuclear Waste Task Force,
Nevada Desert Experience, Nuclear Information and Resource
Service, and Public Citizen.
They allege that the EPA was wrong to set radiation protection
standards for Yucca Mountain that last for only 10,000 years. The
standards should be set for hundreds of thousands of years
because the waste will be radioactive for at least that long, the
plaintiffs claim.
Department of Energy scientists have estimated that peak
emissions of radiation can be expected up to 800,000 years into
the future.
John Hadder, northern Nevada coordinator with plaintiff group
Citizen Alert, said, "This undermines the purpose of radiation
protection standards, by presuming that a repository at Yucca
Mountain will not contain nuclear waste throughout the thousands
of years it remains dangerous."
Another source of contention is the 11 mile radius from the site
where a dose of no more than 15 millirems per year is mandated.
The 11 mile radius allows repository designs "to rely on dilution
and dispersion rather than containment of radioactive waste," the
groups said.
They don't want the repository in Nevada at all, but as standards
are set, the radius of containment should be much smaller, they
believe.
"Exposure limits are built around expected levels of radioactive
contamination leaking from the dump, thus establishing a
regulatory framework for legalized nuclear pollution in Nevada,"
Hadder said.
In the state's lawsuit, executive director of the Nevada Agency
for Nuclear Projects Robert Loux, says the EPA's standards fail
to satisfy the agency's duty to protect the health and safety of
the people of Nevada from releases from radioactive materials
stored or disposed of at the Yucca Mountain repository.
Loux said the rule ignores Nevada's advice to the EPA that people
may one day live much closer to Yucca Mountain than they do now.
"It is not reasonable to assume that for even hundreds of years
into the future that people will continue to live only where
people live today," the suit says.
Loux's suit complains that EPA language expressing the "intent of
isolating it [radioactive waste] for as long as reasonably
possible" in the Yucca Mountain Rule "is arbitrary and capricious
and violates the letter and intent of the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act to the detriment of public health and safety."
Yucca Mountain is the only site under consideration by the
Department of Energy as a potential repository for high-level
nuclear waste from weapons facilities and commercial nuclear
power plants across the country. The waste is now stored on-site
at these facilities.
If the Yucca Mountain repository is built, the hot waste would be
transported by road and rail to Nevada. Nevada Congresswoman
Shelley Berkley, a Democrat, has begun a campaign to learn the
exact routes by which nuclear waste would travel on its way to
Yucca Mountain.
"We have advocated a protective standard at all stages of the
process leading up to this rule being finalized. We are now
bringing this issue before the courts because our concerns have
not been addressed," said David Adelman, senior attorney with the
plaintiff Natural Resources Defense Council. "We cannot accept a
rule that sets artificially weak standards to allow a
fundamentally flawed project to move forward," he said.
Meanwhile, the EPA's national ombudsman, an independent
investigator within the agency, began an inquiry June 25 into the
scientific basis for the EPA's Yucca Mountain radiation health
standards.
Nevada Governor Kenny Guinn is opposed to the location of the
repository in Nevada as are most state elected officials. In
April, the governor said a new report by the U.S. Inspector
General's office showed evidence that the process to find a
scientifically suitable site for the storage of high-level
nuclear waste has been tainted by bias targeting Yucca Mountain.
"The idea that political concerns could, in any way, affect a
process with such severe health and safety ramifications for the
people of Nevada is shocking and disheartening," Governor Guinn
said. "The only acceptable standards for the evaluation of
high-level nuclear waste storage are scientific."
Copyright 2001, Environmental News Network
*****************************************************************
23 NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Co. To Discuss Safety
Performance at the Dresden Nuclear Plant
Region III -- 2001 - 035 --
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, REGION III
801 Warrenville Road, Lisle IL 60532
No. III-01-035 July 5, 2001
CONTACT: Jan Strasma (630)829-9663/e-mail: rjs2@nrc.gov
Pam Alloway-Mueller (630)829-9662/e-mail: pla@nrc.gov
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will meet with Exelon
Generation Company officials July 11 to discuss the NRC's annual
assessment of safety performance at the Dresden Nuclear Station
near Morris, Illinois.
The meeting will begin at 1:30 p.m. CDT and will be held at the
plant's Training Center in rooms 101-103, 6500 N. Dresden Road
near Morris. The public is invited to observe the session. NRC
officials will be available afterwards to answer questions.
The annual assessment, referred to as the End-of-Cycle
assessment, evaluates safety performance at the Dresden plant
from April 2000 through March 2001, and informs plant officials
of the NRC's plans for future inspections at the facility.
The Dresden assessment letter and inspection report are available
at http://www.nrc.gov/OPA/ppr or from the Region III Public
Affairs Office. Current performance information for the plant is
available at http://www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/index.html.
*****************************************************************
24 Yakima nuclear plant back on line
The Spokesman-Review.com -
Wednesday, July 4, 2001
Energy crisis brings Columbia out of 15-year retirement
Linda Ashton - Associated Press
YAKIMA _ The Northwest's only nuclear power plant returned to
service Tuesday, 15 days behind schedule, at a time when the
West's electricity supplies have been taxed by drought, high
prices and high temperatures.
The 1,200-megawatt Columbia Generating Station should be at 100
percent power by midnight today, said Gary Miller, a spokesman
for Energy Northwest, which owns the plant on leased land at the
Hanford nuclear reservation.
Over the next year, the plant will provide about 10 percent of
the electricity in the hydropower-dependent Northwest.
Energy Northwest, a 13-utility consortium, had an ambitious
schedule to refuel the nuclear reactor for a 23-month operating
cycle in just 29 days and 22 hours.
It was to be the shortest refueling outage in the plant's 17-year
history while preparing it for the longest operating cycle --
almost two years.
But a number of problems, including an electrical storm that set
the schedule back a full day, stretched the outage two weeks past
its planned mid-June return to the power grid.
"It is with a heavy heart and disappointment that I tell you we
couldn't make the 29 days, 22 hours or Energy Northwest's
corporate vision ... for the shortest outage ever," John Dabney,
outage manager, said in a statement to employees.
"This has been a long, tough outage."
The Bonneville Power Administration -- a federal power marketing
agency that sells all of the plant's electricity along with
electricity from 29 federal dams on the Columbia-Snake river
system -- purchased replacement power in advance of the refueling
and maintenance outage.
The delayed outage "hasn't been catastrophic," said Mike Hansen,
a spokesman for the BPA in Portland.
But it was a factor in BPA's announcement last Friday that it
couldn't afford to spill water over federal dams this summer to
help young fish migrate to the Pacific Ocean, he said.
With the nuclear power plant down and near-record lows flows
forecast for rivers in the Columbia Basin, BPA said it needed
every drop of water for electricity generation or to store to
avoid rolling blackouts come winter.
Spills this summer would reduce the power system reliability to
an unacceptably low level, said Steven Wright, the agency's
acting administrator.
"We simply could not take that risk," Hansen said.
BPA also had to purchase some additional replacement power
because of the delay, but he could not say how much or what it
cost.
Columbia Generating Station disconnected from BPA's electrical
transmission grid on May 18, and had hoped to be back on line
June 18.
Efforts to return the plant to service last week were thwarted by
some mechanical problems, and discovering and fixing them takes
time as the plant is powered up and then back down for work,
Miller said.
*****************************************************************
25 NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Co. To Discuss Safety
Performance at the Braidwood Nuclear Power Plant
Region III -- 2001 - 036 --
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, REGION III
801 Warrenville Road, Lisle IL 60532
No. III-01-036 July 5, 2001
CONTACT: Jan Strasma (630)829-9663/e-mail: rjs2@nrc.gov
Pam Alloway-Mueller (630)829-9662/e-mail: pla@nrc.gov
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will meet with Exelon
Generation Co. officials July 12 to discuss the NRC's annual
assessment of safety performance at the Braidwood Nuclear Power
Plant near Braidwood, Illinois.
NRC to Meet with Exelon Generation Co. To Discuss Safety
Performance at the Braidwood Nuclear Power Plant
The meeting will begin at 1 p.m. CDT and will be held at the
plant's Training Building in Room 53, 35100 S. Route 53, near
Braidwood. The public is invited to observe the session. NRC
officials will be available after the meeting to answer
questions.
