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09/13/01 **** RADIATION BULLETIN(RADBULL) **** VOL 9.218
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RADBULL IS PRODUCED BY THE ABALONE ALLIANCE CLEARINGHOUSE
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NUCLEAR POWER CONTENTS
1 BE wants £3bn write-off to build new reactors
2 EU sees study of Czech nuke plant ending soon
3 Brittish Energy says UK needs new nuclear power plants
4 EU pledges help for Ukraine's nuclear sector
5 UK: 10 bilion pound nuclear power programme
6 Nevada approves big legal contract in nuke dump fight
7 State hires law firm to contest Yucca plan
8 Yucca Mountain hearings delayed
9 Panel told risk of eruption at Yucca site is underestimated
10 REID URGES HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TO START YUCCA MOUNTAIN LETTER
11 Letter: Government bound to put nuke waste here
12 Nuclear waste decision 'may be at election time'
13 Daily Events Report
14 IAEA Daily Press Review 9/13
15 IAEA Daily Press Review 9/12
16 The Feds Are Considering Shipping Spent Nuclear Fuel Through the
17 Price-Anderson
18 Nuclear waste plan is still five years off
19 Fast-breeder reactor research the way forward
20 U.S. urges nuclear plant precautions after attack
21 Letter to Gregory Friedman, Inspector General, DOE from Bob
22 NCI CALLS ON NRC TO ACTIVATE EMERGENCY PLAN FOR PROTECTING
23 Nuclear waste consultation announced
24 Yggdrasil Institute - Uranium Enrichment Newsletter - August 2001
25 EC Gives Green Light to Environmental Cleanup
26 Hungarian nuclear station can't withstand attack by Boeing
27 Norwegians unable to proceed with radiation monitoring in
NUCLEAR WEAPONS CONTENTS
1 Flats work goes ahead despite S.C. dispute
2 Israel Eyes Air Strikes at Iran's Nuclear Arsenal
3 Terrorists vow to hit Indian nuclear sites
4 Letter: DOE doesn't keep promises
5 DOE: (Oakridge) SELLS Meeting Announcement
6 SRS, Fort Gordon tighten security
7 Security still increased at DOE
8 SRS officials use trees to suck up nuclear contamination
9 DOE: Reindustrialization works
10 No end in sight to increased DOE security
11 Beazley warns of nuclear terror threat
12 Plutonium will be ready to ship if S.C. accepts it
13 Workers prepare plutonium to ship
14 Pasko case enters decisive stage
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NUCLEAR POWER ARTICLES
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1 BE wants £3bn write-off to build new reactors
© 2001 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
14 September 2001 07:37 GMT+1
Independent
By Michael Harrison, Business Editor
12 September 2001
British Energy warned yesterday that it could not build a new
generation of nuclear power stations unless it was allowed to
offload £3bn of its current nuclear liabilities onto the
taxpayer.
The nuclear electricity generator also called on the Government
to impose a new "carbon-free" obligation on electricity
suppliers, requiring them to take 25 per cent of their
requirements from nuclear stations.
It estimated that this would make nuclear-generated power around
50 per cent more expensive than current wholesale prices – a cost
increase that ultimately must be borne by the consumer, as the
price for security and diversity of supply.
In its submission to Downing Street's energy policy review, the
company said the Government needed to give the green light now to
a £10bn programme to construct 10 new nuclear stations or face
the prospect of having to rely on foreign gas for more than half
of Britain's electricity needs by 2025.
British Energy is proposing that £2bn worth of liabilities on its
balance sheet, which pre-date its privatisation in 1996, should
be transferred to the Government's proposed UK Liabilities
Management Agency.
It also wants to renegotiate its fuel reprocessing contracts with
the state-owned British Nuclear Fuels so that British Energy's
annual bill comes down from £300m a year to £50m. This would make
the group's UK nuclear stations profitable once again. "Restoring
UK profitability will be a prerequisite to British Energy playing
a major role in any future new build programme," the submission
added.
Robin Jeffrey, British Energy's executive chairman, said that to
make a new generation of nuclear stations financially viable
would mean bridging the "economic gap" between current wholesale
prices of £18-£20 a megawatt hour and the £25-£30 that the new
generation of nuclear reactors would have to charge.
Constructing 10 new 1,000-1,200 megawatt stations would increase
the UK's stockpile of nuclear waste by 10 per cent, which could
be addressed either through surface storage or burial in deep
underground repositories, he said.
British Energy also said the new generation of reactors would
help the country meet its Kyoto targets. If no new nuclear
stations were built it would result in an increase in greenhouse
gas emissions equivalent to half the total emissions currently
produced by motor vehicles.
Greenpeace urged the Government to resist the nuclear industry's
lobbying and opt for a "50:50" strategy – a 50 per cent reduction
in energy usage and 50 per cent of Britain's energy needs met
from renewable sources.
*****************************************************************
2 EU sees study of Czech nuke plant ending soon
Planet Ark Environmental News:
BELGIUM: September 12, 2001
BRUSSELS - The European Commission said on Monday it hoped an
assessment of the environmental impact of the Czech Republic's
controversial Temelin nuclear power plant would be completed in
"a matter of weeks".
The Czech Republic, an EU candidate country, agreed to carry out
the assessment last December under pressure from fiercely
anti-nuclear Austria, which says the Soviet-designed station just
50 km (30 miles) from their shared border is unsafe.
"We will try to find a date as soon as possible for a summit
meeting (between Austria, the Czech Republic and the Commission)
aimed at closing this process," European Commissioner for
Enlargement Guenter Verheugen told reporters.
"It should be a matter of weeks, not months," he said after talks
with the Czech chief negotiator in EU accession talks, Pavel
Telicka.
Verheugen said he hoped the assessment would help to allay
Austrian fears.
Vienna has in the past threatened to block Prague's bid to join
the EU if it does not meet its environmental concerns. "In my
view, this has been a successful process... It is important that
standards at Temelin should be safer after the process than
before it started," Verheugen said.
The Czech Republic insists that the plant is safe. But last week
the European Parliament called for a new analysis of risks posed
by Temelin and an international forum to evaluate the price-tag
for closing it.
This week, Telicka repeated his government's refusal to consider
such a conference.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
*****************************************************************
3 Brittish Energy says UK needs new nuclear power plants
UK: September 12, 2001
LONDON - British Energy , the country's largest nuclear
generator, called on the government to replace old nuclear power
stations with new ones to ensure Britain can meet its commitments
on combating global warming.
Nuclear power stations, unlike coal and gas-fired plants, do not
produce greenhouse gas emissions which many scientists say
contribute to climate change.
British Energy's remarks were a response to the review the
government is carrying out of the energy sector which will look
at tackling global warming while securing reliable energy
supplies. "We are proposing to government a cost effective,
balanced approach which can achieve the government's
environmental and security of supply priorities at sensible and
stable prices," said British Energy's Executive Chairman Robin
Jeffrey in a statement.
All except one of Britain's nuclear power stations are due to
close within the next 25 years and Jeffrey's comments echo views
expressed last week by the UK's other nuclear generator,
state-run British Nuclear Fuels.
British Energy's proposal to replace old nuclear plants with new
ones would require building 10 power stations each between 1,000
and 1,200 megawatts between 2010 and 2025.
British Energy said the government's energy policy should target
a mix of 15 percent coal, 40 percent gas, 20 percent renewables
and 25 percent of power from nuclear by 2025.
Nuclear power currently accounts for around one third of
Britain's electricity output.
While environmentalists object to nuclear power on safety
grounds, some analyst doubt the economics of nuclear power could
be made to work in a liberalised energy market characterised by
tumbling energy prices.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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4 EU pledges help for Ukraine's nuclear sector
UKRAINE: September 12, 2001
YALTA - The European Union pledged yesterday to help Ukraine with
the cost of making its nuclear power plants safe and solving
social problems related to the closure of the Chernobyl plant.
In a communique issued after a one-day summit between top
European and Ukrainian officials, the EU said also it expected
Ukraine to meet conditions for securing European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development funds.
Both sides agreed the importance of bringing safety levels in
Ukraine's nuclear industry to Western standards.
The former Soviet republic is building two new nuclear reactors
to replace the Chernobyl complex, which was shut down last
December but the government is short of funds.
"The EU expresses its commitment to support Ukraine in resolving
issues of nuclear safety and the social problems arising from the
closure of Chernobyl," the communique said.
Reactor number four exploded at Chernobyl in 1986 in the world's
worst civil nuclear accident, spewing a toxic cloud across
northern Ukraine, Russia and Belarus, contaminating thousands of
people and huge tracts of land.
At the summit, held in the Crimean resort of Yalta, Ukrainian
officials said they also discussed possible EU support to help
develop the key Odessa-Brody oil pipeline project, which feeds
into a line supplying Europe from Russia.
The summit, attended by foreign policy chief Javier Solana,
Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, and Ukrainian President
Leonid Kuchma, also addressed the EU's concerns about corruption
and press freedom in Ukraine.
The summit took place in the palace that hosted the historic 1945
Yalta Conference where Soviet dictator Josef Stalin and U.S. and
British leaders redrew the post-war map of Europe.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
*****************************************************************
5 UK: 10 bilion pound nuclear power programme
scotsman.com -
BRITISH Energy yesterday launched a plea to the
government to allow it to start a £10 billion programme
to build at least 10 new nuclear power stations to
replace existing ones from 2011 onwards.
The East Kilbride-based nuclear electricity generator is
also pushing for the government to take on £3 billion
worth of costs relating to reprocessing of spent nuclear
fuels to enable the group to fund its share of
construction costs.
The plea came in British Energy’s submission to the
government’s comprehensive energy review, launched just
after the general election and aimed at determining UK
energy strategy until 2050.
However, it will have to overcome tough opposition to
new nuclear power plant construction from environmental
and other groups.
British Energy pointed out that all but one of the UK’s
existing nuclear power stations were due to shut within
the next 25 years, starting from 2011 with Hunterston B
and Hinkley Point.
The group, which currently has eight stations delivering
output of 9,600 megawatts, or around 25 per cent of the
UK total requirement, wants to replace them with 10 new
stations of 1000mW output, each costing around £1
billion.
British Energy said its submission "details how a future
nuclear programme can deliver all the environmental
benefits of the UK’s renewables programme, but at third
of the cost to consumers".
All the new plants would be on existing sites, where
British Energy owns surplus land and would be able to
utilise existing high voltage transmission line
connections as well as the skilled staff available. The
stations employ roughly 500 people each, or 5,000 across
the UK.
Given that it will take a total of 10 years to design,
obtain planning consents, commission and open new
stations, the group sees the issue as an urgent one for
government .
The Department of Trade and Industry has estimated that,
if current trends continue, by 2025 around 75 per cent
of the UK’s generation will be from gas -fired plant and
90 per cent of that gas will have to be imported from
countries beyond Europe, including Russia.
This has drawn criticism from various quarters over the
inherent risks in this due to a lack of security of
supply.
British Energy said yesterday the cost of new nuclear
plant would amount to an extra 0.25p per unit on
electricity bills, roughly a 4 per cent rise.
If the government took on the £3 billion historic and
current liabilities it faces for nuclear waste disposal,
including taking on £250 million of its £300 million
annual bill, British Energy would be able to fund about
40 per cent of the cost of new plants with banks and
other debt providers supplying the rest.
Andrew Turpin
Wednesday, 12th September 2001
The Scotsman
*****************************************************************
6 Nevada approves big legal contract in nuke dump fight
Las Vegas SUN
September 11, 2001
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Officials have approved a $2.5 million
contract with a Washington, D.C., law firm that will help the
state in its battle against a proposed nuclear waste dump at
Nevada's Yucca Mountain.
The state Board of Examiners, chaired by Gov. Kenny Guinn, voted
Tuesday to grant the three-year contract to Egan &Associates,
known for its handling of big nuclear litigation cases.
Guinn described the contract as "probably the most important step
we've been able to take" in the long-running effort to keep the
high-level nuclear waste dump out of Nevada.
Attorney General Frankie Sue Del Papa, also on the Board of
Examiners, said her office will work closely with Egan
&Associates, predicting success in the effort to force the
nuclear power industry "to rethink its options."
The law firm, headed by attorney Joe Egan, has represented
numerous foreign research reactor operators and their
governments; has been involved in large nuclear power cases in
Texas, Connecticut and Kentucky; and brought a billion-dollar
action against the nation's leading radioactive waste disposal
operator.
Egan said his goal will be to win the battle against the Yucca
Mountain dump on the legal merits of the case. That includes the
argument that a proper scientific analysis will show Yucca
Mountain isn't suitable.
"We are not anti-nuclear activists. We are pro-science
activists," he added.
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
7 State hires law firm to contest Yucca plan
[Las Vegas Review-Journal]
Wednesday, September 12, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Legal team to fight project on scientific grounds
By SEAN WHALEY
DONREY CAPITAL BUREAU
CARSON CITY -- State officials on Tuesday hired a Washington,
D.C., law firm at a cost of $2.5 million to fight federal efforts
to build a high-level nuclear waste repository 100 miles
northwest of Las Vegas at Yucca Mountain.
The firm of Egan &Associates will assemble and manage a team of
nuclear industry lawyers and former government litigators to
assist the state with any licensing proceedings for Yucca
Mountain by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission for the
three-year term of the contract.
"It's a big day for Nevada," said Gov. Kenny Guinn. "This is a
giant step forward for us."
The contract was approved by the Board of Examiners, made up of
Guinn, Attorney General Frankie Sue Del Papa and Secretary of
State Dean Heller.
Joseph Egan, chairman of the firm, is a Massachusetts Institute
of Technology-trained nuclear engineer who once worked at a
nuclear power plant.
Funding for the contract came from a $4 million appropriation,
approved by the 2001 Legislature, intended to fund the legal
fight against Yucca Mountain and mount a public relations
campaign against the transportation of nuclear waste to Nevada
from across the nation.
"We're going to fight the very best fight, through litigation,
that can be fought," Guinn said.
William Briggs, a former solicitor with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, is an attorney with the Washington, D.C., firm of
Ross, Dixon &Bell who has been retained as part of Nevada's legal
team. He attended the meeting with Egan.
Egan said his team will fight Yucca Mountain on legitimate
scientific issues and concerns.
"The NRC is a very scientific agency," Egan said. "It's not too
easy to go into NRC and fool people. You have to be real sound on
the merits to get NRC to take you seriously.
"The fact that Nevada selected our team is a strong sign that
they are very interested in the merits," he said. "We're very
serious about evaluating the merits of this project."
Del Papa said Nevada has been outspent by supporters of the dump
since the Nuclear Waste Policy Act was amended by Congress in
1987 to single out Yucca Mountain for the high-level nuclear
waste repository. But the state can still defeat the project, she
said.
"I think we can win this contest," Del Papa said.