The annual assessment, referred to as the End-of-Cycle
assessment, evaluates safety performance at the Braidwood plant
from April 2000 through March 2001, and informs plant officials
of the NRC's plans for future inspections at the facility.
The Braidwood assessment letter and inspection report are
available at http://www.nrc.gov/OPA/ppror from the Region III
Public Affairs Office. Current performance information for the
plant is available at
http://www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/index.html.
*****************************************************************
26 NRC to Meet with Entergy Nuclear Northeast to Discuss Performance
at Indian Point 3 Nuclear Power Plant
Press Release - Region I - 2001- 46 -
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, REGION I
475 Allendale Road, King of Prussia, Pa. 19406
No. I-01-046 July 5, 2001
CONTACT: Diane Screnci (610)337-5330/ e-mail: dps@nrc.gov
Neil A. Sheehan (610)337-5331/e-mail: nas@nrc.gov
Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff will meet with
representatives of Entergy Nuclear Northeast on Wednesday, July
11, to discuss the results of the agency's annual assessment of
safety performance at the Indian Point 3 nuclear power plant.
The meeting, which will be open to the public for observation,
will begin at 1 p.m. in the Training Center at the plant, located
at Broadway and Bleakley Avenue in Buchanan, N.Y. NRC officials
will be available afterwards to informally answer questions from
meeting observers.
The performance period to be discussed is April 1, 2000, to March
31, 2001. Overall, the NRC found that the plant operated in a
manner that preserved public health and safety and fully met all
cornerstone objectives during the period. A letter sent from the
NRC Region I office to Entergy Nuclear Northeast addresses plant
performance during the period and will serve as the basis for the
meeting discussion. It is available on the NRC web site at:
www.nrc.gov/OPA/ppr/ip3_eoc2001.pdf.
Current performance information for Indian Point 3 is available
on the NRC web site at:
www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/IP3/ip3_chart.html.
*****************************************************************
27 NRC to Meet with FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Company to Discuss
Performance at Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Plant
Press Release - Region I - 2001-047 -
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, REGION I
475 Allendale Road, King of Prussia, Pa. 19406
No. I-01-047 July 5, 2001
CONTACT: Diane Screnci (610)337-5330/ e-mail: dps@nrc.gov
Neil A. Sheehan (610)337-5331/e-mail: nas@nrc.gov
Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff will meet with
representatives of FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Company on
Wednesday, July 11, to discuss the results of the agency's annual
assessment of safety performance at the Beaver Valley nuclear
power plant.
The meeting, which will be open to the public for observation,
will begin at 2 p.m. in Conference Room A of the Emergency
Response Facility at the plant, which is located in Shippingport,
Pa. NRC officials will be available afterwards to informally
answer questions from meeting observers.
The performance period to be discussed is April 1, 2000, to March
31, 2001. Overall, the NRC found that the twin-reactor plant
operated in a manner that preserved public health and safety and
fully met all cornerstone objectives during the period. A letter
sent from the NRC Region I office to FirstEnergy Nuclear
addresses plant performance during the period and will serve as
the basis for the meeting discussion. It is available on the NRC
web site at: www.nrc.gov/OPA/ppr/beaver_eoc2001.pdf
Current performance information for Beaver Valley Unit 1 is
available on the NRC web site at:
www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/BV1/bv1_chart.html
Information for Beaver Valley Unit 2 is available at:
www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/BV2/bv2_chart.html
*****************************************************************
*****************************************************************
NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARTICLES
*****************************************************************
1 Resource center for Nevada Test Site workers opens in Las Vegas
Today: July 05, 2001 at 15:50:33 PDT
LAS VEGAS (AP) - After years of being turned away, sick workers
from the Nevada Test Site now have a place to go to seek
assistance and file claims for government compensation.
Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., and officials from the Labor and Energy
departments were on hand Thursday for the opening of one of 10
resource centers that will operate nationally. They were joined
by about a dozen former workers - including one with a lung
transplant and others with oxygen tanks - who trace their
illnesses to time spent helping the nation develop and test
nuclear weapons.
"These people deserve compensation. They are very sick," Reid
said. "They are due. It's been too long."
Reid, who was instrumental in passing the legislation that
provides the compensation, called the former test site workers
"foot soldiers in the Cold War."
"After working out there all these years and being guinea pigs,
they haven't compensated us," said Chuck Alger, 70, who worked in
the mines at the Test Site from 1958-91.
Alger suffers from silicosis, a respiratory disease that develops
from prolonged exposure to airborne crystalline silica, which
comes from the rock at the test site.
"We're hoping they'll do something before we all die," Alger
said. Hank Peluaga, 73, who worked with Alger the same 33 years
in mining, drilling and blasting, also remains skeptical.
"I also lost my hearing out there," he said. Peluaga also suffers
from silicosis. "I doubt we'll get anything out of them."
Labor Secretary Elaine Chao opened the first of the centers in
Paducah, Ky. on Monday. The centers are jointly operated by the
federal Labor and Energy departments as part of the Energy
Employees Occupational Injury Compensation Program Act.
Resource centers are scheduled to open in Denver; Richland,
Wash.; Espanola, N.M.; Idaho Falls, Idaho; North Augusta, S.C.;
Oak Ridge, Tenn.; Anchorage, Alaska; and Portsmouth, Ohio.
The program offers lifetime medical care and $150,000 to ailing
workers who were employed at nuclear test sites in Nevada and
Alaska, in the government's nuclear weapons plants or at
factories that contracted with the Energy Department.
It was approved by Congress last year ending 50 years in which
the government had denied any link between workers' illnesses and
their jobs in the nation's nuclear weapons complex.
"I'm proud the nation is finally repaying its debt," said Kathy
Carlson, manager of the DOE's Nevada field office.
The government will begin accepting claims July 31, and officials
hope to mail the first compensation checks in late August or
early September, said Pete Turcic, director of the division of
Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program. There
is no deadline for filing a claim, which may also be submitted by
heirs of deceased workers.
The government has hired contractors to operate the resource
centers. Diseases covered include cancer caused by radiation,
chronic beryllium disease and chronic silicosis.
An estimated 800 workers who worked in underground tunnels at the
test site from 1951 to 1992 when the bombs exploded developed the
lung disease silicosis, but the legislation doesn't apply to all
silicosis victims.
"They've got to change the law so more workers can be covered,"
said Ray Slaughter, who worked at the test site about six years.
The 66-year-old, who has been diagnosed with silicosis, said he
isn't eligible for compensation.
"I was tested three years ago," he said. "I probably meet the
standard now." In a related matter, Reid invited Yuri V. Ushakow,
a Russian ambassador, to tour the Desert Research Institute of
Las Vegas and the Nevada Test Site.
"He wants to see what we're doing and I wanted him to see Las
Vegas," said Reid, adding that Russia has a similar test site
that Reid would like to visit.
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
2 Scientist raises new radiation fear
BBC News | HEALTH |
Thursday, 5 July, 2001, 13:22 GMT 14:22
[Plymouth march ]
People in Plymouth are fighting plans to dump tritium
A scientist has warned that radioactive materials being released
in Britain are many times more dangerous than previously
believed. Dr Chris Busby says he has found that low-level
radiation from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster caused a sharp rise
in infant leukaemia in Wales and Scotland.
His warning comes as the Environment Agency considers whether to
allow Devonport Dockyard to dump tritium from submarines into the
River Tamar in Plymouth.
Campaigners had been assured that low-level radiation would not
be a health hazard - the same advice given after the Chernobyl
disaster in 1986.
Devonport Dockyard processes tritium from submarines
Leukaemia rates in Plymouth were recently shown to be 25% above
the national average among males and 29% above average in
females.
Some tritium - a weak radioactive form of hydrogen - is already
released into the Tamar from the city's historic naval dockyard.
Dr Busby says the risk of people contracting cancer from
low-level radioactivity could be far greater than calculated by
the Environment Agency's advisers.
He told BBC News Online: "We have sent the Environment Agency a
solicitor's letter saying they can no longer accept risk levels
are safe.
"So if they go into court saying they didn't know, this letter
will show they were warned." Their model fails to predict all
sort of risks. Their understanding of radiation risk is faulty.
Last month Dr Busby, from Aberystwyth, presented a paper at a
World Health Organisation conference on Chernobyl in Kiev.
He said the Chernobyl findings cast serious doubt on the
internationally-adopted model used to calculate health risk.
His paper says the increased danger comes from radiation absorbed
into the body through food and drink.
zThat makes that health risk many times greater than from
external exposure. Radiation levels in the UK after Chernobyl
were considered too low to have a measurable effect on health.
Infant leukamia increased in the UK after Chernobyl
Dr Busby's paper says: "Government advice was that food was safe
to eat and water and milk safe to drink."
He said: "The models being used to calculate risk to health from
low-level radiation are out by a factor of between 100 and 1,000.
"When they apply this risk model they find hardly anybody will
become ill - the figure is point-zero something.
"But their model fails to predict all sort of risks. Nuclear
reactors
"The whole basis of their understanding of radiation risk is
faulty. Dr Busby has been advising anti-radiation campaigners who
live close to the
River Tamar, which divides Devon and Cornwall.
They launched Cansar - Campaign Against Nuclear Storage And
Radiation - when the Environment Agency announced a public
consultation on Devonport Dockyard.
Low-level radiation can be absorbed through food and water
DML, the operating company, has applied to increase tritium
emissions by 700%.
The tritium is a created in submarine reactors but cannot be
dumped legally in international waters.
On Wednesday about 150 people marched across the Tamar Bridge
from Saltash to the dockyard and handed a 5,000-name petition to
an Environment Agency official.
They want the government to call in the application and hold a
public inquiry. Agency's 'dilemma'
A spokesman for the Environment Agency said Dr Busby's warning
would need to be explored "to ensure that what we are looking at
is accurate".
She added: "The Environment Agency is not an expert on health.
"If the experts who give us our information are not accepting
what Dr Busby says, then that is a dilemma for us."
*****************************************************************
3 The Navy's mess | July 4, 2001 | SFBG News
THE UNITED STATES military is knee-deep in what is likely to be
the most costly, time-consuming pollution cleanup in history: a
$380 billion, 80-year project to decontaminate some 38,000
tainted sites, many of them former bases. But the cleanup efforts
are already looking shoddy – and that has an impact on local
communities.
As A.C. Thompson reports on page 15, when the Navy shut the
Alameda Naval Air Station in 1997 and sailed away, it left behind
a base full of toxic waste and 25 tainted hot spots. The Navy has
already spent $86 million in taxpayer money trying to clean up
the mess and plans to spend another $130 million-plus more over
the next nine years. The goal is make the property safe again for
human habitation before turning it over to the city of Alameda
for redevelopment; homes, shops, offices, parks, and a marina are
planned.
But the restoration process is a mess. Thompson's report outlines
a long list of problems: sloppy (or nonexistent) record keeping,
large amounts of waste that's unaccounted for, and some
horrifying incidents that make it difficult or impossible to
trust the Pentagon officials who say the Navy will ultimately
clean up its own mess.
San Francisco faces a similar situation in Hunters Point – and in
both cases, local officials should resist development pressures
and refuse to allow the sites to be developed until independent
(that is, nonmilitary) testing agencies scour every scrap of the
ground and make public detailed reports that show the sites meet
the highest environmental standards. Otherwise, these bases may
turn out to be new Love Canals just waiting to erupt.
*****************************************************************
4 Hunter's Point Contamination: in this issue
| July 4, 2001 | SFBG News
THE PUBLIC IS finally focusing on the environmental travesty –
and the U.S. Navy's role in it – at the San Francisco Naval
Shipyard at Hunters Point. And that's a good thing. The Hunters
Point shipyard is proof positive that the government is incapable
of policing itself when it comes to evaluating and undertaking
the cleanup of hazardous radioactive material. Thankfully, city
officials have at last responded to residents' complaints that
the shipyard was unsafe and polluted.
But it's not the only story the Navy would rather we not tell.
Across the bay in the quiet town of Alameda, Bay Guardian
reporter A.C. Thompson has uncovered what might be an equally
devastating affront on the environment at the hands of the
military. For 48 years the Navy operated the Alameda Naval Air
Station. And not surprisingly, the trail of toxic garbage it left
behind is staggering. Thousands of tons of hazardous material
still remain on the 2,600-acre site. And there are other reasons
to be alarmed. Over the course of a six-month investigation,
during which he dug through thousands of records,
Thompson discovered that the Navy and the environmental agencies
set to oversee it failed to keep proper paperwork about the waste
shipped to and from the station. In all, the whereabouts of more
than 5.7 million pounds of toxins remain unaccounted for.
The Navy maintains it's a record-keeping snafu. Considering that
the property is already classified as a federal Superfund site,
we wonder if the military is the most reliable source of
information.
Today the property sits primed for redevelopment for upscale
homes with killer views. I hope those new homeowners get more
answers than those living in Bayview-Hunters Point have.
Melissa Houston melissa@sfbg.com
*****************************************************************
5 Alameda Naval Installation Contamination: Hot property
| July 4, 2001 | SFBG News
The city of Alameda wants to build homes, offices, and stores on
the site of a former U.S. Navy base. There's just one problem:
it's a toxic disaster area. By A.C. Thompson
IN 1997 THE United States Navy pulled out of the island town of
Alameda, shuttering its base after 48 years in operation. As it
did in dozens of other locations – San Francisco's Hunters Point
Naval Shipyard, for example – the Navy left behind boatloads of
toxic garbage. But unlike the shipyard, which has been
scrutinized by the media for years, the mess in Alameda has
received little attention.
City officials have grand designs for the ex-base, including
plans for more than 2,000 homes, 900 boat slips, 4.1 million
square feet of offices and retail shops, and, at the tip of the
island, a wildlife refuge for seabirds. The town of 75,000 has
already signed a deal with megabuilder Catellus to put up homes
on one slice of the property. In a few years families with kids
and cats and dogs and backyard gardens with tomato plants will
begin living on what was once the Alameda Naval Air Station.
But before any of that can happen, the Navy will have to
decontaminate 25 toxic hot spots scattered across the 2,600-acre
former outpost. Tainted with radiation and an interminable list
of toxins, the ex-base has been placed on the federal Superfund
list, which ranks it as one of the most polluted places in
America.
The Navy is in the midst of an epic $223 million cleanup project,
overseen by federal and state environmental authorities. To get a
handle on the environmental damage – and the efforts to undo it –
the Bay Guardian dug through a huge pile of technical,
seldom-reviewed Navy, federal Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), and state documents. Emerging from this investigation is a
not-so-pretty picture of a bumbling naval operation and blind
federal and state regulators.
Our investigation found:
ï The Navy can't account for thousands of tons of hazardous waste
stored on the Alameda base during the late 1980s and early 1990s.
ï Government scientists think new housing erected on nearby Navy
property during the early 1990s may pose a cancer risk for
residents – but the Navy has done nothing about the possible
danger (see "Past as Prologue: What Cancer Study?," page 16).
ï Cleanup crews are ignoring accounts by Navy personnel of
uranium and mercury spills on the base.
ï In 1998 the Navy may have blasted dangerous levels of radiation
into the atmosphere without giving public officials or nearby
residents any notice. Our findings come as no surprise to Ken
Kloc, a chemist and public health expert who spent two years
advising the Navy on the project. "The Navy has got to clean up
this land, and they're trying to do this in the most economical
way possible – and the problem is that sometimes they've cut
corners when it comes to protecting human health and the
environment," Kloc told the Bay Guardian. "The Navy has to be
pushed to do a thorough cleanup."
The artificial isle
Alamedans have always had a hands-on relationship with the
natural environment. Established in 1872 by a pair of businessmen
who bought the territory for $14,000, Alameda wasn't always an
island: it was a peninsula until 1902, when city officials
decided to create a lucrative new shipping channel by hacking the
landmass away from Oakland. Around that time Alamedans (the
city's motto: "prosperity from land and sea") began using sludge
dredged from the Oakland harbor to increase the acreage of their
new isle.
The artificial island offered the Navy a strategic port for its
Pacific fleet and aircraft squadrons. From 1936 on, Alameda was a
company town, and the U.S. Navy was the company, employing more
than 17,000 people. Pontoon-equipped seaplanes plopped down in a
special lagoon carved out of the south side of the island.
Aircraft carriers and battleships – nuclear-powered after 1966 –
moored at the docks. F-15s pregnant with missiles screamed
overhead. Sailors were ubiquitous, bunked in myriad two-story
apartment houses across the island.