Robert Loux, executive director of the state Agency for Nuclear
Projects, said: "We aim to fight the project on the merits with
the assistance of a world-class legal team."
This story is located at:
http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Sep-12-Wed-2001/news/16978386.html
*****************************************************************
8 Yucca Mountain hearings delayed
[Las Vegas Review-Journal]
Wednesday, September 12, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
REVIEW-JOURNAL
Public hearings scheduled for tonight and Thursday night on the
government's plans for burying nuclear waste in Yucca Mountain
have been postponed, a Department of Energy spokesman said.
The hearings in Amargosa Valley and Pahrump were the last
scheduled for the Yucca Mountain Project. New hearing dates are
expected to be announced later this week.
This story is located at:
http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Sep-12-Wed-2001/news/16979017.html
*****************************************************************
9 Panel told risk of eruption at Yucca site is underestimated
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL: NEWS:
The Lathrop Wells cinder cone, center left, protrudes from the
valley floor south of Yucca Mountain in this Aug. 30 photo.
Photo by Gary Thompson.
Thursday, September 13, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Geologist says DOE should assess results of a molten release
By KEITH ROGERS
REVIEW-JOURNAL
A state geologist challenged the Department of Energy on
Wednesday to better assess the risk of a volcanic eruption at
Yucca Mountain, where the government has proposed storing the
nation's high-level nuclear waste.
"If you stand atop Yucca Mountain and look at relatively young
volcanoes, it's obvious something is going on here," said
geologist Steve Frishman, technical policy coordinator for the
Nevada Nuclear Projects Agency. Frishman was referring to several
cinder cones that protrude from the landscape within view of the
mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
"It's pretty clear to me that the project is not ready for site
recommendation," he told a presidential panel reviewing technical
information on the Yucca Mountain Project.
Instead of downplaying the chances that radiation could be
unleashed by a dike of molten rock, Frishman said, the Energy
Department should examine the actual releases that could result.
Calculations based on that scenario would show much higher public
exposure, especially if molten rock laden with nuclear
contamination breaches the mountain's surface and leaves
radioactive ash that could be inhaled, Frishman said.
"This is the information decision-makers should have ... and
they're just not getting it," Frishman told Nuclear Waste
Technical Review Board, a panel that reports to Congress and the
energy secretary.
Yucca Mountain Project scientists have said the last time molten
rock penetrated the surface in the vicinity of the ridge was
roughly 80,000 years ago, at the Lathrop Wells cinder cone, 12
miles south of the mountain.
Yucca Mountain was formed some 13 million years ago from
alternating periods of volcanic ash falling from the sky and lava
oozing out of a caldera near Timber Mountain, 12 miles north.
The volcanoes and cinder cones near Yucca Mountain are extinct,
according to Eric Smistad, an Energy Department geologist.
Smistad's team has calculated a 1-in-70 million chance per year
that magma could rise through the floor of a repository, if one
is built, wipe out nuclear waste canisters and continue upward to
the mountain's surface, releasing radioactive materials into the
air.
His team estimates that such a release might result in a dose of
one-tenth of a millirem to a person downwind.
That would be a fraction of the Environmental Protection Agency's
standard of 15 millirems per year of allowable radiation exposure
from all pathways: air, soil, water and the food chain.
Frishman said the dose from radioactive ash escaping from Yucca
Mountain could be about 1,000 rem, considerably higher than the
allowable standard of 15 millirems. A millirem is one-thousandth
of a rem, the measurement of radiation dosage.
During Wednesday's panel discussion, Smistad referred to
Frishman's worst-case analogy as a "semantics issue." But, he
said the team intends to work on reporting their calculations on
volcanic risk so they are more easily understood by people who
aren't as familiar with the scientific aspects of the project.
A decision on site recommendation by Energy Secretary Spencer
Abraham is expected within a few months.
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1997 - 2001
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10 REID URGES HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TO START YUCCA MOUNTAIN LETTER
WRITING CAMPAIGN
Issues challenge during "Capitol to Classroom" Internet chat with
Nevada students
September 10, 2001
WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senator Harry Reid today challenged
Nevada's students to begin a letter writing campaign opposing
Yucca Mountain. During his monthly "Capitol to Classroom"
Internet chat, Reid urged the young people to take part in the
grass roots movement to stop nuclear waste from coming to Nevada.
"This is the biggest issue facing our state, and it is vital
that President Bush and members of his Administration know of
Nevadans outrage and opposition to burying nuclear waste in Yucca
Mountain," Reid said. "Residents across the state should make
sure their voices are heard, and I would especially encourage our
high school students to get involved."
Each month, Senator Reid selects different Nevada schools to
participate in a "Capitol to Classroom" chat about important
issues affecting Nevada and the nation. Today's chat, the first
one of this school year, included students from Centennial,
Laughlin and Western High Schools. The chats feature an
interactive question and answer session with students typing
their questions and Reid responding via live video conferencing.
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11 Letter: Government bound to put nuke waste here
Las Vegas SUN
September 12, 2001
The nuclear waste issue remains very big to Nevadans. I didn't
make the meeting last Wednesday, but the 5 1/2 hours probably all
came down to, "Not in my back yard."
What hurts us is that Nevada has more Bureau of Land Management
land than any state in the United States. Since most of us would
like to see it moved elsewhere, did any protesters give their
opinion as to whose back yard it should be in? You cannot keep
saying, "anywhere but here." Washington won't buy that. We have
to make this a multiple choice issue for them.
If not, since it's the government's one and only choice, and
since we all agree the waste must go somewhere, what does that
tell you? It will be placed on government land many miles from
Las Vegas. The Nevada Test Site, which is on government land, has
been protested against for many years, with many going to jail.
As you can see, it's still there.
If you feel that you can damn well do what you please on the
property that you own, what are the thoughts of the U.S.
government on the property it owns?
CHARLES A. HAGEN
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
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12 Nuclear waste decision 'may be at election time'
Financial Times; Sep 13, 2001
By ANDREW TAYLOR
The government could be faced with the sensitive issue of
deciding where to store Britain's medium term and long term
nuclear waste at about the time of the next election, Michael
Meacher, the environment minister, conceded yesterday.
Ministers have launched a public consultation over how to deal
with the country's radioactive heritage - four years after the
Conservative government dropped plans for a controversial nuclear
repository deep underground at Sellafield, Cumbria.
The outcome will be crucial to any decision to replace Britain's
ageing nuclear power stations, which is being considered as part
of the government's energy review.
More than 10,000 tonnes of radioactive waste have been stored in
Britain pending a decision on its future. This would rise to
500,000 tonnes even if no new nuclear power stations were built
and reprocessing ended when existing plants closed, said Mr
Meacher.
Public consultation was expected to last several years and would
consider all methods of dealing with long-term radioactive waste
including above ground storage, he said.
The outcome of the consultation could also have important
implications for plans to privatise up to 49 per cent of British
Nuclear Fuels which faces mounting costs in dealing with its own
medium-level and high-level waste. Potential BNFL shareholders
may be reluctant to invest in the company if there is no clear
strategy for dealing with these liabilities, say
environmentalists.
The military also faces problems over dealing with its nuclear
waste, particularly from submarines.
British Energy, the privatised nuclear generator also warned this
week that it would be unable to finance a Pounds 10bn rebuilding
programme unless it was allowed to offload Pounds 3bn of former
spent fuel liabilities on to the taxpayer. Greenpeace, the
environmental campaigner, des-cribed the decision as "an
important breakthrough". Greenpeace opposes the option of a deep
repository.
Copyright: The Financial Times Limited
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13 Daily Events Report
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Operations Center
Event Reports For
09/12/2001 09/13/2001
** EVENT NUMBERS **
38265 38271 38275 38279 38280 38281 38282
Fuel Cycle Facility Event Number: 38265
FACILITY: PADUCAH GASEOUS DIFFUSION PLANT NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/04/2001
RXTYPE: URANIUM ENRICHMENT FACILITY NOTIFICATION TIME: 18:09[EDT]
COMMENTS: 2 DEMOCRACY CENTER EVENT DATE: 09/04/2001
6903 ROCKLEDGE DRIVE EVENT TIME: 14:00[CDT]
BETHESDA, MD 20817 (301)564 3200 LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/12/2001
CITY: PADUCAH REGION: 3
COUNTY: McCRACKEN STATE: KY PERSON ORGANIZATION
LICENSE#: GDP 1 AGREEMENT: Y MARK RING R3
DOCKET: 0707001 M. WAYNE HODGES NMSS
NRC NOTIFIED BY: UNDERWOOD
HQ OPS OFFICER: CHAUNCEY GOULD
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY
10 CFR SECTION:
NBNL RESPONSE BULLETIN
EVENT TEXT
24 HOUR 91 01 BULLETIN RESPONSE
At 1400, on 9/4/01, the Plant Shift Superintendent (PSS) was
notified of an NCSA violation that had occurred at the C 355 air
plant. Immediately after switching drying units at the air
plant, a high high moisture alarm was received. The alarm
indicated air moisture content greater than 1300 ppm water,
violating NCSA GEN 10 01. NCSA GEN 010 credits the dry air
system for producing dry air with moisture content of less than
1300 ppm. The purpose of this requirement is to prevent exposure
of fissile uranium deposits to a moderating environment. No
equipment containing fissile material was exposed to high
moisture content plant air at the time of the alarm or following
receipt of the alarm.
Since one leg of double contingency was lost, this is being
reported to the NRC as a 24 hr. event report.
SAFETY SIGNIFICANCE OF EVENTS:
There was no purging of equipment containing fissile material in
progress at the time of the moisture excursion. Although a
parameter was exceeded, the proper response to the alarm was
taken prior to resuming buffering of purging equipment containing
fissile material.
POTENTIAL CRITICALITY PATHWAYS INVOLVED(BRIEF SCENARIO(S) OF HOW
CRITICALITY COULD OCCUR:
In order for a criticality to be possible. Operations personnel
would have had to fail to respond to the alarm. In addition, a
fissile deposit containing greater than a critical mass and
absorbing greater than 10 kg of water would have had to be
present.
CONTROLLED PARAMETERS (MASS, MODERATION. GEOMETRY,
CONCENTRATION. ETC: Double contingency for this scenario is
established by implementing two controls on moderation.
ESTIMATED AMOUNT, ENRICHMENT, FORM OF LICENSED MATERIAL (INCLUDE
PROCESS LIMIT AND % WORST CASE CRITICAL MASS): n/a
NUCLEAR CRITICALITY SAFETY CONTROL(S) OR CONTROL SYSTEM(S) AND
DESCRIPTION OF THE FAILURES OR DEFICIENCIES: Double contingency
for this scenario is established by implementing two controls on
moderation.
The first leg of double contingency Is based on receiving a high
high moisture alarm indicating a moisture content greater than
1300 ppm water and ceasing buffering and purging operations in
response to the alarm. This control was not violated.
The second leg of double contingency is based on the dry air
system producing plant air with a moisture content less than 1300
ppm water. Since the moisture content was confirmed to be greater
than 1300 ppm, this process condition was exceeded and double
contingency was not maintained.
Since double contingency is based on two controls on moderation,
double contingency was not maintained.
CORRECTIVE ACTIONS TO RESTORE SAFETY SYSTEMS AND WHEN EACH WAS
IMPLEMENTED: No corrective actions implemented. Proper procedure
response was performed.
The NRC Resident Inspector was notified.
* * * UPDATE ON 09/12/01 AT 1455 ET BY PITTMAN TAKEN BY
MACKINNON * * *
Criticality Safety Incident Report NCS INC 01 022 has been
revised to include information from EN C 826 01 039 that
documented that the moisture content did not exceed the NCS limit
of 1300 ppm. Since the moisture limit for the plant air system
was not exceeded, no violation occurred. R3DO (Sonia Burgess)
notified.
The NRC Resident Inspector was notified of this update by the
certificate holder.
General Information or Other Event Number: 38271
REP ORG: NEW MEXICO RAD CONTROL PROGRAM NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/07/2001
LICENSEE: WESTERN TECHNOLOGIES NOTIFICATION TIME: 18:31[EDT]
CITY: CUBA REGION: 4 EVENT DATE: 09/06/2001
COUNTY: STATE: NM EVENT TIME: 11:00[MDT]
LICENSE#: DM 244 29 AGREEMENT: Y LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/12/2001
DOCKET:
PERSON ORGANIZATION
LINDA SMITH R4
M. WAYNE HODGES NMSS
NRC NOTIFIED BY: SHERRY MILLER
HQ OPS OFFICER: JOHN MacKINNON
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY
10 CFR SECTION:
NAGR AGREEMENT STATE
EVENT TEXT
MISSING TROXLER DENSITY GAUGE.
Western Technologies, out of Albuquerque, accidentally left a
3430 Troxler moisture density gauge at mile marker 49 on US
highway 550. The moisture density gauge was out of its
transport case laying on the side of the highway when the it was
left behind. The driver immediately, within an hour, returned to
the location and discovered that the gauge was missing. State of
New Mexico has recommended to the licensee that they offer a
reward for the missing gauge.
* * * UPDATE 1851 9/12/2001 FROM MILLER TAKEN BY STRANSKY * * *
The state reported that the missing gauge has been recovered.
Notified R4DO (Shaffer).
!!!!!!!!! THIS EVENT HAS BEEN RETRACTED. THIS EVENT HAS BEEN
RETRACTED !!!!!!!
Hospital Event Number: 38275
REP ORG: CLARK MEMORIAL HOSPITAL NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/11/2001
LICENSEE: CLARK MEMORIAL HOSPITAL NOTIFICATION TIME: 15:17[EDT]
CITY: JEFFERSIONVILLE REGION: 3 EVENT DATE: 09/11/2001
COUNTY: STATE: IN EVENT TIME: 07:00[CST]
LICENSE#: 1312367 01 AGREEMENT: N LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/12/2001
DOCKET:
PERSON ORGANIZATION
SONIA BURGESS R3
MELVYN LEACH NMSS
NRC NOTIFIED BY: TRINNA WALKER
HQ OPS OFFICER: JOHN MacKINNON
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY
10 CFR SECTION:
BAB1 20.2201(a)(1)(i) LOST/STOLEN LNM>1000X
EVENT TEXT
MISSING 94 PALLADIUM SEEDS.
Licensee received, in the mail, a box containing 94 palladium
seeds with a total activity of 119.14 millicuries on Friday,
09/0701 at approximately 1200 ET. The box containing the seeds
was locked in the Hot Lab at approximately 1700 hours on
09/07/01. Saturday morning it was noticed that the box
containing the palladium seeds was missing. It was assumed that
the box of seeds had been picked up. Today, 09/11/01, at 0700
hours a Radiation Physicist came to pick up the box of palladium
seeds. At this time it was realized that the seeds were missing.
A search of the hospital areas, trash, etc., was performed and
the seeds were not found. The hospital security and the
Jeffersonville Police department were notified of the missing
palladium seeds.