Then one day in 1997 the Pentagon sent word: budget cuts were
killing the air station. The news came as no surprise. The cash
crunch had already closed Bay Area Navy installations at Point
Molate, Mare Island, and Hunters Point.
Toxic lifeblood
Alameda is tainted today because environmentally perilous
substances are the lifeblood of the war machine.
The general public worries about some Gomer Pyle type dropping a
nuclear warhead or knocking over a vat of anthrax, but ecological
dangers lurk within everyday weaponry. Conventional ordnance –
rockets, mines, grenades, and such – is loaded with explosives
such as cyclonite, a suspected human carcinogen. Perchlorates, a
family of thyroid-damaging chemicals that spread quickly in
water, are a major ingredient in jet and rocket fuels.
Then there are the standard industrial products consumed in bulk
by the Navy. Gasoline and diesel fuel, for example, have
carcinogenic components. The solvents used to clean machinery and
strip paint are classified as hazardous materials by the federal
government.
And in Alameda, as in other garrison towns around the globe, the
Navy's stewardship of these potentially lethal substances has
been pure Homer Simpson. That fact is well documented in the 1994
Environmental Baseline report, the Navy's five-volume master plan
for the cleanup.
From 1942 to 1978, the document reveals, the Navy abandoned
somewhere between 45,000 and 500,000 tons of toxic rubbish on the
extreme western end of Alameda. Nobody knows exactly how much
detritus was cast off, because the Navy kept no records on the
subject. Though the exact tonnage will never be pinned down, it's
certain that sailors did a hell of a lot of dumping out on this
flat, weedy lot crisscrossed by concrete runways.
They dumped radium, a radioactive metal that glows green and was
once used to illuminate landing strips; unexploded bombs; spent
shells; and 55-gallon drums brimming with virulent gunk. They
even dumped two decrepit, oil-filled ships. One favored disposal
technique, as documented in the report, "consisted of digging
trenches to the water table, filling them with waste, and
compacting the material with a bulldozer."
It's this toxic graveyard, one of the most mephitic locations on
the island, that's now slated to become a permanent reserve for
the California least tern, an endangered seabird.
In one surreal 1950s-era episode, sailors piled up a bunch of
trash, set it ablaze, and then used the charred garbage as
landfill, pushing the rubbish into the water and eventually
expanding the size of the island by 52,000 square feet.
Of course, for the time period, that sort of insanity was normal
– nobody thought about the long-term environmental consequences
of radium and all of the other malignants today lingering in the
soil and oozing into the bay. Far more recently, though, the Navy
has done amazingly stupid things. In 1994, for example, naval
personnel came across three open casks of radioactivity-spewing
uranium in a metal scrap yard. Hauled off of a ship from San
Diego, the drums were marked "depleted uranium," but the readings
on the Geiger counter said the contents were anything but
depleted. A special team clad in haz-mat suits was sent in to
remove the barrels.
Then there was a series of flunked inspections in 1997 that led
to a $104,000 fine from state environmental regulators. The
California Department of Toxic Substance Control cited the base
for storing incompatible – that is, combustible – chemicals
together, keeping toxic garbage in open containers, and failing
to do regular safety inspections of its hazardous waste facility.
The list goes on and on; if you want every last detail, you can
find the reports at the Navy's environmental library out on the
island. Meanwhile, we've assembled a few telling snapshots of
what has taken place – and what's going on right now – on the
land Alameda hopes will some day be used for playgrounds and
backyards.
Snapshot no. 1: the hazardous waste that went AWOL
The 1976 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) was a
landmark environmental bill that was supposed to stop the random,
deadly dumping of poisonous trash.
The high-profile federal law was intended to chart the movement
of hazardous waste from "cradle to grave," ensuring that
mutation-inducing chemicals weren't surreptitiously buried,
tossed out on the highway late at night, or flushed down the
drain. Every gallon of toxic goo is supposed to be monitored by
the EPA to make sure it's disposed of properly. That's the theory
anyway. In reality, at least in the case of the Alameda naval
installation, it's impossible to say what truly happened to
thousands of tons of deadly chemicals handled by sailors from
1989 to 1993.
During those years, according to EPA records, 18-wheelers full of
some of the worst stuff on earth rolled out of the Alameda Naval
Air Station on a near-daily basis. The logs give a look at the
kinds of shipments routinely trucked off the base: 629 pounds of
mercury; 1,300 pounds of a solvent called cresol, a probable
carcinogen; 10 tons of incredibly caustic nitric acid; 280 tons
of methylene chloride, another suspected cancer-causer ... and
there's plenty more.
Some of the lethal junk went to special landfills in Washington
and Tennessee, which are licensed to handle toxic waste. Many,
many barrels-o-death were trucked right across the street to the
Navy's Defense Reutilization and Marketing Office, the property
Catellus intends to turn into a brand-new neighborhood.
The warehouses of the DRMO were meant to act as a temporary way
station for hazardous chemicals, discarded vehicles and
equipment, and heaps of rusting scrap metal. But some of the
hazardous waste never left the facility; the soil at the DRMO
site is laden with dangerous levels of PCBs and cadmium. More
ominously, thousands of tons of the toxic detritus the Navy
claims to have shipped to the DRMO may not have gone there at
all.
Under the RCRA law, hazardous waste facilities are required to
file voluminous reports with the EPA. The reports reveal what
substances the facilities have handled during the past 12 months
and what they've done with the stuff. Both the air station and
the adjacent DRMO were obligated to send the reports to the EPA
every other year.
These records are rife with discrepancies. In 1989 the air
station claimed to have sent 2,406.08 tons of hazardous waste to
the DRMO. But the DRMO only reported receiving 12.95 tons from
the air station.
The 1991 document is similar. The air station said it shipped
462.08 tons of waste to the DRMO facility; DRMO reported getting
only 11.79 tons from the air station. The disparity for 1993 is
22.38 tons.
Altogether, more than 2,865 tons of toxins stand unaccounted for.
So what happened to all of those 55-gallon drums? Are they
sitting at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, keeping the fish
company? Were they ditched in an empty lot at the end of deserted
road somewhere?
The Bay Guardian went looking for the stuff, but before donning
the gas masks and acid-proof jumpsuits, we decided to follow the
paper trail a little further. By law, every hazardous waste
transfer must be documented with an invoice explaining where the
junk came from, who hauled it, and where it went. We thought
these shipping manifests – which are archived by the California
Department of Toxic Substance Control – might shed more light on
the case of the missing toxins.
We focused on 1991, plowing through 477 manifests on file for
that year. According to those records, the air station sent only
20 tons of toxic waste to the DRMO that year. That leaves 442
tons missing just for 1991 – and leaves us at another dead end.
Naval officials can provide little insight, saying the service
has destroyed all of the files on the subject – which is legal,
since hazardous waste handlers have to hold onto their records
for only three years. Two Navy employees who signed off on the
shipments didn't respond to repeated phone messages left for them
by the Bay Guardian.
The mystery may never be solved, but it looks like the Navy
either broke federal law over a period of several years by
illicitly disposing of toxic waste or made major accounting
errors. And the incident raises serious questions about federal
and state environmental authorities: do they actually read the
reports hazardous waste facilities file with them?
California toxics department spokesperson Ron Baker figures the
whole thing is just a paperwork snafu. "I can tell you this
department in our efforts to track hazardous waste disposal – not
only at the facilities in question but at all facilities – relies
very heavily on the manifest system," Baker told us. "If there
were materials that left that facility that were not manifested,
certainly that's something that we would be concerned about.
However, I don't know if that's what happened or if there's an
error in their accounting system.
"I doubt very seriously if somewhere in this state there is in
excess of 2,800 tons of hazardous waste floating around. In this
state that just doesn't happen."
We asked Steve Armand in the EPA's hazardous waste division to
review the records. Armand admits he can't say where the stuff
went but says he thinks the Navy probably just made a series of
accounting errors.
That explanation doesn't appease activist Saul Bloom. "When the
regulators say, 'It's just a paper problem,' they're just
encouraging lousy record-keeping," retorts Bloom, head of Arc
Ecology, a nonprofit focused on military-generated pollution.
"And sloppy record-keeping protects the polluter. Good enough for
government isn't good enough for public health."
Snapshot no. 2: never mind the uranium
Building 66 stands in a sector of the base set aside for the
development of new offices. In 1994, Navy consultants looking for
contamination combed over hundreds of similar structures.
But Building 66, a 30,000-square-foot hangar once used to test
and overhaul aircraft engines, has some distinguishing
characteristics.
Interviewing a machinist who had worked in the building, the
researchers discovered some startling info. "Mercury spills
occurred often over a period of decades," said the machinist, as
quoted in the Baseline report. Mercury is a neurological toxin.
Reports from the Navy's Radiological Affairs Support Office
brought the researchers more bad news, warning of "cesium and
uranium oxide contamination" in Building 66. Uranium is a central
component in nuclear weapons and reactors, while cesium, also
radioactive, is considered one of the most deadly by-products of
nuclear fallout.
As part of the Superfund cleanup schedule, another team of
surveyors – again hired by the Navy – went back to Building 66
three years later in 1997.
Scraping the stained concrete floors of the hangar and scooping
soil out of the ground surrounding the structure, the team
gathered dozens of field samples and ran them through a battery
of tests. They tested for beryllium. They tested for arsenic.
They tested for diesel residue.
But for some unexplained reason, they didn't break out the Geiger
counter and check for radioactivity or analyze the samples for
mercury. At this point, seven years after being alerted to the
possible peril, the Navy and its consultants have done no testing
for those toxins in Building 66.
"Someone dropped the ball," said Patrick Lynch, a chemical
engineer who has worked on other Superfund projects. "There's a
significant problem out there, and they just totally overlooked
it."
Snapshot no. 3: call in the bomb squad
It was December 1998, and Navy scientists were dragging a gamma
radiation sensor over the west-end landfill. They knew from
studies dating back to 1991 that radium, PCBs, asbestos,
pesticides, and a million other things had been buried or burned
in the area. And they knew that an earlier round of radiation
readings had come in at more than twice the safe limit. But they
didn't know about this: buried in the ground were 335 live
20-millimeter shells.
The surveyors rushed in unexploded-ordnance specialists from the
Navy's Vallejo outpost to deal with the shells, each one about
three inches long, nearly an inch in diameter, and packed with
high explosive.
The bomb squad had a simple plan to neutralize the ammo: clear
everyone out, set an incendiary charge, and blow the little
missiles sky-high. The technique is known as "open detonation" in
military parlance.
There's just one problem with this little scheme.
At the time of the operation, the Navy hadn't completed its study
of the terrain and couldn't say precisely what kind of toxins and
what levels of gamma radiation infected the soil around the
buried shells – and setting off a sizable explosive charge would
definitely launch some of that dirt into the atmosphere,
spreading the contagion.
Despite the lack of conclusive data, the detachment charged ahead
and blew up the ammo. A color photo of the explosion, referred to
euphemistically as an "emergency removal action," shows a dark
brown tornado of dirt shooting into the air. It looks to be 20 to
30 feet high. The picture, along with the rest of this info, can
be found in a pair of naval reports on the subject.
The soil the Navy blasted into the sky may well have been
radioactive. Radiation maps of the territory, completed by the
surveyors after the bomb squad did its thing, show a major radium
deposit in the area, marked as a fat yellow and red blot. The
hottest points on the map clocked in at over a thousand times
higher than acceptable levels. As for the slightly less deadly
stuff, post-blast dirt samples found lead concentrations 33,000
times over the legal limit.
What did the EPA make of all this? Well, the Navy didn't get
around to telling the agency – or the city – about the operation
until two weeks after it went down, or more correctly, up. EPA
spokesperson Leo Kay said, "Had we been notified, we would've
wanted to ensure that there were no plumes of smoke containing
hazardous material that could've posed a threat to the
community." Choice property
We'd love to make this story less one-sided. We'd love to tell
you the Navy has credible explanations for these seeming
blunders. But when questioned directly about the incidents, Navy
officials could only mouth vague platitudes.
The Navy has been "as good a neighbor as it could be," naval
spokesperson Tom Pinard informs us. "The people I work with are
dedicated to make sure this happens – the cleanup. They want to
be able to turn over the installation one day – as soon as they
can – but with all due regard for not only humans but for flora
and fauna as well.
"The items that you've listed – well, we can go back in time in
any situation, whether it's the Navy or another government agency
or a private individual, and say, 'Did you do everything you
could?' "
Over at the EPA, Kay tells us that a new pact between the agency
and the Navy will ensure a meticulous restoration job. "Up until
now we haven't had the authority we need to run a supertight
cleanup," Kay said.
The guard post at the gates of what was once the Alameda Naval
Air Station sits vacant. A few yards away, in the middle of a
grassy plaza, a vintage Corsair fighter plane stands mounted like
a stuffed grizzly bear. Connected by an asphalt maze of roads
with names like Pearl Harbor Street and Midway Avenue are
hundreds of blocky beige buildings. Some are occupied, some are
empty, some like Building 66, are off-limits, teeming with
pollutants.
It's quiet but not ghost-town quiet. Civilian businesses have fit
themselves into some of the structures left behind by the Navy.
Custom-bicycle crafter Bernie Mikkelsen welds and lathes in one
small workshop; next door is Sal's Inflatable Raft Service.
CalStart, an electric car company, and the Bladium, a roller rink
for in-line skaters, are leasing giant hangars.
Soon these boxy old buildings will be razed. Fresh architecture –
three-bedroom houses, shopping centers, office hives – will
arise, a crop of designer structures that don't look like outsize
Legos, erected on land made safe by the United States Navy.
Just how safe is the question hanging over this whole endeavor.
At least $223 million will be poured into demolishing the
contaminated buildings, into purifying the despoiled earth and
water. The expected completion date is set for June 2009. Perhaps
at that juncture the Navy will have mended the world it has
ripped asunder. Or maybe these snapshots are a harbinger of
another Love Canal.
A blinding orange sign juts out of the rocks at the edge of the
silty seaplane lagoon. "NO TRESPASSING. POTENTIAL ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH HAZARDS PRESENT. DO NOT EAT FISH OR SHELLFISH FROM THIS
AREA," shouts the warning. The squadrons of bomb-strapped
aircraft are long gone. There are no fishermen in sight. But
pelicans, downy, gravel-hued pelicans with six-foot wings, are
dive-bombing the water, hunting for smelt, hungry for dinner. Who
knows what the birds will catch.
The Navy's environmental library is located at 950, West Mall
Square, Room 141, Alameda. Research assistance was provided by
Adam Jernigan, Joe Mullin, and Corbett Miller.
E-mail A.C. Thompson at ac_thompson@sfbg.com.
*****************************************************************
6 Crew Of Soviet Nuclear Submarine K-19 Saves World From Nuclear
Catastrophe
Pravda.RU
Jul, 04 2001
16:25 2001-07-04
The crew of the first Soviet nuclear-powered missile-carrying
submarine cruiser K-19 saved the world from a nuclear catastrophe
40 years ago. It could have been something similar to the
accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power station. The above was
said Wednesday by one-time Soviet Navy Commander-in-Chief Admiral
Vladimir Chernavin, Chairman of the Russian Submariners Union. He
spoke at a meeting to mark the 40th anniversary of the accident
on the first Soviet nuclear-powered missile-carrying submarine
K-19. Vladimir Chernavin said that the K-19 crew and its
commander, Captain Nikolai Zateev, had displayed great courage
and heroism. Up to the last minute, they fought to rescue their
submarine, then on combat duty in the northern Atlantic. Eight
sailors died and 23 got heavy dozes of radiation as they were
trying to cope with the breakdown of the nuclear power unit.
For his part, Vladimir Bentsianov, the chairman of an emergency
relief veterans' committee, said at the meeting that his
committee had asked Russian President Vladimir Putin to
posthumously confer on Nikolai Zateev, commander of the K-19
submarine, the Hero of the Russian Federation title.
RIA 'Novosti'
The Web-site of the Russian Federation administrative bodies The
official site of the Russian Government
Copyright ©1999 by "Pravda.RU". When reproducing our materials
*****************************************************************
7 Discounted Casualties book
"A persuasive case built story by compelling story. Spread the
word. Let's ban DU weapons!!"
CONTENTS
Get to the Heart of the Matter
Part I On the Wrong Side of a Superpower
US Gulf War veterans watch their bodies deteriorate as the
Veteran's Administration holds fast to its claim that DU
munitions pose no threat to human health.