* * RETRACTION ON 09/12/01 AT 0943ET BY TRINNA WALKER TAKEN BY
MACKINNON * * *
This event is being retracted since a cyclotron was used to
irradiate the palladium seeds. R3DO (Sonia Burgess) notified.
Power Reactor Event Number: 38279
FACILITY: BRAIDWOOD REGION: 3 NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/12/2001
UNIT: [1] [2] [] STATE: IL NOTIFICATION TIME: 16:36[EDT]
RXTYPE: [1] W 4 LP,[2] W 4 LP EVENT DATE: 09/12/2001
EVENT TIME: 08:00[CDT]
NRC NOTIFIED BY: BRIAN SCHIPIOUR LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/12/2001
HQ OPS OFFICER: JOHN MacKINNON
PERSON ORGANIZATION
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY SONIA BURGESS R3
10 CFR SECTION:
HFIT 26.73 FITNESS FOR DUTY
UNIT SCRAM CODERX CRITINIT PWR INIT RX MODE CURR PWR CURR RX MODE
1 N Y 90 Power Operation 90 Power Operation
2 N Y 96 Power Operation 96 Power Operation
EVENT TEXT
ACCESS DENIED
A contract employee was determined to be under the influence of
alcohol during a for cause test. The employee's access to the
plant has been denied.
The NRC Resident Inspector was notified of this event by the
licensee.
Contact the Headquarters Operation Center for further details.
Power Reactor Event Number: 38280
FACILITY: COLUMBIA GENERATING STATIREGION: 4 NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/12/2001
UNIT: [2] [] [] STATE: WA NOTIFICATION TIME: 19:57[EDT]
RXTYPE: [2] GE 5 EVENT DATE: 09/12/2001
EVENT TIME: 08:17[PDT]
NRC NOTIFIED BY: ROBERT SHERMAN LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/12/2001
HQ OPS OFFICER: BOB STRANSKY
PERSON ORGANIZATION
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY MARK SHAFFER R4
10 CFR SECTION:
HFIT 26.73 FITNESS FOR DUTY
UNIT SCRAM CODERX CRITINIT PWR INIT RX MODE CURR PWR CURR RX MODE
2 N Y 100 Power Operation 100 Power Operation
EVENT TEXT
FITNESS FOR DUTY REPORT
A licensed employee was determined to be under the influence of
alcohol during a for cause test. The employee's access to the
plant has been terminated. The NRC resident inspector has been
informed of this event by the licensee.
Contact the NRC Operations Center for additional details.
Power Reactor Event Number: 38281
FACILITY: OCONEE REGION: 2 NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/12/2001
UNIT: [1] [] [] STATE: SC NOTIFICATION TIME: 20:53[EDT]
RXTYPE: [1] B L LP,[2] B L LP,[3] B L LEVENT DATE: 09/12/2001
EVENT TIME: 18:13[EDT]
NRC NOTIFIED BY: PHILLIP NORTH LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/12/2001
HQ OPS OFFICER: FANGIE JONES
PERSON ORGANIZATION
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY JOHN MONNINGER R2
10 CFR SECTION:
ARPS 50.72(b)(2)(iv)(B) RPS ACTUATION CRITICA
AESF 50.72(b)(3)(iv)(A) VALID SPECIF SYS ACTUAT
UNIT SCRAM CODERX CRITINIT PWR INIT RX MODE CURR PWR CURR RX MODE
1 A/R Y 100 Power Operation 0 Hot Standby
EVENT TEXT
AUTOMATIC REACTOR TRIP DUE TO TURBINE/GENERATOR TRIP
The plant sustained a turbine/generator trip resulting in a
reactor trip, all rods inserted fully, all systems functioned as
required unless otherwise noted, and the plant is stable in MODE
3 (Hot Standby). Main feedwater was lost due to a loss of power
to the secondary pumps. Power is being supplied from the startup
transformer, reactor coolant system is in forced circulation,
emergency feedwater is supplying the steam generators, and
turbine bypass valves to the condensers are providing a heat
sink.
The licensee is investigating the cause of the turbine/generator
trip and the loss of power to the secondary pumps.
The licensee notified the NRC Resident Inspector.
Power Reactor Event Number: 38282
FACILITY: VERMONT YANKEE REGION: 1 NOTIFICATION DATE: 09/13/2001
UNIT: [1] [] [] STATE: VT NOTIFICATION TIME: 02:00[EDT]
RXTYPE: [1] GE 4 EVENT DATE: 09/13/2001
EVENT TIME: [EDT]
NRC NOTIFIED BY: BRIAN COPPERTHITE LAST UPDATE DATE: 09/13/2001
HQ OPS OFFICER: FANGIE JONES
PERSON ORGANIZATION
EMERGENCY CLASS: NON EMERGENCY STEVE BARR R1
10 CFR SECTION: GLENN TRACEY IAT
NINF INFORMATION ONLY
UNIT SCRAM CODERX CRITINIT PWR INIT RX MODE CURR PWR CURR RX MODE
1 N Y 100 Power Operation 100 Power Operation
EVENT TEXT
INFORMATION REPORT IN ACCORDANCE WITH NRC INFORMATION NOTICE 98
35
A suspicious vehicle was noted in area around the plant site.
Immediate compensatory actions were taken upon discovery.
Contact HOO for further details.
*****************************************************************
14 IAEA Daily Press Review
IAEA Daily Press Review Date 2001-09-13 Number 175
1. Non-proliferation
US vulnerability to terrorist attack may galvanize support for MD
plan. President Bush will attend October-Summit of
Asia-Pacific leaders in Shanghai as planned, Chinese official
says. (NYT; R - 13/9) China; United States of America
2. Terrorism
Nations around world condemn terror attacks on US. President
Bush discusses with his Russian counterpart response to
terrorism; Moscow offers support. Antiterrorist exercises
codenamed Atom 2001 aimed at strengthening antiterrorist
defences of large cities and nuclear facilities have been held in
Russian town of Volgodonsk. (R; WP - 12/9) Russian
Federation; United States of America; WORLDWIDE
3. Nuclear power
British Energy urges UK government to 'decide now' on its call
for new NPPs so that advanced reactor designs 'could be
developed in time'. Hearing on NPP Temelin reportedly to be
organized by European Parliament next year. Second unit of
Russian NPP Volgodonsk to be launched in 2004. (NUC; R - 12/9)
Austria; Czech Republic; Russian Federation; United Kingdom
4. Nuclear safety
US NPPs and energy companies on heightened security alert,
operate normally. Rosenergoatom views safety of Russian NPPs as
reliable: no extra protection from terrorists needed. (R - 12/9)
Russian Federation; United States of America
5. Radiation, health
New mobile telephone earpiece called 'Safe Talk' will be
launched this week with promise to strongly reduce risk of
exposure to radiation: more than 99,7% of radiation emitted by
telephone can be eliminated. (TEL - 13/9) United Kingdom
6. Radwaste, fuel
UK government's decision on 10.000 tonnes of radioactive waste
currently stored in the country unlikely to be taken before
next election; British Energy wants to block expensive nuclear
fuel reprocessing contracts. (FT; R - 12,13 /9) United Kingdom
7. UN
UN Security Council calls on all states for joint action against
terrorism. UN General Assembly postpones Children's Summit.
(DAW; NYT - 13/9) United States of America; WORLDWIDE
8. Miscellaneous
'Kursk' recovery effort advances. Three-minute silence is being
held across Europe on Friday in tribute to victims of terrorist
attacks on US. (BBC; NYT - 13/9) EUROPE; Russian Federation
*****************************************************************
15 IAEA Daily Press Review
IAEA Daily Press Review Date 2001-09-12 Number 174
1. Non-proliferation
DPRK says it may reconsider its moratorium on missile tests in
response to Japan's launch of rocket last month. (AFP - 11/9)
Dem. P.R. of Korea; Japan
2. Terrorism
Several reports on terrorist attack in US: NRC recommends that
all US and nuclear fuel facilities go to highest level of
security as precautionary measure in response to attacks on WTC
and Pentagon; Europeans pledge to mount joint battle against
terrorism. (NYT - 11/9) EUROPE; United States of America
3. Nuclear power
British Energy says Government should provide financial
assistance for new NPP construction if it wants to maintain
atomic energy industry. According to Slovene state board for
nuclear safety, Krsko NPP operates safely; International
conference on Information on Nuclear Energy starts in Portoroz.
KEDO has reportedly paid $ 638m to KEPCO as prime contractor to
build two light-water NPPs in DPRK since February last year when
contract was signed. Romanian reactor at Magurele, outside
Bucharest, to be decommissioned soon. Temelin NPP unit 1shutsdown
for five days and launches preparation for completion of tests of
power start-up with output of reactor upto 55 per cent.
Westinghouse plans to develop AP1000 for introduction on US
market and is aiming to receive design certification from US NRC
by end of 2004. (BBC; FT; JAP; R - 10, 12/9) Czech Republic; Dem.
P.R. of Korea; Japan; Romania; Slovenia; United Kingdom; United
States of America
4. Nuclear safety
Security measures increased at Ignalina NPP and two NPPs in
Czech Republic after string of terrorist attacks in US, but
reactor is operating at normal capacity. Report: "A Nuclear
Nightmare" deals with security measures against possible
terrorism attacks at US NPPs . (USN - 10/9) United States of
America
*****************************************************************
16 The Feds Are Considering Shipping Spent Nuclear Fuel Through the
Howard Street Tunnel. Are They Playing With Fire?
Baltimore City Paper: Hot Line (September 12 - September 18, 2001)
Photo By Christopher Myers
By Van Smith
For a few days in mid-July, a few dozen train cars carrying
hazardous chemicals and other materials burned out of control
beneath the city. After a century of barely being known even to
Baltimoreans, the Howard Street tunnel was suddenly in the
national spotlight.
As an event, the tunnel fire was both scary and enthralling.
Local residents and commuters were inundated with news of
gridlock, a water-main break, and possibly toxic smoke. TV sets
all over the country glimmered with images of menacing plumes and
flooded streets, coupled with reports that the too-hot-to-fight
inferno was disrupting not only rail traffic, but Internet
services via cables that also run through the tunnel. But as
normalcy was restored in the ensuing days and weeks, coverage
tailed off. Today, for most folks, the fire is just a memory.
Lost in the immediacy of the moment and the disinterest of its
aftermath are two questions that may ensure the Howard Street
tunnel fire's lasting legacy: What if nuclear waste had been
among the freight in the hottest part of the fire? Could
radioactivity have been released, contaminating people and
property in the heart of a major East Coast city?
The question isn't merely theoretical. A long-studied proposal
for handling the nation's growing inventory of nuclear waste by
carting it from points around the country to a permanent
repository in Nevada's Yucca Mountain is expected to reach
President Bush's desk later this year. If the project gets a
presidential thumbs-up and survives the resulting legal
challenges, spent nuclear fuel will be a frequent passenger on
the nation's highways and railroads for the next three or four
decades, en route to the Nevada desert. Plans drawn up by the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) call for carrying
used-up fuel assemblies from Constellation Energy's Calvert
Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant in Southern Maryland by train through
the Howard Street tunnel.
When it comes to managing the potential of large-scale risks such
as nuclear accidents, examining extreme hypothetical
situations--the possibility, for instance, of nuclear waste in
the Howard Street tunnel fire--is crucial to finding ways to
avoid disasters. Thus, nuclear-transportation experts have
started to examine and debate what they have dubbed "the
Baltimore fire." Until the actual conditions of the fire--the top
temperature reached, how long it stayed that hot--are
established, much of the talk is necessarily speculative. But the
central questions posed by the fire are already known: How sturdy
are the containers used to transport nuclear waste? How foolproof
are the methods of moving them safely by train?
Critics contend that the containers, called "transportation
casks," haven't been tested enough to know their true strength;
cost, rather than safety, is the chief priority in designing
nuclear-transportation plans, they say. The nuclear-energy
industry points out the exemplary safety record of waste
shipments and outlines the stringent measures taken to guard
against reasonably foreseeable dangers. However the argument
turns out, it's a good bet that as the Yucca Mountain Project
heats up, the Howard Street tunnel fire will be national news
once again.
Sitting in her Mount Washington home July 18, Gwen Dubois
listened anxiously to reports of a tunnel fire downtown. Her
teenage son had already left on the light rail for a
double-header at Oriole Park. "On any given day, he's as likely
to be at Camden Yards as he is to be home, despite what's
happened to the Orioles this season," she says, recalling her
worries in an interview later that month. Knowing that freight
trains often carry chemicals that can produce toxic smoke when
burned, Dubois was "concerned about whether his health was at
risk." When "later on I found out that he was stopped on North
Avenue and came home, I was greatly relieved," she says.
Dubois' relief about the fire was short-lived. An internist, she
sits on the board of directors of Physicians for Social
Responsibility, a nonprofit group based in Washington that works
to raise public awareness of nuclear issues. On her house hangs a
large banner reading nuclear-free zone. Attuned as she is to
nuclear risks, her thoughts quickly broadened from the chemical
fire to larger issues.
"Within hours," she says, "I was thinking, If this were a train
carrying radioactive waste, what kind of exposures would there
be? Who would be monitoring? Would we even know? What about the
psychological impact on people who are afraid that they've been
exposed? So, as bad as this fire was, I thought it would have
been just truly a catastrophe if the train had carried nuclear
waste. . . .
"As time goes by, the other issue is, it's going to become more
and more likely that trains will contain nuclear waste, and
nuclear waste carried in containers that haven't been adequately
tested. And also, this train wreck--the temperatures were
extremely high, high enough to cause burning of nuclear waste and
make some of the radioactivity airborne and carried over a wider
area," she continues. "So all of the specifics about this train
fire--the temperature, the difficulty getting to it, the fact
that it was in an urban area where a lot of people were
potentially exposed--all of these factors are so relevant. If the
cargo was radioactive, the implications would have really been
just mammoth."
Dubois' mind was not the only one turning to the potential
nuclear risks posed by the Howard Street tunnel fire. U.S. Sen.
Harry Reid (D-Nev.)--the Senate majority whip and, like every
other elected official in Nevada, a strident opponent of the
Yucca Mountain plan--took to the Senate floor the day after the
fire began to offer his take on the dangers.
"People think hydrochloric acid is bad, which it is," Reid said,
referring to one of the hazardous materials carried by the
burning train in Baltimore, "but not as bad as nuclear waste. A
speck the size of a pinpoint would kill a person. And we're
talking about transporting some 70,000 tons of it all across
America."
Reid enlisted the aid of Maryland Sens. Barbara Mikulski and Paul
Sarbanes in promptly convincing his colleagues to do what
politicians often do when drastic accidents occur: order a study.