Part II The Threat in our Backyards
Evidence is mounting that radioactive uranium has contaminated
air, soil, and water near the plants that produce DU munitions,
harming the health of workers and nearby residents.
Part III Contaminated Earth
People living near facilities where DU weapons are test-fired or
discarded face environmental contamination, mounting cancer
rates, and an official "stone wall."
Part IV Heavy Burden for an Ally
British Gulf War veterans are also struggling for government
recognition that they are suffering due to DU exposure.
Part V The Scars of War
Economic sanctions against Iraq pit physicians against
overwhelming odds in their struggle with the post-war upsurge in
cancers, stillbirths, and congenital deformities.
Part VI Finishing the Story
Contamination spreads from areas where DU penetrators leach
toxic uranium with a half-life of 4.5 billion years into the
ground.Grassroots groups are working steadfastly for a cleanup
and a ban.
Some scientists claim depleted uranium is harmless. Some claim
it's deadly. Others call for more research. Meanwhile, Akira
Tashiro takes us into the homes, families, and hearts of people
suffering and fighting the effects of DU. As a journalist from
Hiroshima, Tashiro knows that conclusively proving radiation
effects is next to impossible. That's not because there are no
effects. It's because radiation produces so many different
effects. It's impossible to get a complete picture of radiation
damage by counting cases of leukemia or breast cancer. Low levels
of radiation can get you in so many ways; no one problem rises
high enough above the horizon to draw attention. Scientists have
yet to go into communities and look for higher incidences of
"everything." What happens is, people get sick, then start to
look around and wonder why so many of their friends, relatives,
or fellow veterans are also sick.
The personal experiences you will encounter in this book are more
convincing than science. They leave little room for doubt that DU
is a cruel, frightening menace that needs to be treated like the
chemically toxic radioactive waste it is, not turned into bullets
and scattered around the world.
During the Gulf War, the multinational force combat-tested a
formidable new weapon--depleted uranium (DU) penetrators. These
projectiles performed admirably, burning their way through enemy
tanks on contact. But at what cost?
Hiroshima-based reporter Akira Tashiro traveled through the US,
UK, Iraq, and Yugoslavia pursuing this question. Here is the
ominous picture that emerged: See contents as left.
*****************************************************************
8 Budget increase may allow more staffing in inspector general's
office
Oak Ridger Online -->
Story last updated at 11:30 a.m. on Thursday, July 5, 2001
KNOXVILLE (AP) -- The Tennessee Valley Authority's inspector
general's office could see its first staffing increase in 13
years following the board's approval of a midyear $1.1 million
budget increase, the agency's inspector general said.
"My impression since I arrived has been that this board is
committed to supporting the inspector general's office," said
Richard Chambers, who was deputy IG at the U.S. Postal Service
until he joined TVA last August. "They recognize the importance
of having an independent and capable IG around. I saw this as
further evidence of that."
George Prosser, the agency's previous watchdog, had complained
in 1999 that TVA management tried to interfere with his office's
independence. Then-TVA Chairman Craven Crowell was the only
sitting member on TVA's board at the time, and put Prosser on
paid leave until allegations concerning his credit card charges
were investigated by an outside agency.
Prosser was cleared of any criminal wrongdoing by an FBI review,
and he returned to TVA for a short time before retiring at the
end of last year. He now operates a private investigation
business based in Knoxville. Crowell retired in April.
TVA spokesman John Moulton told the Knoxville News-Sentinel's
Washington bureau that the board supports the inspector general's
independence.
"The board agreed that the additional funds were needed to
improve the IG's information technology capabilities and to add
staff members and to make other improvements," Moulton said.
The board unanimously approved the higher budget March 5, but
the action was not disclosed until Chambers noted it recently in
a report to Congress.
He said the extra money will allow the hiring of eight more
staff members, bringing the total to 90. About $700,000 of it
will go toward hardware and software to upgrade the office's
computer security, he said.
Of the eight new staff members, five will be computer
information specialists. Chambers said a new federal law requires
inspectors general to assess the information security of their
agencies and make reports to Congress over the next two years.
The bulk of TVA's information systems are in Chattanooga, so
Chambers said inspector general staffing there will be increased
from two to eight.
Prosser said he's pleased with the work of his successor.
"I certainly support anything they are doing," he said. "I've
heard that Richard Chambers is doing a good job."
TVA is the nation's largest publicly owned utility, providing
electricity to 158 distributors serving some 8 million people in
Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia,
Mississippi and Alabama.
On the Net: Tennessee Valley Authority: http://www.tva.gov/
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
*****************************************************************
9 Kursk salvage operation gears up - July 4, 2001
CNN.com -
Frans van Seumeren, left, heads the company in charge of the operation
MOSCOW, Russia -- Salvage experts are gathering ahead of the
operation to raise the Kursk nuclear submarine from the bottom of
the Barents Sea.
The vessel was ripped apart by two unexplained explosions last
August, killing all 118 men on board. It sank about 250
kilometres (155 miles) off the Norwegian coast and is currently
submerged under 108 metres (355 feet) of water.
According to navy officials in Moscow, Commander Vladimir
Kuroyedov has arrived in the northern port of Severomorsk to
oversee preparations for lifting the submarine, Reuters news
agency reported.
Kuroyedov is due to meet northern fleet commander Admiral
Vyacheslav Popov to finalise plans to raise the vessel.
The operation is being overseen by Dutch heavy transport company
Mammoet, Reuters said.
Kuroyedov will also pay his respects in the town of Vedyayevo,
where many relatives of the Kursk victims live.
The exact cause of the Kursk disaster still remains a mystery.
Officials say it may have been the result of a torpedo explosion
that set off the rest of the arsenal on board, yet the cause of
the torpedo blast itself has not been identified.
The move to lift the 20,000-ton vessel from the Arctic seabed
comes on the 40th anniversary of the former Soviet Union's first
nuclear submarine disaster.
On July 4, 1961, the K-19 -- the country's first nuclear powered
submarine -- ran into difficulty when its nuclear cooling system
malfunctioned on its maiden voyage.
Eight crew members died from radiation poisoning after exposing
themselves to the reactor to prevent a potentially disastrous
nuclear explosion.
Sergei Chernyavsky, from the central museum of the Russian navy
in St Petersburg, told Reuters the K-19 ballistic missile
submarine was dubbed Hiroshima in the wake of the disaster, with
reference to the 1945 atomic bombing of the Japanese city.
*****************************************************************
10 British atomic test subjects urged to register with Veteran Affairs
ABC News -
Anyone involved in British atomic tests in Australia during the
1950s and 60s is being urged to register with the Department of
Veterans Affairs.
It is the first step in a process to conduct medical studies of
these people.
Twelve nuclear devices were detonated in the 1950s off the
Western Australian coast, and at Maralinga and Emu Field in South
Australia.
Vietnam veteran and the state member for Heathcoate, Ian McManus,
says a preliminary list has revealed more than 16,000 Australians
took part in the tests.
"The Department of Veteran Affairs have produced a nominal role
of people who were involved in those tests," he said.
"My suggestion is that these nominal roles indicate that there
are over 3,000 navel personnel, over 1,500 army personnel, 3,000
RAAF personnel and up to nearly 9,000 civilians involved in these
things."
© 1999 Australian Broadcasting Corporation
*****************************************************************
11 Updated facilities are in DOE's future
Oak Ridger Online -->
Story last updated at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, July 3, 2001
About 24 new facilities are expected to built at Oak Ridge
National Laboratory as the facility undergoes an extensive
modernization effort. This is an artist rendering of what the
updated lab could look like. -- Photos Submitted
by Paul Parson Oak Ridger staff
It's out with the old and in with the new because big changes lie
ahead for two Oak Ridge Department of Energy facilities.
Specifically, the Y-12 National Security Complex and Oak Ridge
National Laboratory will both undergo extensive modernization
efforts to replace aging infrastructure.
Here's a recap.
Over the next 20 years, the modernization of Y-12 is expected to
cut the facility's size in half.
An artist rendering of the proposed Special Materials Complex
at the Y-12 National Security Complex.
The Y-12 modernization calls for the construction of a storage
area for highly enriched uranium and a special materials complex.
Existing Y-12 facilities for storage of highly enriched uranium
are in buildings that are 35 to 55 years old and require
significant maintenance and funding to maintain operations and
security.