On July 23, as charred rail cars were being removed from the
Howard Street tunnel, the Senate voted 96-0 to attach an
amendment to the U.S. Department of Transportation appropriations
bill requiring DOT to conduct a top-down assessment of the
nation's system for transporting hazardous and radioactive waste.
Reid's actions in the wake of the Baltimore fire caused a flurry
of interest--back in Nevada. "Baltimore's experience should be
reason enough to comprehend that Yucca Mountain isn't just
Nevada's problem, it would be a land mine for any city or town
that had the misfortune of being located near the path that would
take nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain," the daily Las Vegas Sun
editorialized on July 25 under the headline "Baltimore derailment
a bad omen."
Also quick to pick up on the nuke-train angle was the Nuclear
Information and Resource Service, a Washington-based activist
group. The organization's nuclear-waste specialist, Kevin Kamps,
shot off a press release on July 21, revealing that a U.S.
Department of Energy assessment of the Yucca Mountain Project
included route maps that showed nuclear-waste shipments going by
rail from Calvert Cliffs through the Howard Street tunnel. Kamps
spent the next two weeks touring the country, garnering news
coverage of this new twist to the Yucca Mountain debate.
Pro-Yucca forces dismiss attempts to play up the Baltimore fire
as a nuclear-waste-transportation issue. The day after Reid made
his speech on the Senate floor, the industry issued its response.
"It is really unfair for Sen. Reid to use this as an opportunity
to make a case against Yucca Mountain by scaring the public,"
said Mitch Singer, a spokesperson for the D.C.-based Nuclear
Industry Institute (NEI). Sarah Berk, spokesperson for U.S. Sen.
Larry Craig (R-Idaho), told reporters that Reid's response to the
tunnel fire is "a misguided and misinformed effort to connect
something that should not be connected. The fact of the matter
is, if that train had been carrying nuclear components, it would
have been protected in containers that would have prevented this
sort of a spill." Berk stressed the nuclear-power industry's
"phenomenal safety record" and its ongoing efforts "to develop
safe and responsible methods to handle nuclear waste."
The NEI's Web site (www.nei.org) points out that nuclear-waste
shipments are small, carefully managed, and do have a remarkable
safety record: In nearly 40 years of transporting spent nuclear
fuel, there have been 2,900 shipments and only eight accidents.
Only one was serious, and none resulted in a radioactive release.
In Maryland, shipments of high-level radioactive materials have
occurred without incident. Twenty-eight thousand pounds of
radioactive material passed through Maryland in four shipments
during July and August 2000, according to the Maryland State
Police, which is notified of such hauls, and since 1996
approximately 15 kilograms of spent nuclear fuel were trucked
through the state in five separate shipments.
In addition, an NRC report shows that between 1993 and 1997 154.8
kilograms of spent nuclear fuel were shipped out of state from
the Dundalk Marine Terminal, Calvert Cliffs, and the National
Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg. Another
17.1 kilograms were sent to Dundalk for export.
The key to safely transporting spent nuclear rods is the
survivability of the casks. The NRC, according to NEI's Web site,
requires that transportation casks "pass a series of hypothetical
accident conditions that create forces greater than the
containers would experience in actual accidents. The same
container must, in sequence, undergo 1) a 30-foot free fall onto
an unyielding surface, 2) a 40-inch fall onto a steel rod six
inches in diameter, 3) a 30-minute exposure to fire at 1,475
degrees Fahrenheit that engulfs the entire container, and 4)
submergence under three feet of water for eight hours."
What the NEI site doesn't point out is that never has an actual,
full-size cask been subjected to this battery of assaults.
Quarter-scale models have been used as the basis for computer
models that predict how an actual cask would perform in extreme
circumstances. But no actual full-scale testing has been
conducted, because subjecting a 130-ton cask to those conditions
is logistically challenging and very expensive--probably near $20
million per test. Thus--as Yucca Mountain Project critics like to
point out--there is no real-life basis for concluding the casks
can survive such extreme circumstances.
The third element in the NRC's list of standards--the 30-minute,
all-engulfing fire at 1,475 degrees Fahrenheit--is the one that
turned attention to the Baltimore blaze. Firefighters here
reported whole train cars aglow from the heat of the tunnel fire.
On the second day of the fire, Baltimore City Fire Department
officials told the press that the temperature in the tunnel was
as high as 1,500 degrees. If the hottest part of the fire rose
above 1,475 degrees for more than 30 minutes--as appears likely,
though technical analysis has yet to prove it--then the Howard
Street tunnel fire achieved a rare intensity that gives pause to
nuclear-waste- transportation experts.
Questions to NEI's press office about whether casks are designed
to survive a fire as intense as Baltimore's was reported to be
were referred to Robert Jones, a Los Gatos, Calif., nuclear
engineer who designed casks for General Electric for 13 years and
now works as a nuclear-industry consultant. Jones was skeptical
about whether the Baltimore fire actually exceeded the design
standard for casks. If it did, he says, it would be a singular
event. Jones cites a government study showing that the
probability of an actual railroad fire exceeding the regulatory
conditions is less than 1/10 of 1 percent.
"I'll wager that 1,500 degrees did not exist totally for a day
and a half" in the Howard Street tunnel, Jones says. He
acknowledges, though, that if it did, "there's a potential for
some release. But we're not talking about this thing blowing up."
Rather, he explains, "the leakage, if it was to occur, is likely
to be a radioactive gas that would be dispersed."
Daniel Bullen, who sits on the federal Nuclear Waste Technical
Review Board , concurs with Jones. "Would there potentially be a
release? Yes," says Bullen, an Iowa State University engineering
professor who used to run that school's now-closed
nuclear-reactor laboratory. Foreseeing the questions his answer
raises, he fires off a quick interview with himself: "Would it be
a significant release? Probably not. Would it be hard to find?
No, because radiation is pretty easy to find. Would it be
difficult to remediate? Maybe. You might have to move a lot of
dirt and clean up a lot of surface and stuff. But would it be
significantly life-threatening? Probably not."
"Oh, this guy's just shooting from the hip," Marvin Resnikoff
says upon hearing Bullen's characterization of the effects of a
long-burning 1,500-degree fire. Resnikoff, a physicist, heads
Radioactive Waste Management Associates, a New York-based
consulting firm that specializes in analyzing nuclear-waste
safety.
The state of Nevada recently hired him to look at the Howard
Street tunnel fire and report on its implications for safe
transport of spent nuclear fuel. The report is due to be
completed this month; when it's released, Resnikoff asserts,
"we'll have much more definitive answers."
In the meantime, Resnikoff offers a glimpse of what he's
learning. If the fire turns out to be as hot as reported--and his
analysis will establish whether or not it was--then a potential
release would include other materials besides radioactive gas.
"There are particulates," he says. "We are concerned about cesium
137 because it is semivolatile. And we are concerned about cobalt
60, to a lesser extent, because that material is on the outside"
of spent-fuel assemblies and could be released more quickly in
the event of a leak. Cesium 137 and cobalt 60 are radioactive
carcinogens that have half-lives of 30 and five years,
respectively, so they represent a long-term cancer risk. They
emit gamma rays, which, according to a U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency fact sheet, "can easily pass completely through
the human body or be absorbed by tissue, thus constituting a
radiation hazard for the entire body." Based on the weather
conditions that existed during the Baltimore fire, Resnikoff
estimates that a radioactive smoke plume exiting the southern
terminus of the tunnel would have spread perilously close to
Camden Yards.
Until the report is concluded and released, Resnikoff declines to
give any more details of his concerns about what could have
happened if nuclear waste had been in the Howard Street tunnel
fire. Robert Halstead, transportation adviser for the Nevada
Office of Nuclear Projects, which hired Resnikoff to study the
Baltimore fire, is much more candid.
If the fire was hot enough for a long enough time to compromise
the casks and cause a leak, Halstead says, "you are going to be
concerned with this plume of smoke carrying cesium and some other
fission products. Obviously it's bad if you breathe it, but also,
because it is a big-time emitter of gamma radiation, there is
direct radiation from the plume. If anything's been deposited on
the ground, it's irradiating the area also. It would cause a very
big cleanup problem.
"So you basically would face this terrible choice," Halstead
says. "You could easily spend in excess of $5 [billion] to $10
billion to clean the area. Or you could simply quarantine the
area. The real answer on this is that you are probably going to
have a situation where you've spent money rather than lives.
There probably aren't going to be thousands of latent cancer
fatalities, but you are going to have to spend hundreds of
millions or billions of dollars to prevent that. That's a pretty
fair ballpark [figure]."
If Resnikoff concludes that the Baltimore fire actually could
damage a nuclear-waste-transportation cask enough to cause a
radiation leak, the question becomes how to ensure that nuclear
waste bound for Yucca Mountain (or anywhere else, for that
matter) is never subjected to such an accident. This opens up a
whole other area of debate--some experts contend the shipping
risks are minimal, while others assert transportation is the
weakest link in the nuclear-waste-management chain.
Jones, the cask designer, points out that rail shipments of spent
nuclear fuel are made on dedicated trains, hauling only
nuclear-waste casks. That reduces the probability of waste being
in a contained, inaccessible environment, such as a train tunnel,
along with volatile chemicals and other materials that, when
burning, can create extremely high temperatures for a long period
of time. (The train that caught fire under Howard Street, for
example, was loaded with wood and paper products.) Furthermore,
shipping schedules can be coordinated to eliminate the
possibility that a dedicated nuclear-waste train and a
mixed-freight train with hazardous materials are in the same
tunnel at the same time.
"You know, railroads don't just cut things loose and say we'll
see you at the other end," Jones says. "They're very good at
tracking these things. So the circumstances that would have to
exist in order to have an environment where a spent-fuel train
would be in that Baltimore tunnel fire or its equivalent is just
extraordinary. A billion to one. It virtually isn't going to
happen, just because that's the way the business is structured."
Resnikoff counters that "there is no regulation that says that
nuclear-waste shipments will be by dedicated train. It would all
be voluntary on the industry's part. If they'd like to sign a
requirement that it will be by dedicated train, that would make a
big difference. It costs more money to have a dedicated train. Do
they want to put up the money? [That] is the question." "It's
perfectly credible that you could have one or two casks of spent
fuel in a mixed-freight train going through that Baltimore
tunnel," Halstead maintains.
His reasoning is based on cost. In all likelihood, dedicated
trains will be used to make large hauls of nuclear waste. But the
small amount of waste at Calvert Cliffs--930 metric tons, about
1/10 of 1 percent of the nation's growing inventory of spent
nuclear fuel--may well end up on trains carrying a variety of
other materials.
"A contractor working for the Department of Energy who got [its]
contract on a low-bid basis would be tempted to shave nickels and
dimes by transporting a small number of casks a short distance on
a mixed-freight train--say, from Calvert Cliffs maybe up to
Harrisburg [Pa.]," Halstead says. There, he speculates, the
Calvert Cliffs casks would be transferred to a dedicated train
carrying other waste from other reactors in the region.
Calvert Cliffs spokesperson Karl Neddenien cautions that "at this
point there is no plan whatsoever as to where and how the
shipments will go. It's wide open." He notes that Calvert Cliffs
is right next to the Chesapeake Bay, so "it may turn out to be
safer to put it on a barge to go down to Norfolk, Va., to a
railhead. We don't know." He acknowledges that Yucca Mountain
planning documents do show a proposed route through the Howard
Street tunnel but says nothing is set in stone.
And Bullen, of the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board, suggests
the proposed route may be changed in light of this summer's
events. "I'd be surprised if they let them use that tunnel after
the fire," he says.
Another problem with shipping waste by train is that "there are
no federal regulations that govern the selection of shipping
routes for rail," Halstead says. "There are for trucks, and the
highway routes are generally selected to minimize shipments
through highly populated areas, but there aren't any equivalent
regulations for rail." He suggests laws that prevent the use of
two-way tunnels and require circuitous routing and dedicated
trains.
"Why in the world would we allow spent fuel to be shipped in
mixed-freight trains in the first place?" Halstead says. "And,
secondly, if they were in mixed-freight trains, who would be
stupid enough to run them through dangerous areas? Congress
should just say, 'Bang, you will not ship any spent fuel in
mixed-freight trains.' My god, what could be more common sense
than that?"
His harsh critique of the existing waste-transport system
notwithstanding, Halstead says he is not against nuclear power.
"I personally think that there is a very good green case to be
made for nuclear power," he says. But after years of studying the
industry and how it's regulated, he says, he finds it "just
pathetic that the people running this business are incapable of
doing it technically and in a way that would have public
confidence."
The public is going to have plenty of opportunity to express its
confidence, or lack thereof, in the Yucca Mountain Project as it
winds through the approval process. Based on NRC's assessment of
the site's scientific and technical feasibility, Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham and President Bush are expected to give the plan
the green light later this year. Then Nevada Gov. Kenny Guinn and
that state's legislature will have an opportunity to veto that
decision--something they're assured to do. Once Nevada rejects
it, Congress gets the final say by a simple majority vote of both
houses. Along the way, lawsuits brought by the state of Nevada
and coalitions of environmental groups will throw up roadblocks.
All together, this level of contention is bound to attract big
media attention and raise Yucca Mountain's profile as a national
issue.
In the meantime, a major snafu has cast a shadow over Yucca. In
late July, the Las Vegas Sun reported that for the last six
years, the same Chicago law firm that the Department of Energy
has been paying to provide legal services in support of Yucca
Mountain has been lobbying on behalf of the NEI to get the
project built. The firm, Winston &Strawn, and the NEI severed
their relationship shortly after reporters called for comment on
the apparent conflict of interest. "This situation," Guinn wrote
to Abraham in an Aug. 1 letter, "presents serious issues
concerning conflict of interest and possible bias in the site
evaluation process" for Yucca Mountain.
Around the same time, in an incident seized upon by anti-Yucca
forces to bolster their case, a leaking cask was discovered on a
truck carrying low-level nuclear waste through Nevada. No
radioactive material escaped, but the July 30 incident served as
a reminder of a leaky container found on a truck in Arizona in
1997--and that one did release radioactivity, leading to a
suspension of additional shipments until corrective measures were
put in place. Guinn promptly fired off another letter to Abraham:
"It appears DOE's protocol for the transportation of nuclear
waste is seriously ineffective in protecting public health and
the environment."
Critics' concerns about the Yucca Mountain Project aside, most
everyone agrees that the technology doesn't exist today to allow
the waste to be stored on-site at the nation's 72 nuclear-reactor
sites for 10,000 years, until it has cooled off enough to be
relatively safe. "It's gotta go someplace, it can't just stay
around forever where it is," says Robert Jones, the former GE
nuclear engineer.
As the nation has already invested $6 billion to $8 billion in
the Yucca site, Jones contends, we should move forward with it.
But it will cost another $50 billion to bring the Yucca site
online; rather than continue throwing good money after bad,
Nevada's Sen. Reid contends, the Bush administration should scrap
Yucca and start anew, finding another site or developing
strategies to safely keep the waste where it is.
It remains to be seen how exercised the public will get over the
potential hazards of transporting nuclear waste to Yucca
Mountain. But as bad press, including the doubts about safety
posed by the Baltimore fire, feeds into the collective
realization that shipments are going to pass within a mile of an
estimated 60 million U.S. residents over the course of 30 or 40
years, grass-roots opposition is bound to coalesce. If Resnikoff
demonstrates that the Howard Street tunnel fire actually did burn
at or about 1,500 degrees for more than a few hours--potentially
enough to break a cask and cause a radioactive release--Yucca's
opponents' arsenal will be stocked with a credible, real-life
incident that raises serious doubts about the current framework
for shipping the waste.
"The issue of waste transportation to Yucca Mountain is lurking
on the national horizon," Nevada Agency for Nuclear Waste
Projects executive director Robert Loux wrote in an Aug. 16 guest
column in the Las Vegas Sun, "like a thousand-pound gorilla
waiting to pounce."
© 2001 Baltimore City Paper
*****************************************************************
17 Price-Anderson
Coordinators Training
AmeriSuites
4520 Paradise Road
Las Vegas, NV 89109
November 27-29, 2001
Welcome to the website for registration for the two
Price-Anderson Amendments Act (PAAA) trainings that will be held
at the AmeriSuites Hotel, 4520 Paradise Road, Las Vegas, NV.
The first session will be a half-day training and will be held
from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. on November 27, 2001, in the AmeriSuites
Paradise conference room. This meeting is designed for new
coordinators, either federal or contractor. You must register
with this office by choosing the "Registration" button to the
left. Be sure to indicate that you wish to attend the new
coordinator's training. If you are a DOE employee and you wish to
get credit for taking the training, register through the DOE
Catalog, Course Number POL 115, CHRIS Number 000197, Session
0003.
The second session is the two-day training for federal DOE PAAA
Coordinators only. This session will be held from 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. on November 28-29, 2001, in the AmeriSuites Paradise
conference room. New DOE coordinators will want to attend this
session after they have attended the half-day session. You must
register with this office by choosing the Registration button to
the left. Be sure to indicate that you wish to attend the two-day
training. To get credit for taking the training, register through
the DOE Catalog, Course Number POL 103, CHRIS Number 000198,
Session 0003.
We have reserved a block of rooms for you at AmeriSuites under
"DOE Price-Anderson Group." The price of the rooms is $78.48
taxes included for single or double occupancy. Phone for
reservations at 702-369-3366. The last possible date for
reservations at the group rate is October 25, 2001.
If you would like to submit suggested agenda topics, please call
Sue Petersen at (301)903-0112 or send by e-mail to
Sue.Petersen@eh.doe.gov.
The buttons on the left give you additional information about the
hotel and the meetings.
Remember, to participate in these trainings, you need to do three
things:
1. Make your reservations at the hotel before October 25, 2001,
at 702-369-3366;
2. Register with this office at this website; and
3. Register for the training through CHRIS if you are a DOE
employee.
*****************************************************************
18 Nuclear waste plan is still five years off
news.telegraph.co.uk -
By Charles Clover, Environment Editor
(Filed: 13/09/2001)
AFTER four years without any plans for dealing with the nuclear
industry's 50-year legacy of radioactive waste, the Government
yesterday unveiled a strategy unlikely to produce a result before
the next election.
Michael Meacher, Environment Minister, said the programme of
public consultation and research into burial - with or without
the possibility of retrieval - or above-ground dry storage would
culminate in 2005 with a series of options for public
consultation and an announcement of the result in 2006.
He said that the Government was "starting from scratch" following
the cancellation by the last government of plans to build an
experimental disposal shaft near Sellafield, which was hotly
opposed by Cumbria county council.
Mr Meacher said a decision about the disposal of 500,000 tons of
nuclear waste that the industry will produce over this century,
even if there are no nuclear power stations, "must not be rushed
and may take decades to implement".
Among the options that have been rejected at the outset as too
dangerous are firing waste into space aboard missiles. Mr Meacher
issued assurances that the Government had at present no preferred
option or preferred site for a nuclear waste dump.
"There is no site on the radar screen at the moment. I want a
national debate. I don't want people ever to wake up and find out
there is to be a nuclear storage facility near them.
"Today the news is full of horrendous events that people will be
discussing for a very long time. I want to say that this too is
an issue which affects the public, their children and their
children's children."
© Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited2001. Terms &Conditions of
*****************************************************************
19 Fast-breeder reactor research the way forward
Asahi Shimbun www.asahi.com JAPANESE
The Asahi Shimbun
Japan should continue research work on the fast-breeder reactor
to establish an efficient nuclear fuel-recycling system, says
Kenji Yamaji, a professor at the University of Tokyo. The effort
suffered a setback after an accident at the Monju prototype
reactor in December 1995. Excerpts of an interview follow:
Q: Should Japan develop a nuclear fuel cycle?
A: Using uranium fuel without reprocessing spent fuel is a waste
of uranium resources, which are far less available than
petroleum. Nuclear-energy technology is also indispensable as a
means of curbing global warming, unless another revolutionary
technology is developed that does not generate carbon dioxide.
Q: What should be done to develop the fuel cycle?
A: We should do more in terms of basic research, such as
designing a revolutionary fast-breeder reactor. It is important
to aim for a less expensive and more efficient reprocessing
technology.
The current plan is to build one large reprocessing plant. But
if fast-breeder reactors go into commercial operation, it will be
possible to build a small reprocessing facility at each nuclear
plant. Each plant will be able to have a self-containing fuel
cycle that makes it unnecessary to transport plutonium elsewhere.
Q: The pluthermal program (which uses plutonium-uranium mixed
oxide in light-water reactors) became the mainstay of the fuel
cycle following setbacks to the fast-breeder reactor project. But
the program has been put on hold (because of resident
objections). How do you see the situation?
A: The fast-breeder reactor is the heart of the fuel cycle. The
pluthermal program does not make for efficient use of fuel
resources, so it is only a temporary system. But in the
referendum in Kariwa, Niigata Prefecture, proponents insisted
that the program was the heart of the cycle.
(The authorities) should tell residents candidly that for the
time being pluthermal is the only way to consume plutonium and
seek their cooperation.
Q: Moves are under way to resume operation of the prototype
fast-breeder reactor Monju. What do you think about this?
A: Basically, I agree with resuming operations there. We should
keep the door open for the development of more effective energy
technologies. But it is not necessary yet to complete a follow-up
demonstration reactor (a step before the operation of commercial
reactors).
Judging from projected increases in the concentration of carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere, a full-scale introduction of the fuel
cycle will become necessary to curb global warming probably 50
years from now. For the time being, we should concentrate on
assimilating past technologies and promoting research and
development.
Q: There is already a glut of plutonium, but a reprocessing
plant is under construction at Rokkasho, Aomori Prefecture, with
commercial operation expected to begin in 2005. What do you think
of this?
A: From an economic viewpoint, there is little urgent need for
reprocessing. We should weigh the cost of operating the plant and
the cost of canceling its operation. I favor the second option,
if it is possible.
It is currently more important to build interim storage
facilities for the large amounts of spent fuel that are produced
by existing nuclear plants. Along with reprocessing, we also
should consider the option of direct disposal of spent fuel. We
will have to change the current fuel recycling program sooner or
later.
Kenji Yamaji, formerly a researcher at the Central Research
Institute of Electric Power Industry, also is head of the Society
on the Future of Nuclear Energy, a group of university and
corporate researchers.
(09/12)
[Copyright Asahi Shimbun. All rights reserved. No reproduction
*****************************************************************
20 U.S. urges nuclear plant precautions after attack
[Reuters]
Tuesday September 11, 5:29 pm Eastern Time
WASHINGTON, Sept 11 (Reuters) - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission
on Tuesday recommended that all U.S. nuclear power plants and
nuclear fuel facilities go to the highest level of security as a
precautionary measure in response to devastating attacks on the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
``While there has been no credible general or specific threats to
any of these (power plant) facilities, the recommendation was
considered prudent, given the acts of terrorism in New York City
and in Washington, D.C.,'' the NRC said.
Hijacked planes crashed into the major U.S. landmarks, destroying
New York's twin towers and plunging the Pentagon into flames in
what President George W. Bush called an ``apparent terrorist
attack.''
The agency said it would not provide details of the heightened
security measures being taken at the nation's 103 nuclear
reactors located in 31 states because such steps are classified.
Nuclear power provides about 20 percent of the U.S. electricity
supplies. Progress Energy (NYSE:PGN - news) President Bill
Cavanaugh said his company was coordinating with federal
authorities and ``is taking every step necessary to ensure safety
and security'' at all its facilities. ``As always, safety is our
top priority,'' he said.
Cavanaugh added that he was ``shocked and saddened'' by the
attacks. The Raleigh, North Carolina-based company owns two major
utilities, CP&L and Florida Power, that operate nuclear power
plants.
Meanwhile, the Energy Department has ordered the highest state of
security readiness at its nuclear weapon laboratories.
``We've had a lockdown of our nuclear material, and we are in
close contact with our labs and field offices,'' department
spokeswoman Jeanne Lopatto said. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham
has been in close contact with White House officials about the
situation.
For security reasons, Lopatto refused to say where Abraham was.
``He's in a safe location,'' she said.
*****************************************************************
21 Letter to Gregory Friedman, Inspector General, DOE from Bob
Loux re: Inquiry into bias in DOE's Yucca Mountain Program
KENNY C. GUINN Governor STATE OF NEVADA [State
Seal] OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR AGENCY FOR NUCLEAR PROJECTS 1802 N.
Carson Street, Suite 252 Carson City, Nevada 89701 Telephone:
(775) 687-3744 • Fax: (775) 687-5277 E-mail: nwpo@nuc.state.nv.us
ROBERT R. LOUX Executive Director
September 7, 2001
Mr. Gregory Friedman, Inspector General
Department of Energy
Office of the Inspector General
1000 Independence Ave. S.W.
Washington, DC 20585
Dear Mr. Friedman:
You have initiated an inquiry into whether a conflict or bias
exists within the Department's Yucca Mountain program when the
Department's law firm, Winston & Strawn, concurrently represents
the Nuclear Energy Institute, in a lobbying capacity, before the
Congress on issues concerning the Yucca Mountain program. I'm
enclosing portions a transcript from a hearing that took place on
July 5, 2001, before Magistrate Judge Kay in the matter of
LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, L.L.P. versus the Department of
Energy and Winston &Strawn.
In this hearing, attorneys representing Winston & Strawn made the
statement, under questioning by Judge Kay, that Winston has
represented the Department of Energy in the Yucca Mountain
program, since 1992. The significance of this statement is that
in previous statements to the court, Winston stated that they
were exclusively representing TRW, the Department's prime
contractor on the Yucca Mountain. Not only are these conflicting
statements cause for concern regarding Winston's ethics, but
demonstrate that the Department's legal relationship with Winston
go back to 1992, prior to the Nuclear Energy Institute's
engagement, which appears to been initiated in 1996.
I hope that you find this information useful to your inquiry.
Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact
me.
Sincerely,
--/s/-- Robert R. Loux Executive Director
State of Nevada Office of the Governor Agency for Nuclear
Projects 1802 North Carson Suite 252 Carson City, NV 89701 (775)
687-3744 voice (775) 687-5277 fax nwpo@nuc.state.nv.us- e-mail *
*****************************************************************
22 NCI CALLS ON NRC TO ACTIVATE EMERGENCY PLAN FOR PROTECTING
REACTORS AGAINST TERRORIST ATTACK
NCI document
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Tuesday, September 11, 2001 CONTACT:
Tom Clements, 202-822-8444, clements@nci.org
Paul Leventhal,
301-657-8171, Leventhal@aol.com
The Nuclear Control Institute today called upon the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission to immediately activate an emergency plan
that was developed several years ago for protecting nuclear power
plants against terrorist attack when a potential threat has been
identified.
NCI President Paul Leventhal today spoke with NRC Chairman
Richard Meserve on the telephone at 9:45 AM to convey the urgent
request. Meserve responded that he and NRC officials were closely
monitoring the crashes of planes into the twin towers of the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon, as well as a fire on the
Mall in Washington. Meserve acknowledged the NRC's emergency
authority to order the placement of heavy trucks across access
roads to the nation's 104 commerical nuclear reactors and to
upgrade guard forces at the plants.
Leventhal asked Meserve if he was implementing the plan. Meserve
responded that he could not discuss on an open telephone line
what the NRC is doing in response to the emergency. At that
point, Leventhal urged that the plan be implemented immediately.
NCI has long advocated that the NRC upgrade protections at
nuclear power plants against truck bomb attacks and other armed
assaults. Half the nation's nuclear power plants have failed to
repel NRC-supervised mock terrorist attacks involving only three
lightly armed "attackers." These "force-on-force" exercises have
resulted in the "destruction" of redundant safety systems that
would result in severe core damage leading to a meltdown.
In 1994, NRC adopted a truck-bomb rule following the bombing of
the World Trade Center. NRC has resisted demands by NCI and the
Los Angeles-based Committee to Bridge the Gap to upgrade the
truck-bomb rule to establish barriers and set-back distances
sufficient to resist the larger bombs subsequently used against
the federal building in Oklahoma City and the U.S. Marine
barracks in Saudi Arabia. The NRC also has acquiesced in nuclear
industry demands to shift responsibility for supervising the
mock-terrorist attack exercises from the NRC to the plant
operators in response to industry complaints that the exercises
are too severe and the costs of upgrading security too costly,
given the low probability of an attack.
More information on the terrorist threat against nuclear power
plants, including a report in the current issue of U.S. News and
World Report on the vulnerability of plants to these attacks, is
available at http://www.nci.org/nci-nt.htm.
NCI
*****************************************************************
23 Nuclear waste consultation announced
Ananova -
The long-term future of radioactive waste is to be the subject of
a widespread public consultation.
Environment Minister Michael Meacher says the aim is for
transparency, with as many people involved in the debate as
possible.
The problem is that now more than 10,000 tonnes of radioactive
waste are being stored in the UK, pending a decision on their
management.
Mr Meacher said: "Even if no nuclear plants are built and
reprocessing of spent fuel ends when existing plants reach the
end of their working lives, another 500,000 tonnes of waste will
arise during their clean-up over the coming century.
"Some of the substances produced will be radioactive and
potentially harmful for hundreds of thousands of years.
"Protecting the public, workers and the environment now and in
the future is a top priority for the Government in conjunction
with the devolved administrations.
"How should we manage the waste? Should we bury it deep
underground or store it until future generations know more about
its risks and perhaps better ways of dealing with them? Or is
there another better option?"