These safety improvements are long overdue, according to a
federal watchdog agency.
The Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board recently issued a
report to DOE stating safety improvements at Y-12 had to be made.
The group said inadequate attention has been paid to the storage
of hazardous materials, maintenance needs and fire prevention at
the plant. This is the third such warning the board has issued
about Y-12 in three years.
At ORNL, about 24 new facilities could be constructed under the
plan including 16 DOE-funded structures ($125 million), four
state-funded buildings ($26 million) and four funded through
private business (around $50 million).
More than half of the buildings at the lab were built during or
immediately following World War II. Officials say only 23 percent
of the occupied space at ORNL is adequate for the lab's research
missions.
The new facilities would encompass 1.2 million square feet of
space and include areas for biological, computer and neutron
sciences research. Proposed construction sites are in Bethel
Valley near the main ORNL entrance, near the west portal in
Melton Valley and within the recently established footprint for
the Spallation Neutron Source. These are "brownfield" sites that
were previously contaminated and/or developed areas.
Over a 10-year period, the modernization effort would also move
ORNL staff from off-site locations -- Y-12 and leased commercial
spaces -- back to the lab.
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
*****************************************************************
12 Commentary: DOE must fess up, clean up and pay up if we are to
move on
Oak Ridger Online -->
Story last updated at 11:34 a.m. on Thursday, July 5, 2001
Linda Dalton Gass
I am writing to encourage Oak Ridgers and Department of Energy
decision-makers, including Leah Dever upon her recent return, to
take the long-range view of what is best for our children's
future health, safety, and environment.
Specifically, we need an overall plan for all the federal
property on the Oak Ridge Reservation. We need to consider the
total environmental impact of many decisions which have so far
been made piecemeal.
Piecemeal decisions are our legacy. Failing burial trenches,
cross-connections of contaminated water, planned and accidental
releases of toxins to the air, long-term storage of chemical and
radioactive wastes -- all these separate events have combined to
have unintended side effects.
People are sick. Let's move on with Lessons Learned and "'fess
up, clean up, and pay up." Let the truths of the past be told.
Clean up and make aboveboard property transfers that maximize our
children's future prospects.
Pay fair compensation to deceased and disabled victims' families
-- not just a cheap buyout of the sickest. Provide treatment -- a
clinic -- for the ill instead of stalling with studies,
committees, and public relations campaigns.
The Land Use Meeting on Jan. 30, 2001, showed that there was a
great deal of support for "'fess up, clean up, and pay up." Many
of the standing-room-only crowd waited for hours (6 to 10 p.m.)
to speak in support of environmental responsibility.
Dave McKinney, a state of Tennessee employee, spoke regarding
his role of trying to bring DOE into the era of environmental
compliance years ago. He challenged DOE to use the scientific
leadership at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to take a progressive
stance and be a model for other sites.
In the early '90s, when McKinney was exerting oversight over the
Oak Ridge Reservation, I was internally trying to move us toward
environmental responsbility within Engineering Division as a K-25
employee (I also worked at Y-12 and ORNL).
For about the first year in my new position, there was a
wait-and-see attitude -- would I use my background in
environmental engineering to rubber-stamp the old way of doing
business? Or would I take a proactive stance and start doing
things right on the front end instead of waiting for the poorly
funded oversight of the state of Tennessee or the Environmental
Protection Agency to catch us red-handed? Among my coworkers
there were diversities of attitudes.
Even during the 1980s, years before there were Material Safety
Data Sheets, training requirements, and practices to safeguard
employees, I had supported several hourly employees' efforts to
protect their health and safety on the job from assignments that
were clearly out of line.
I was liked and respected. I was known for loyalty and having a
heart for individuals and their families. Unfortunately, at the
time and place when I took a decisive, highly visible stand, my
career was squelched.
Leah Dever, an environmental professional, is at a much higher
level, and there is now much more support both within DOE and
within Oak Ridge for moving forward and doing the right thing
than when I tried.
Hazardous waste often was simply not being identified as such
because it was easier to manage if we only checked it for
radioactivity. The long-term storage of mixed waste was then and
still is a concern. The synergistic health effects of radiation
and chemicals are some of the major research issues which the
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry is mandated to
assure.
As more of ORR is increasingly turned over to public access, and
as our body burden of toxics from all sources mounts, we have
reasons for growing concern.
I have had a whistleblower complaint ongoing since 1995. Just
recently DOE headquarters informed me that key evidence in my
case -- the investigation conducted by the DOE Office of the
Investigator General, in which an investigator came from
headquarters and spent a week here on my case -- was destroyed.
A similar situation recently came to light regarding the
Parallax investigation into whether and how K-25 employees were
exposed to toxins in the water and steam. It was found that an
incriminating utilities computer database had the hard drives
removed and none of several backups could be found.
A November 2000 memo from Dever implies that anyone who provides
information about how exposures occurred will not be retaliated
against. This information could include field observations of
utilities, maintenance, sanitary and storm sewers, operations,
the cooling towers, engineering drawings, land survey
coordinates, waste disposal, waste management, etc.
Unfortunately, my personal experience and my following of the
Joe Carson case speaks too loudly that we cannot believe the
no-reprisal policy.
An Oak Ridger editorial, Oct. 6, 2000, "Whistleblower Case
Erodes DOE Credibility," states: "Carson already has six
favorable court rulings under his belt to legal issues
surrounding DOE's refusal to heed his safety concerns and its
subsequent alleged retaliation against him. He has won previously
before the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, which has ordered
DOE to give Mr. Carson back his job. DOE has instead resorted to
the all-too-familiar tactic of drawing these matters out, six
years now, through one court and administrative agency appeal
after another. Enough is enough. The Joe Carson case reflects
terribly upon a DOE which already faces a serious crisis of
public credibility."
Please, DOE, settle the Carson case. It will contribute
materially to having people come forward and provide firsthand
information in order to help those who are sick or families of
the deceased.
Some with direct knowledge of how exposures occurred have told
it; usually they are no longer vulnerable directly (retired or
left the DOE umbrella). The fact that our social lives and
families are still intertwined here causes some to be reluctant,
but others are simply waiting for the right timing to do the
right thing.
I am one of at least six confidential contacts to whom
information can be given anonymously (122 Cavett Hill Lane,
Knoxville TN 37922, phone 898-4263 or 675-8827 ; fax 675-6337;
linda99@mindspring.com).
The Parallax investigation into exposures has cost about half a
million dollars in the first six months of a project that may go
on for a couple of years.
I love Oak Ridge and Oak Ridge people, in spite of what happened
to me. My years living and working in Oak Ridge are among the
best of my life.
Those of us who have raised our children and/or spent our
productive lives here are inextricably linked to the future of
Oak Ridge. We do not want another generation to endure premature
aging.
For the sake of local reputation and the health and welfare of
future generations, please, DOE and community leaders, let's
'fess up, clean up, and pay up, so that we can move on.
Linda Dalton Gass is a resident of Knoxville.
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
*****************************************************************
13 Whatever happened to Israeli 'atomic spy' Vanunu?
THURSDAY, JULY 5, 2001
B. SNYDER OF GREENBELT, MD., ASKS:
Whatever happened to Israeli 'atomic spy' Vanunu?
By Adam Cooke
CONVICTED SPY: Vanunu in 1998. He is still serving an 18-year
sentence for revealing Israel's nuclear capability. AP
Mordechai Vanunu is to be released from an Israeli prison in
April 2004, five months before the end of his 18-year sentence.
He was convicted of espionage and treason after leaking
information about Israel's nuclear arsenal to the London Sunday
Times in 1986.
Mr. Vanunu's family emigrated to Israel from Morocco in 1954,
when Mordechai was a child. After serving in the military from
1971 to '74, he worked as a technician in the highly secret
Dimona nuclear research center. He began studies at Ben Gurion
University in '79, where he became active in politics, opposing
Israel's invasion of Lebanon and the Dimona center.
In 1986, Vanunu went back to work at Dimona. He smuggled in a
camera and took photos. Then he resigned, taking the pictures
with him. He traveled through Asia, and ended up in Australia,
where the Times contacted him.
The Times brought him to England, where he disclosed that Israel
had become an important nuclear power, with some 200 warheads.