Story filed: 12:02 Wednesday 12th September 2001 RELATED STORIES:
*****************************************************************
24 Yggdrasil Institute - Uranium Enrichment Newsletter - August 2001
Uranium Enrichment Newsletter
August 2001
The Uranium Enrichment Project publishes a monthly online
newsletter summarizing events within the US uranium enrichment
establishment. The newsletter is edited by Mary Byrd Davis, who
can be contacted at . A grant from The John Merck Fund makes the
newsletter possible.
1. Oak Ridge
2. Paducah
3. Portsmouth
4. US Department of Energy
5. United States Enrichment Corporation
6. Russia
7. Depleted uranium
8. Scrap metal
I. OAK RIDGE
Damages for whistleblowers
July 31, Daniel F. Sutton, an administrative law judge with the
federal Department of Labor, awarded financial damages to three
whistleblowers: Ken Warden ($50,353 in compensation plus
reinstatement in his former position), Commie Byrum ($25,000 in
compensation and withdrawal of a reprimand), and Virginia Johnson
($2,500 in compensation). All three are present or former
security analysts at Oak Ridge. The complainants "expressed
concerns that questionable individuals, including convicted
felons, drug dealers and abusers, and persons with psychological
problems, had their national security clearances granted or
renewed." According to Sutton, DOE "deliberately altered
evidence" in the case. DOE filed an appeal of the ruling with the
Department of Labor’s Administrative Review Board August 9.
(Frank Munger, Knoxville News-Sentinel, 8/7/01; Paul Parson, Oak
Ridger Online, 8/16/01)
Options for K-25 and K-27
The Engineering Evaluation/Cost Analysis for the Decontamination
and Decommissioning of the K-25 and K-27 Buildings was released
in July, and an information session was held on it August 16. The
release had originally been planned for June but was halted at
the last minute due to the need to discuss the analysis with
regulators (see July UEN). Of the four alternatives analyzed in
the final version of the study, the preferred approach would
dispose of some of the radioactive waste that is generated by
demolition, at the Nevada Test Site and the remainder of this
waste at the Environmental Management Waste Management Facility
under construction at Oak Ridge. This approach would leave in
place the basement slabs and retaining walls. The estimated cost
for the preferred alternative is $294 million. Work would be
completed by the end of FY 2008. The fate of the concrete slab,
underground soil, and utilities will be addressed later. Copies
of the analysis are available from the DOE Information Resource
Center (865-241-4582). (Paul Parson, Oak Ridger, 7/31/01; DOE
Press Release 8/15/01)
Health problems in communities near K-25
Because of complaints from the Coalition for a Healthy
Environment (CHE), the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
has asked DOE to draw up a plan to investigate possible
contamination in communities along the Clinch River, near the
East Tennessee Technology Park (previously known as K-25). Harry
Williams of the CHE reports that residents of Dyllis, Sugar Grove
Valley, and Dickey Valley are experiencing serious health
problems. CHE would prefer that EPA look into the possible
contamination directly rather than work though DOE. (Oak Ridger
Online 8/14/01; Frank Munger, News-Sentinel, 8/17/01)
Historic water contamination
The team conducting an investigation into possible water
contamination in the past at K-25 released a draft report in
mid-August. The draft states that the project team has made
"substantial progress reviewing documents and developing an
understanding of the water systems" at K-25. It has identified a
preliminary list of contaminants of concern and potential
exposure routes.
The draft also indicates that the investigation may have to stop
because of "budget constraints." Bob Garber of Parallax, which is
coordinating the investigation, explains that Parallax did not
believe that the project would last as long as it has. He says,
however, that the remaining money should cover a final version of
the draft report. Steven Wyatt, DOE spokesperson, indicates that
additional funding may be available. Parallax currently has a
$1.5 million contract.
Because of problems that have arisen in regard to the
investigation, the Community Input Team for the project has asked
that Roane County District Attorney Scott McCluen conduct an
investigation. The problems include missing computer hard drives
and failure to save information after the demolition of the
K-1001 Building, in which several sick workers had worked.
McCluen points out that an investigation at a DOE facility is
"technically a ‘matter of federal jurisdiction.’" (Paul Parson,
Oak Ridger, 8/22, 8/23, and 8/28/01)
Land use planning
August 29, US Rep. Zach Wamp announced that DOE has established a
focus group to draft a "roadmap for development" on the Oak Ridge
Reservation (ORR). The focus group will include representatives
from the city of Oak Ridge, The Nature Conservancy, Advocates for
the Oak Ridge Reservation, Friends of Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, the Tennessee
Valley Authority, and the Community Reuse Organization of East
Tennessee. Advocates for the Oak Ridge Reservation has posted on
its Web site a summary of the organization’s concepts for an ORR
planning process. (Paul Parson, Oak Ridger, 8/29/01; )
Waste storage
August 28 DOE held a public meeting to discuss a proposal to
store waste in existing "tent-like structures" next to the Oak
Ridge incinerator. The waste would consist of hazardous and
radioactive materials packaged in ready-to-burn boxes. DOE says
that storing the waste next to the incinerator would enable the
department to save at least $180,000 annually by canceling a
contract for storage space in a Weskem facility a few miles from
the incinerator. The incinerator is at the west end of the K-25
plant. (Knoxville News-Sentinel, 8/16/01)
Compacter
British Nuclear Fuels Limited (BNFL) has installed at Oak Ridge
what the company describes as the "largest compactor ever used in
the nuclear industry." The supercompacter is designed to crush
metal that is to be disposed of rather than recycled. BNFL hopes
that the machinery will process two million pounds of metal a
week. (Paul Parson, Oak Ridger, 8/17/01)
Erratum—fire
The fire at K-25 the morning of July 25 actually occurred in the
K-31 building of the K-25 plant, rather than in the K-25 building
itself as we mistakenly reported last month. Workers were in the
process of using a plasma torch to cut a converter when the fire
occurred. BNFL has completed its investigation of the fire by
mid-August, but we have been unable to ascertain whether DOE has
given permission for work in K-31 to restart. (Knoxville
New-Sentinel, 8/17/01)
II. PADUCAH
PACE contract
August 29, USEC and members of PACE, the Paper Allied-Industrial
Chemical and Energy Workers (PACE), reached an agreement that
will keep hourly workers at Paducah on the job until at least
November 15. They have worked without a contract since July 31.
The agreement, which expires November 15, provides for a four
percent hourly wage increase retroactive to July 31 when the old
five-year contract expired. It forbids a strike and also layoffs
of hourly workers. USEC has agreed to draw up a new contract
proposal. If USEC and PACE cannot agree on a new contract by
November 15, the four percent pay raise will be discontinued.
August 2 workers had soundly rejected a contract that would end
after one year if USEC does not remain the sole US executive
agent for the US-Russian High-Enriched Uranium (HEU) agreement,
does not obtain market-based pricing in a new contract with
Russia’s Techsnabexport, and is not allowed to import
"commercial" enrichment from Russia. The Union has now pledged to
help USEC obtain favorable terms in regard to the HEU agreement.
(Joe Walker, Paducah Sun, 8/30/01; WPSD TV ( ), 8/29/01)
Rejection of request for a site-wide EIS
US District Court Judge McKinnley has denied a motion by the
Regional Association of Concerned Environmentalists (RACE) to
require a site-wide Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on
cleanup activities at the Paducah site. RACE had challenged the
lack of a site-wide EIS at Paducah under the Administrative
Procedure Act’s "failure to act" provisions.
The Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), responsible for
federal agency compliance with NEPA, encouraged agencies to adopt
their own regulations implementing NEPA. DOE did so. Among DOE’s
NEPA regulations is the statement that "DOE shall prepare
site-wide EISs for certain large, multiple-facility DOE sites."
The judge ruled that neither NEPA itself, nor NEPA regulations
promulgated by the CEQ, nor the NEPA regulations drawn up by DEA
mandate a site-wide EIS at Paducah. DOE regulations give DOE "a
discretionary choice to perform site-wide EISs at certain of its
facilities."
Mark Donham of RACE says that RACE is considering a sixth circuit
challenge to the ruling but that other means of approaching the
issue remain open. DOE is doing several Environmental Assessments
(EAs) at the present time. In the EAs, the agency is obligated to
analyze cumulative impacts. RACE intends to sue DOE, if DOE does
conduct complete analyses. (Mark Donham, e-mails, 8/7/01 and
8/31/01; Memorandum Opinion and Orders on Cross-Motions for
Summary Judgment, Civil Action No. 5:00CV-116-M, US District
Court, Paducah Division.)
Comments on ATSDR assessment
The Kentucky Division of Waste Management has submitted comments
to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Control Registry
(ATSDR) on the draft of its public health assessment for the
Paducah plant, released May 1 (see May and June UEN). The
Kentucky agency "suggested that the public health assessment
underestimated the affected population, the public’s ability to
access contaminated areas outside the plant, and past pollution
from the plant." In doing so, it noted that ATSDR does not appear
to have taken into consideration certain information in DOE’s
Phase II Independent Investigation of the plant. In its final
version of the report ATSDR will respond to all comments that it
has received. (LeRoy Chittenden and Lauren McDonald, Kentucky
Environmental Oversight News, 7/01)
Modification of hazardous waste permit
The Kentucky Division of Waste Management has drafted
Modification #16 to the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant’s
Hazardous Waste Permit. The modification will incorporate the
PGDP Site-Wide Operable Unit Strategy into the Corrective Action
portion of the permit. The strategy, agreed upon by the US EPA
Region 4, DOE, and the Commonwealth of Kentucky, divides the
plant into several media- or function-specific Operable Units:
Surface Water, Groundwater, Surface Soils, Burial Grounds, and
Decontamination and Decommissioning. A Comprehensive Site
Operable Unit will address any problems that remain after
completion of the media-specific units. The Operable Unit
Strategy is already being implemented. Nevertheless, Modification
#16 has been presented for public comment, because it contains a
revised corrective action compliance schedule. Comments will be
received until September 2l. They should be sent to Michael V.
Welch, Hazardous Waste Branch, Department of Waste Management, 14
Reilly Road, Frankfort, KY 40601. Copies of the Modification can
be consulted at the Information Center for the Paducah plant and
at the public library in Paducah or requested from the Division
of Waste Management (502-564-6716). (Mike Guffey, Kentucky
Environmental Oversight News, 7/01)
Visit by Exelon
Exelon officials visited the Paducah plant twice in August as
part of an informal exchange program under which a team from one
nuclear plant visits another to review operations and suggest
ways of improving efficiency. August 3 Exelon president and chief
nuclear officer Oliver Kingsley Jr., toured the Paducah plant
with William Timbers, USEC president and CEO. Later in the month
a group of technical experts from Exelon visited Paducah. USEC
spokesperson Elizabeth Stuckle denied rumors that Exelon is
interested in buying the plant. (Bill Bartleman, Paducah Sun,
8/30/01) Exelon owns ten power plants, with a total capacity of
16,810 MW, in Illinois, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. Thus it
purchases much enriched uranium. The company was formed by the
merger of PECO Energy (formerly Philadelphia Electric) with
Unicom, Inc. of Illinois.
New environmental information center
August 1, DOE opened a new environmental information center on
the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant, just off Interstate 24 and
across from Paducah Community College. The environmental
information center for the Paducah plant had previously been
located at Kevil, Kentucky, twelve miles from Paducah. The center
was shifted in response to pressure from the public to move it to
a more accessible location. The Coalition for Nuclear Justice
issued a press release August 16 stating that the move is a
positive step, but that DOE is also taking steps to avoid
involving the public in decision making. It has not, for
instance, held a meeting on the scrap metal preliminary
environmental impact statement at Paducah despite a consensus
recommendation by the Site Specific Advisory Board (SSAB); and it
has not informed the public (apart from the SSAB) about its plans
for a new radioactive waste disposal center at Paducah. The new
information center is in the same building as the new workman’s
compensation center (July UEN) and an office for the Site
Specific Advisory Board. (DOE Press Release, 8/8/01; Coalition
for Nuclear Justice Press Release, 8/16/01)
III. PORTSMOUTH
Community programs
Governor Bob Taft announced the week of August 6 that a new
center for technology training and job development will open in
the fall of 2003 in Piketon. The center is intended to help
displaced enrichment workers in particular, but will be open to
other members of the public. It will be financed by a $1.92
million federal grant, $900,000 from Ohio State University, and
$270,000 from the Appalachian Regional Commission. (Jonathan
Riskind, Columbus Dispatch, 8/12/01)
At a meeting of local community leaders near Piketon, Dennis
Spurgeon of USEC presented a check for $2 million from USEC to
the Southern Ohio Diversification Initiative (SODI) for local
community and economic development. The money was part of the
approximately $44 million that the Ohio Valley Electric Corp.
(OVEC) paid USEC for reducing its electricity consumption in the
summer of 2000. USEC is devoting $18 million of the money from
OVEC to benefits for workers who are losing their jobs because of
the cessation of enrichment operations at Portsmouth--$10 million
for enhanced benefits, $8 million for USEC’s standard package.
(See UEN Dec.00/Jan.01.) (USEC Press Release, 8/28/01)
IV. US DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY (DOE)
Compensation for workers
In a ceremony held August 9 at the new Energy Compensation
Resource Center office in Paducah, US Labor Secretary Elaine Chao
and her husband Senator Mitch McConnell handed a check for
$150,000 to Clara Harding, widow of Joe Harding. Clara Harding
did not speak at the ceremony but reportedly said afterwards that
Joe Harding would "be grateful that we got this, but he’d also
tell ‘em it wasn’t enough." The Hardings’ daughter Martha Alls
told an interviewer that the payment would not even cover Joe
Harding’s medical bills. The check was the first payment under
the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program
Act. Tim Gannon, a process operator at the Portsmouth plant who
is suffering from cancer, was to receive the first check to be
delivered to a living worker. Under the act, people who worked at
certain locations, including the enrichment plants, and who
suffer from certain types of cancer are automatically considered
to have been made ill by their work. DOE has not yet written
regulations that will determine which workers at other DOE sites
will be compensated. (Sara Shipley, The Courier-Journal, 8/10/01)
Environmental Management Budget
As Congress goes back into session in September, the total
funding for DOE’s Environmental Management programs is as
follows: FY 01 appropriation $6.265 billion; FY 02 request from
the Bush administration $5.913 billion; House appropriation for
FY 02 $6.612 billion; Senate appropriation for FY 02 $6.845
billion. The difference between the House and Senate
appropriations will be ironed out in committee.
Review of Environmental Management programs
The Alliance for Nuclear Accountability (ANA) filed a Freedom of
Information Act request with DOE August 16 seeking "all documents
produced as part of the ‘top-to-bottom assessment of the
Environmental Management program’ initiated by Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham. Previously ANA had asked Abraham "to conduct the
review in compliance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act,
which requires a balanced review panel and open meetings."
Abraham did not respond to that request. (see June UEN)
Jessie Roberson, DOE’s new assistant secretary for environmental
management, said August 15 that concluding the review will
probably be a gradual process. As new ways of speeding cleanup
are identified, they will be implemented without waiting for the
study to be completed. Abraham ordered the review in the spring
and has opposed efforts in Congress to increase DOE’s FY 2002
budget for cleanup on the grounds that the study has not been
completed. (John Stang, Tri-City (WA) Herald, 8/16/01)
Double billing
The US Court of Federal Claims ruled August 23 that the federal
government owes nine utilities $25.69 million, because, between
September 1992 and June 1993, DOE double charged them for the
future decontamination and decommissioning of its enrichment
plants (see UEN August 01). Other utility companies may now try
to bring similar cases against the government. (, 8/23/01)
V. USEC
Annual financial report
USEC has reported that in Fiscal Year (FY) 2001, revenue totaled
$1,143.9 million, a drop of 23% from the FY 2000 total of
$1,489.4 million. Gross profit in FY 2001 was $152.2 million,
34.8% below the gross profit of $233.6 in FY 2000. Sales of
separative work units (SWU) represented $1,057.3 million, a
reduction of $330.5 million from the previous year. Sales of
natural uranium represented $86.6 million in FY 2001, another
decrease, since natural uranium sales in FY 2000 were $101.6
million. The company anticipates that earnings in FY 2002 will be
between $35 million and $40 million in spite of an anticipated
small loss in the first quarter. (USEC Press Release, 8/1/01)
VI. RUSSIA
Deliveries in 2002
In a letter of July 27, Techsnabexport (Tenex) the Russian
executive agent for the US-Russian High Enriched Uranium (HEU)
Agreement, asked USEC to start discussing with it a schedule for
delivery of downblended Russian HEU in 2002. The Russian Ministry
of Atomic Energy and the Russian enrichment enterprises that
downblend the HEU have requested that Tenex and USEC come to an
agreement on a tentative delivery schedule "promptly," because
preparing the uranium for delivery and obtaining government
approvals is time consuming. The Bush administration, which is
considering whether to continue the current HEU program with USEC
as the sole US executive agent, has not approved an agreement
based on market-based pricing that USEC and Tenex negotiated last
year. (See UEN, 8/00.) The current contract expires at the end of
2001. (Carter Dougherty, Washington Times, 8/22/01; , 24/8/01)
HEU as collateral
July 31 Senator Pete Domenici (R. NM) reintroduced the Russian
Fissile Material Disposition Loan Guarantee Act (S.1277). The act
would provide US loan guarantees of up to $1 billion for loans by
private investors to Russia. The private loans would have to be
for the purposes of retirement of Russia’s debt, support of
Russian nonproliferation programs, or development of Russia’s
energy infrastructure, including "peaceful uses of nuclear
energy." For each $20 million in loans Russia would have to place
one metric ton of HEU and one metric ton of plutonium as
collateral in a Russian facility under IAEA safeguards. ().
VII. DEPLETED URANIUM
DOE announced August 6 that the following three firms had been
selected to compete for the contract to build and operate
conversion facilities for depleted uranium hexafluoride at
Paducah and Portsmouth:
--American Conversion Services, LLC, composed of USEC and the
environmental engineering firm CH2M Hill;
--Jacobs COGEMA, LLC, composed of Jacobs Engineering Group Inc.
and COGEMA LLC, the French fuel-chain giant;
--Uranium Disposition Services LLC, composed of the French firm
Framatome ANP Richland Inc., the cleanup company Duratek Federal
Services Inc., and the engineering firm Burns and Roe Enterprises
Inc.
Not making the short list, were General Atomics, on the one hand,
and Foster Wheeler Environmental Conversion Services, composed of
BWX Technology Services, Inc., BNFL Inc. and Foster Wheeler
Environmental Corp. on the other.
The Energy Daily was told that DOE’s source evaluation board,
which reviewed the bids, did not recommend American Conversion
Services. Sources suggested to the publication that political
factors may have been behind the consortium’s eventual inclusion
in the top three. For instance, DOE may want to compensate USEC
for a possible decision by the Bush administration to name a
second executive agent for the US-Russian HEU agreement.
According to DOE spokesperson Walter Perry, DOE’s Oak Ridge
Operations office is scheduled to award the contract in October.
Construction of the conversion plants must start by Jan. 31,
2004. (DOE announcement, 8/6/01; George Lobsenz, Energy Daily,
8/10/01; Paul Parson, Oak Ridger, 8/9/01; Joe Walker, Paducah
Sun, 8/8/01)
Depleted uranium imports
USEC Inc. has asked the NRC to determine whether it can import
depleted uranium under a general license as source material. In
support of its request, the company is citing the decision in May
of the French Conseil d’Etat that depleted uranium is not a
waste. USEC has requested an "indication" of the NRC’s thinking
in about a month, but, according to an NRC staffer, the NRC may
not be able to meet this timetable, since the decision will
likely be up to the commissioners rather than the staff. (,
8/22/01)
VIII. SCRAP METAL
Preliminary Environmental Impact Statement
DOE has extended by sixty days the public scoping period for the
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) on the
Disposition of Scrap Metals. The department will now consider all
comments received by November 9, 2001. Furthermore, DOE will hold
three additional meetings: in Santa Monica, CA (Oct. 8), Simi
Valley, CA (Oct. 9), and Minneapolis, MN (Oct. 16), and New York
city (Oct. 18). (See August UEN) Information on the PEIS is
available at .
Future scrap
DOE predicts that it will generate 942,000 tons of scrap carbon
steel, 37,000 tons of stainless steel, and 3,000 tons of iron,
plus unspecified amounts of aluminum, copper, lead, nickel, and
other metals between now and 2035. Eighty-four percent of the
steel will come from facilities at Oak Ridge, Paducah, and
Portsmouth. (Tim Bonfield, Cincinnati Enquirer, 8/15/01)
*****************************************************************
25 EC Gives Green Light to Environmental Cleanup
Thursday, Sep. 13, 2001. Page 7
Reuters
HELSINKI, Finland -- Multilateral lenders, the European
Commission and Russian officials meeting in Stockholm on
Wednesday endorsed plans to step up funding of environmental
projects in Russia and the Baltic Sea region, the Nordic
Investment Bank said.
The conference was the first meeting of the steering group of the
Northern Dimension Environmental Partnership, approved by the
European Union's Goteborg summit in June.
The meeting brought together officials from the NIB, the European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the World Bank, the
Nordic Environment Finance Corporation, the EC and Russia, the
NIB said.
"[The meeting] was a very significant step forward," said NIB
senior vice president Oddvar Ronsen. "[Now] for the first time we
have set a partnership between the international financial
institutions, bilateral financing institutions and the Russian
Federation to accelerate implementation of significant
environmental projects in Russia."
The first projects in line to receive funding from the
partnership are a wastewater treatment plant in St. Petersburg
and environmental investments in Kaliningrad, the NIB, the Nordic
countries' international lending institution, said in a
statement.
The partnership would also consider funding for nuclear cleanup
and nuclear waste-management projects, the NIB said.
A pledging meeting for a partnership fund is planned by the EC
and the EBRD for the last week of November in Brussels, the NIB
said.
Ronsen said that the first funds for partnership projects could
be provided before the end of this year.
The Moscow Times
*****************************************************************
26 Hungarian nuclear station can't withstand attack by Boeing
plane
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 13, 2001
Text of report by Hungarian newspaper Nepszabadsag on 13
September
The Paks nuclear power station has a complex physical security
system in accordance with international standards, the
institution's Deputy Director Gabor Vamos has told Nepszabadsag.
Visitors are only allowed to enter certain parts of it and
movements between zone limits are monitored by computer.
Together with internal armed security guards and security
service, a police intervention unit trained in averting terrorist
attacks has also been deployed at Paks. There is a ban on air
traffic 2.3 kilometres above and three kilometres around the
nuclear power station. The Hungarian air traffic control
authority monitors is making sure that this requirement is met.
Like other nuclear power stations throughout the world, many risk
factors were taken into account in the course of building the
Hungarian nuclear power station, although the crashing of a
passenger aircraft the size of a Boeing jet had not been
considered anywhere. However, the power station has prepared for
a potential attack across the water. Detectors have been
installed and defence plans drafted.
Source: Nepszabadsag, Budapest, in Hungarian 13 Sep 01 p 4 /BBC
Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
*****************************************************************
27 Norwegians unable to proceed with radiation monitoring in
Barents Sea
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Sep 13, 2001
Text of report by Russian TV6 on 13 September
[Presenter] To conclude our bulletin, some news from the Barents
Sea. This morning Mammoet representatives said the first stage of
the operation to raise the nuclear submarine Kursk had been
completed. In Murmansk journalists are now awaiting an official
announcement that the Kursk's No 1 compartment has been removed
once and for all. Here is a report by our special correspondent
in Murmansk, Vadim Tokmenev.
[Correspondent] The large monitor screen at the Murmansk press
centre is currently the only way of obtaining confirmation of the
news which came in this morning. Mammoet representatives said the
torpedo compartment had been completely separated from the rest
of the Kursk's hull. Another stage of the operation has been
completed. The Russian military may also make an announcement
about this in the next hour or two. A direct video link to the
[battle cruiser] Pyotr Velikiy has been set up. But at the moment
the screen is only showing a logo.
Norwegian ecologists may have been the first here on shore to
find out that the submarine's bows had already been cut off.
Last night they got a call from their office in Oslo asking them
to get ready to go to sea. Ingar Amensen, Bred Muller and Bjorn
Linde [all phonetic] are three specialists from the Norwegian
Radiological Protection Agency [NRPA] whom the Russian
authorities are allowing to be in the area when the submarine is
raised.
[Amensen] It took a lot of effort to obtain this permission.
Everything connected with the Kursk is shrouded in a veil of
secrecy. Fortunately, our diplomats, including the foreign
minister, managed to convince Russia that this would be in the
interests of both states. For example, we want to provide a
personal guarantee to our state's partners and to inhabitants of
Norway that nothing has happened at sea. Our instruments will
show this.
[Correspondent] The ecologists got to Murmansk by road. That's
the easiest way of crossing the border with large metal
containers and getting through all the customs formalities.
Some of the boxes contain protective clothing in case the weather
deteriorates or something happens on the sea-bed, as well as
complex instruments which will record all this. Here, for
example, is a device which looks more like a pump. It can be used
to obtain an instant analysis of water and soil. A special
display will immediately show up even the slightest radioactive
contamination.
[Amensen] This container is for liquid samples and that one is
for solid ones. As far as we know, there are already various soil
samples aboard the [diving support ship] Mayo. We will gather
everything with a view to taking it back to Norway later.
[Correspondent] The department has been preparing for this
operation for a long time, even though the military were opposed
to it. The ecologists brought this glossy booklet with them in
order to demonstrate how open they are. It contains everything,
including operational plans and diagrams showing the danger
points on the submarine, from where water samples will need to be
taken.
[Bjorn Linde] We are aware that the most dangerous stage lies
ahead - when they start to move the submarine, and therefore the
reactor. We are now trying to trust the forecasts being made by
the Russian military. We even hope to cooperate with them. We
will be taking good equipment with us. Every two hours we will
obtain fresh information about the radiation situation in the
area of the special operation.
[Correspondent] All morning ecologists waited to hear when they
could go aboard the vessel [Semen] Dezhnev. But later it
transpired that for the time being they would have to unload
their equipment at the Norwegian consulate. Today the Norwegian
ecologists are returning home to Norway. The Russian military
explained that they would not be able to go aboard the
hydrographic ship any earlier than 21 September. The lifting of
the Kursk will start shortly after that. The NRPA specialists do
not know exactly how much time they will spend in the area of the
special operation.
This is Vadim Tokmenev, Andrey Grebtsov and Konstantin
Stepanov-Molotov reporting for TV6 from Murmansk.
Source: TV6, Moscow, in Russian 1100 gmt 13 Sep 01 /BBC
Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter All Material Subject to
*****************************************************************
*****************************************************************
NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARTICLES
*****************************************************************
1 Flats work goes ahead despite S.C. dispute
Rocky Mountain News: Local
Plutonium game plan is still on
By Berny Morson , News Staff Writer
Rocky Flats workers have been told to keep packaging plutonium
for planned shipment to South Carolina by mid-October, an
official said Monday.
But South Carolina has not agreed to accept the highly
radioactive material, a spokeswoman for Gov. Jim Hodges said. A
meeting is scheduled Friday between South Carolina officials and
the U.S. Department of Energy, which oversees Rocky Flats and
other nuclear plants.
South Carolina and DOE have been in a standoff over plans to send
the Rocky Flats plutonium to DOE's Savannah River Site in the
Palmetto State. Hodges is willing to accept the material
temporarily, but does not want Savannah River to become the
permanent repository for the nation's plutonium. He threatened at
one point to lie down in front of the truck unless DOE has a plan
to remove the plutonium.
Rocky Flats spokesman Jeremy Karpatkin said workers have been
told to keep packing the plutonium in the special shipping
containers with the expectation the material will begin leaving
as scheduled.
"That doesn't mean it will leave on time," Karpatkin said. "We've
been instructed to be prepared to meet the original schedule."
Cortney Owings, Hodges' spokeswoman, said the governor's
"right-hand man on environmental issues" will meet Friday with
the DOE.
"We are hopeful this will be resolved to the state's benefit
before mid-October," Owings said.
But, she said, the state remains distrustful of DOE. That's
because the agency scrapped a plan favored during the Clinton
administration to convert plutonium to reactor fuel and ship it
to other nations.
U.S. Rep. Mark Udall, D-Colo., said he's "guardedly optimistic .
. . that there will be news in the near future that we've worked
out an arrangement (with South Carolina). Having said that, it's
not definite, but I'm hopeful. "My sense is that people really
want to resolve it."
Udall has been warning since May, when he wrote a letter to DOE
secretary Spencer Abraham, that failure to fund a program to get
the plutonium out of South Carolina would spark a political
crisis.
Under the plan that was scrapped, the United States and Russia
were to convert 50 tons of weapons-grade plutonium to reactor
fuel. That was a smart move, Udall said, since the Russian
plutonium could end up in rogue nations.
September 11, 2001
2001 © The E.W. Scripps Co.
*****************************************************************
2 Israel Eyes Air Strikes at Iran's Nuclear Arsenal
Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001
NewsMax.com reported Wednesday that Israel warned the U.S. that
an air strike against Iran's missiles was a strong possibility.
Now the Russians have been given similar hints.
In Sunday's New York Post, Uri Dan, an Israeli insider
considered a member of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
kitchen cabinet, reported that Sharon raised his nation's
concerns with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the aid
Russian companies are providing to Iran's nuclear weapons
program.
Putin tried to reassure Sharon in their three-hour talk that he
wouldn't put Israel in danger, Dan reported.
"We are not crazy," Putin told Sharon.