Soon after Vanunu's exposé, Israeli agents lured him to Italy. He
was brought to Israel, where he was tried and convicted in
secret. He spent 11-1/2 years in Ashkelon prison in solitary
confinement. In 1998 he was moved to a general cell.
According to Felice Cohen-Joppa, coordinator of the United State
Campaign to Free Mordechai Vanunu, "although many Israelis are
very angry ... [with Vanunu] and what he did, there is growing
support [for him]." In fact, Israel's parliament recently debated
the issue of nuclear weapons for the first time.
Amnesty International and other organizations support Vanunu's
actions and have demanded his release. In 1987, Vanunu received
The Right Livelihood Award. He has also been nominated for the
Nobel Peace Prize.
***
Do you suddenly wonder, hey — 'Whatever happened to ...?'
Wonder no more! Write and tell us who or what you'd like to catch
up with. Send ideas to: One Norway St., Boston, MA 02115 or
e-mail: whatever@csmonitor.com
[bullet] For further information:
+ Vanunu may be barred from leaving after releaseJerusalem Post
(May 29) + Peacewire.org + US Campaign to Free Mordechai
VanunuNonViolence.org + Internet Resources on Mordechai Vanunu
Please Note: The Monitor does not endorse the sites behind these
links. We offer them for your additional research.
. Copyright 2001 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights
*****************************************************************
14 Row brewing over nuclear compensation payments
Radio Australia News - 4/07/01:
A dispute is brewing between officials of the Bank of New York
and authorities in the Marshall Islands over the final
four-point-five million U-S dollar nuclear test compensation
payment, due to the Marshall Islands later this year.
Bank of New York, which is the trustee for the Pacific island
nation's nuclear investment fund, has told Marshall Islands
officials that the last payment is due next month, bringing the
total payout over 15 years to 270 million U-S dollars.
But the Nuclear Claims Tribunal and the Bikini Atoll Local
Government both dispute this, saying there are two more quarterly
payments left - one in July and another in October.
The dispute has arisen because the 15-year compensation package
contained in a treaty between the US and the Marshall Islands,
known as the Compact of Free Association, comes to an end later
this year.
The US established a fund in the mid-1980s to compensate
islanders affected by the 67 American nuclear tests conducted
between 1946 and 1958.
*****************************************************************
15 Industry chief to visit SRS
Augusta Georgia: Technology:
Proposed mixed-oxide facility would fall under jurisdiction of
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Web posted Wednesday, July 4, 2001
By Brandon Haddock
Staff Writer
The head of the agency responsible for overseeing the nation's
nuclear-power industry is scheduled to visit Savannah River Site
next week.
Richard Meserve, the chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, plans to visit the federal nuclear-weapons site
Tuesday, said Roger Hannah, a spokesman for the commission's
Region II office in Atlanta.
''The basic purpose is to familiarize himself with the site,''
Mr. Hannah said. ''He's just going to take a quick tour.''
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission oversees civilian nuclear
facilities, such as power plants, and has no oversight over
current SRS activities. But a proposed mixed-oxide, or MOX, fuel
fabrication facility would fall under the commission's
jurisdiction.
The $1.45 billion plant would manufacture fuel for nuclear-power
plants using plutonium once intended for nuclear weapons. Dr.
Meserve might tour the proposed site for the plant, Mr. Hannah
said.
The chairman also is set to visit the site's Savannah River
Ecology Laboratory, a lab official said.
Dr. Meserve has served as the regulatory commission's chairman
since October 1999. Prior to becoming chairman, he was a partner
in the Washington law firm Covington &Burling.
He also was legal counsel to the president's science and
technology adviser from 1977 to 1981 and worked as a law clerk to
Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun.
Dr. Meserve holds a bachelor's degree from Tufts University, a
law degree from Harvard Law School, and a doctorate in applied
physics from Stanford University.
Reach Brandon Haddock at (706) 823-3409 or
bhaddock@augustachronicle.com.
All contents ©1996 - 2001 The Augusta Chronicle. All rights
*****************************************************************
16 Amarillo Voices: Environmental ignorance keeps going and going...
By Greg Sagan
According to recent news stories, the U.S. Department of Energy
wants our local oversight committee, the Pantex Plant Citizens
Advisory Board, to confine itself to environmental issues and
keep quiet about operational and safety issues at the plant.
This should make the hackles rise on your neck.
Pantex is one of this area's sacred cows. To criticize Pantex is
to invite harsh reaction from the DOE, the local Chamber of
Commerce, the Amarillo Economic Development Corp., and even the
editorial page of this paper.
The reason is obvious: Pantex pays those high federal wages,
funded by taxing every wage-earner in the country, and most of
that money is spent right here.
With a work force of 2,800 (as published in our local Chamber of
Commerce's list of major employers) and an average salary of
$25,000 a year (a guess, and probably a conservative one), that
gives Pantex $70 million worth of annual leverage in Amarillo and
the surrounding area.
Not many here are willing to run off that kind of money no matter
what principle might be at stake.
But there are some principles at stake. One is our local
environment.
I sometimes wonder how many people are aware of just how many
nuclear facilities, both power plants (which are regulated by the
DOE's Nuclear Regulatory Commission) and weapons plants (which
are not regulated by the NRC), are located adjacent to rivers,
large lakes and oceans. Then I wonder how many people know why
this is done.
These plants are located near water for one simple reason:
emergency cooling. In the case of a core meltdown, as happened at
Three Mile Island Unit One in the late 1970s, part of the
strategy for keeping the resulting radioactivity inside whatever
containment structure surrounds it is to dump lots and lots of
water on it.
This is such a serious issue for the nuclear utility industry
that after the Three Mile Island accident, all of the companies
in the United States operating nuclear power plants got together
to form the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations, headquartered
in Atlanta.
When I was consulting to INPO on human performance issues, I
asked one of its executives what the INPO mission was. "Simple,"
he said. "To keep the fuel out of the feed water."
Why does INPO want to accomplish this? Because no sane person
with technical knowledge of radioactivity ever wants to use
emergency cooling.
One of the first things a knowledgeable person will notice about
this area is that there is no such source of emergency cooling
water. And even if there were, if we ever had to rely on it for
an accident at Pantex, we would owe it to ourselves to ask where
it would go after it was splashed on a few (or a few thousand)
plutonium pits.
I'm no geologist, but I suspect it would soak right into the
ground. Right into the perched aquifer. And later, right into the
Ogallala.
This is why we need a Citizens Advisory Board.
I have worked for many nuclear utility companies as a consultant.
These companies tend to have an attitude rather different from
what you find in the GOCO - government owned/contractor operated
- facilities which design, test and build nuclear weapons. One of
the most obvious distinctions is that power plant operators do
not distinguish between "environmental issues," "operational
issues" and "safety issues."
To them, an environmental issue arises from operational and
safety issues. It's a package deal, known in my line of work as
"holistic management."
It's a mistake to treat these issues piecemeal, and to do so is a
bureaucratic tactic generally used to eviscerate a regulatory or
oversight body without coming right out and dissolving it.
We must all question this trend. It smacks of a shift in the
political wind, much like the closing of Amarillo Air Force Base
right after Lyndon Johnson was elected president.
If you recall, this area voted overwhelmingly for Barry Goldwater
in 1964, and President Johnson soon thereafter decided Amarillo's
base was strategically redundant. Many here shook their heads
over this act, coming as it did at the height of the Cold War and
only a couple years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, but the real
answer was clear: LBJ was exercising his royal right to punish
those Texans disloyal to him.
We seem to have something similar, though not precisely
identical, going on here.
In George W. Bush, we have elected another favorite son to the
presidency, one not demonstrably concerned with environmental
issues.
And just like that, within the span of six months under a new
administration, the board tasked with local environmental
oversight is being told by "our" president to keep its nose out
of what Pantex is doing unless it can find evidence of trouble
outside the plant's fence.
Doesn't anyone realize that by then it's just too damn late?
Greg Sagan can be contacted in care of the Amarillo Globe-News,
P.O. Box 2091, Amarillo, Texas 79166, or letters@amarillonet.com.
Chamber of Commerce, the Amarillo Economic Development Corp., and
even the editorial page of this paper.
copy; 2001 Amarillo Globe-News
*****************************************************************
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 this
material is distributed without profit or payment to those who
have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit research and educational purposes only. For more
information go to:
*****************************************************************