"We will not allow Iran to produce nuclear weapons, because it
might endanger neighboring countries, and that would be an insane
move by us."
But Sharon's aides insist that the evidence of Russian assistance
to Iran's nuclear missile program is undeniable, evoking memories
of a similar situation 20 years ago when France denied it was
helping Iraq's Saddam Hussein build an atomic bomb.
According to Dan, intelligence reports indicate that Iran, which
already has the ability to build long-range missiles, could have
nuclear warheads in three to five years and threaten the entire
Mideast.
When Israel faced a similar threat 20 years ago, Dan recalled,
it reacted. After French officials denied reports that they were
supplying Iraq with the material needed to build a nuclear bomb,
Israel destroyed Saddam Hussein's reactor in Baghdad in a daring
air raid in June 1981.
Dan noted that the decision to attack and destroy Iraq's Osirak
nuclear center was made by then Prime Minister Menachem Begin
and, significantly, by "the toughest member of his defense
cabinet - Sharon."
In our Sept. 5 NewsMax report we revealed that Israel's defense
minister made Iran's nuclear program a top priority during a
meeting at the Pentagon – hinting strongly that Israel was
prepared to strike against Iranian weapons' facilities.
NewsMax also reported that Israel may make such a strike at the
same time it hits Iranian targets in Lebanon. Dan reported that
Iran has actually put members of its Revolutionary Guard in
control of missile units that have a long range and can hit Tel
Aviv, and that Iran and Syria are coordinating military moves to
"open a second front" against Israel if the Palestinian crisis
blows.
Recent history has shown that Israel does not sit idly by in the
face of such imminent threats. An air strike against the Iranian
missile site can thus be expected at any time. As we reported
then, when Israel strikes against these missiles, expect a
broader sweep, which may include air strikes on nuclear
facilities in Iran.
NewsMax.com Privacy Statement
*****************************************************************
3 Terrorists vow to hit Indian nuclear sites
rediff.com:
September 12, 2001
Sharvani Pandit in New Delhi
Terrorist groups based in Pakistan have threatened to target
nuclear and military installations all over India in their bid to
escalate their separatist campaign, reports said.
Some half-a-dozen groups have dramatically stepped up their
jingoistic campaign since the failure of the India-Pakistan
summit at Agra in July. In the past fortnight, the threats have
taken an ominous turn.
Sheikh Jamilur Rehman, leader of the Tehrik-ul-Mujahideen that is
active in Jammu and Kashmir, has vowed to attack Indian political
leaders as well as the country's nuclear and military
installations.
He said the attacks would be carried out if India "does not cease
atrocities on Kashmiris immediately".
"We have a very effective network throughout India and nothing is
out of our reach," he said.
Lashker-e-Tayiba chief Hafiz Saeed said jihad would not be
limited to Jammu and Kashmir. "There is no limit to it. If
someone is going to stop us from carrying our mission, we will
declare jihad against him as well."
"We plan major operations against the Indian military
installations in Kashmir and would continue to carry such actions
until liberation."
At a seminar organised by Al-Badr, separatist groups pledged to
launch large-scale attacks against sensitive Indian military
installations and target important personalities.
Hizbul Mujahideen deputy supreme commander Maulana Muhammad Javed
Qasoori has similarly threatened to extend military attacks
throughout India.
Indo-Asian News Service
*****************************************************************
4 Letter: DOE doesn't keep promises
Las Vegas SUN
Today: September 13, 2001 at 8:44:39 PDT
I'm one of the "real people" referred to in Jon Ralston's column
of Sept. 9, "Politics takes back seat for a spell."
Mr. Ralston's sympathy is touching but, Mr. Ralston, please
forget the sympathy and work on your logic instead.
"Surrendering" to what you call the "inevitable" Department of
Energy plans for Nevada is not a position of negotiating
strength. Once an area has "sold out," and makes a deal for
"mitigation benefits," the DOE never pays.
One perfect example is New Mexico's Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
site. The DOE promised millions, got local politicians to sign
on, and now won't pay for anything, not even road improvements.
Worse, DOE reneged on health and safety promises. Is this what we
want in Nevada?
We come from a position of knowledge, not one of tragic
nobility. Mr. Ralston, spare me your sympathy and your opinions.
Your time would be better spent investigating what happens to
communities who "sell out" to the DOE.
JEAN TREICHEL
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
5 DOE: (Oakridge) SELLS Meeting Announcement
Agenda
Tuesday through Thursday, October 23-25, 2001,
American Museum of Science and Energy
Oak Ridge, TN
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Society for Effective Lessons
Learned Sharing (SELLS) Fall Workshop will be hosted by DOE Oak
Ridge and the Oak Ridge Contractors October 23-25, 2001. All
interested parties are welcome to attend. The theme for the
workshop will be "Lessons Learned Integration." Workshop
sessions will include discussions of ways to improve Lessons
Learned Programs with a focus on integrating multiple programs at
a Site and integrating DOE Lessons Learned Programs with
commercial business programs. Interested contributors and/or
participants are invited to submit additional topic ideas and/or
abstracts by e-mail to one of the following individuals no later
than September 15, 2001:
+ John Bickford at: John_C_Bickford@rl.gov
+ Mike Smith at: smithmc@oro.doe.gov
+ Bobbie Smith at: bsmith@legin.com
The abstract should be long enough to convey the substance of
your proposed paper or presentation. Please include estimated
time needed for presentation to assist in agenda development and
scheduling.
PROPOSED TOPICS:
New member orientation briefing and Q & A session
Multi-contractor/DOE LL Program Assessments
BNFL "Learning from Experience
Colonial Pipeline LL Program
Integrating with Industry (panel discussion)
Yucca Mountain Project LL Program growth
Near miss investigations
Activity level feedback process and system
The above topics are only suggestions. Additional related topics
are welcome.
REGISTRATION:
Please register for the workshop by 9/30/2001 using the on-line
form at http://tis.eh.doe.gov/ll/sells/sellsrgistr.cfm. If you
have trouble with that form, please send an e-mail to John
Bickford or FAX your name, address, e-mail, and telephone number
to (509) 376-6112. Hotel reservations must be made separately
(see below).
HOTEL ARRANGEMENTS:
A block of 50 rooms has been reserved at the at the government
rate of $55.00 per night (does NOT include 13.5% tax).
Reservations must be made before September 30, 2001. Please let
the Inn know that you will be with the "DOE SELLS Conference."
433 South Rutgers Avenue
Oak Ridge, TN 37830
(800) 553-7830 or (865) 481-8200 or register on-line through the
Inns Web page.
The Inn Web site has a map and directions. The Museum is 1/2
mile west of the Inn.
WORKSHOP LOCATION:
Early registration will be available in the Comfort Inn
hospitality room starting at 3:00 p.m. on October 22, 2001.
Registration for the workshop at the American Museum of Science
and Energy will begin at 7:30 a.m., Tuesday, October 23, 2001.
The workshop itself will begin at 8:00 a.m. An agenda will be
posted to the SELLS Website
(http://tis.eh.doe.gov/ll/sells/mtg200110/Agenda.htm) as it
develops.
OTHER INFORMATION SOURCES:
Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau:
http://www.visit-or.org
Oak Ridge Chamber Of Commerce: http://orcc.org
*****************************************************************
6 SRS, Fort Gordon tighten security
Augusta Georgia:
Web posted Wednesday, September 12, 2001
By Brandon Haddock
Staff Writer
Security increased Tuesday at Savannah River Site, Fort Gordon
and Plant Vogtle in the wake of the apparent terrorist attacks in
New York and Washington.
Savannah River Site temporarily stopped operations at its
nuclear-processing facilities, said Rick Ford, an SRS spokesman.
Most of the federal nuclear-weapons site's day-shift employees
were sent home just before 1 p.m., although a few SRS officials
remained behind, in part to man the site's Emergency Operations
Center, Mr. Ford said.
The site closed to all visitors and vendors, said Mickie
Seitter, a spokeswoman for SRS contractor Westinghouse Savannah
River Co. Employees leaving SRS were told they could not return
that day.
But second- and third-shift employees reported to work as usual,
said Julie Petersen, an SRS spokeswoman. Day-shift workers were
told to report at their regular times today, Ms. Petersen said.
Security guards at SRS, armed with automatic weapons, direct
traffic leaving the site after a majority of the daytime work
force was sent home just before 1 p.m. in the wake of apparent
terrorist attacks.
RON COCKERILLE/STAFF
The shutdown affected not only SRS, but also nuclear-weapons
sites across the country, Mr. Ford said.
''As a prudent measure and per our security procedures, we are
suspending nuclear materials processing activities,'' he said.
Wackenhut Services Inc., the private security company that
serves as the site's police force, increased security along site
roads and stepped up inspections at SRS barricades, said
Wackenhut spokesman Rob Davis. Beyond that, site officials
revealed little.
''We've taken some extra precautionary measures that we can't
get into for security reasons,'' Mr. Davis said.
The site long has prepared for attacks out of concern that
terrorists might try to steal the materials needed for an atomic
weapon. The site treats and stores plutonium, and also recycles
tritium, the radioactive, gaseous form of hydrogen used in modern
nuclear weapons.
Fort Gordon also increased security measures after the attack,
as did military bases across the country. Visitors were not being
allowed onto the Army base, said Marla Jones, a fort spokeswoman.
Plant Vogtle also heightened security after the attacks, said
Rick Kimble, a spokesman for Southern Nuclear Operating Co. in
Birmingham, Ala.
Southern Nuclear operates the nuclear-power plant near
Waynesboro for Georgia Power Co.
Reach Brandon Haddock at (706) 823-3409 or
bhaddock@augustachronicle.com.
All contents ©1996 - 2001 The Augusta Chronicle. All rights
*****************************************************************
7 Security still increased at DOE
Oak Ridger Online -->
Story last updated at 12:56 p.m. on Wednesday, September 12, 2001
by Paul Parson
Oak Ridger staff
As employees began returning to work this morning at the
Department of Energy's Oak Ridge facilities, heightened security
measures remained in effect, including random searches of
people's possessions.
The majority of the employees were allowed to leave work early
Tuesday due to terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington,
D.C. In light of these events, several local DOE facilities took
precautions today by making changes in parking areas, plant
access and traffic patterns, including the ongoing closure of
Bear Creek Road to through traffic.
"It differs from site to site," DOE spokesman Steven Wyatt said
of security measures.
One official at the Federal Building said workers there were
being subjected to random searches of purses, briefcases and
other items.
Additionally, Billy Stair, a spokesman for Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, said this morning that the federal lab had around 125
employees on travel -- a larger number than reported on Tuesday.
Stair said ORNL officials have made contact with all but 19 of
these employees, nine of whom who are on foreign travel. He added
that there is no reason to believe any of those who are
unaccounted for was injured or killed in Tuesday's attacks.
Stair added that one lab employee, who was in Paris, France,
spent about seven hours trying to get a call into the United
States.
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
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8 SRS officials use trees to suck up nuclear contamination
GoUpstate News
The Associated Press
AIKEN -- The Savannah River Site's operators are using trees as a
new way to suck nuclear contamination out of groundwater.
The process, called phytoremediation, uses the roots of plants
and trees to absorb tritium and other radioactive material found
throughout the site near Aiken where nuclear material for bombs
was once produced.
''Our objective is to keep it out of the groundwater,'' said Dean
Hoffman, program manager of environmental remediation, adding
that no contamination has spread from the SRS site so far.
The old cleanup process involved pumping contaminated groundwater
into the air where chemicals were released.
By using trees and plants, SRS's operators say they are saving
millions.
''Phytoremediation is not any faster than pump and treat
systems,'' said Bob Blundy of Westinghouse's remediation unit.
''It is more natural, passive and not as expensive.''
Nuclear material drawn into the plant ''is used in normal plant
tissue,'' said Lee Newman of the Savannah Ecology Laboratory.
''The projects going on here are fairly good from engineering and
scientific standpoints.''
Loblolly pines, poplars and willows are often used in the process
because they are sturdy, have deep roots and can withstand the
contamination.
The process is particularly effective on tritium because it
dissolves more quickly than other contaminants, said Greenville
health physicist Kevin Taylor, who has been involved in
groundwater cleanups.
''Their cells can be affected like ours, but there is no central
nervous system in a plant,'' he said.
SRS is one of only a few federal facilities in the country to use
phytoremediation, said Bill Taylor, a spokesman for the Energy
Department. ''Almost instantly, downstream tritium readings went
spiraling down,'' Taylor said.
Newman estimates the groundwater should be cleaned up to
acceptable standards within 20 years.
Tom Temples, a geologist at the University of South Carolina,
called phytoremediation a ''pretty nifty tool.''
''Some plants have a natural ability to absorb those
contaminants, break them down and make use of them,'' he said.
*****************************************************************
9 DOE: Reindustrialization works
Oak Ridger Online --> Story last updated at 1:14 p.m. on
Thursday, September 13, 2001
DOE: Reindustrialization works
by Paul Parson
Oak Ridger staff
Reindustrialization continues to be a viable concept in Oak
Ridge.
That was the picture painted by Susan Cange, team leader for the
Department of Energy's local Reindustrialization Division, during
her presentation Wednesday night to the Oak Ridge Site-Specific
Advisory Board.
"Reindustrialization is an innovative method to accomplish
cleanup of underutilized (DOE) facilities and equipment and make
them available for commercial use," said Cange during the meeting
at the Garden Plaza Hotel.
DOE's reindustrialization efforts are accomplished in three
approaches, one of which is by working with the Community Reuse
Organization of East Tennessee.
The federal agency leases land, facilities and equipment to
CROET, which in return subleases them to private-sector
businesses. Cange said 72 leases have been signed with 36
companies to occupy space on the Oak Ridge Reservation.
Using contracts to accomplish reindustrialization is another
viable method, Cange said.
As an example, she pointed out DOE's $238 million, six-year
contract with BNFL Inc. to decontaminate and decommission three
buildings at K-25. Those buildings are K-33, which totals 2.8
million square feet; K-29, 586,880 square feet; and K-31, 1.4
million square feet.
"It has created a tremendous amount of jobs Š more than 900,"
she said of the BNFL contract.
Bartering is another way DOE works toward reindustrialization.
This method allows companies to use DOE equipment and/or
facilities at reduced rates in exchange for cleanup services.
"Savings to the government through bartering arrangements totals
over $4.64 million in current year dollars," Cange said.
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
*****************************************************************
10 No end in sight to increased DOE security
Oak Ridger Online -->
Story last updated at 1:14 p.m. on Thursday, September 13, 2001
by Paul Parson
Oak Ridger staff
Small but noticeable American flags were attached to a couple of
vehicles entering and exiting the Y-12 National Security Complex
this morning.
The small patriotic symbols, some say, seem appropriate since
the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge facilities continue to
implement heightened security measures in light of Tuesday's
tragic terrorist attacks.
"We're still in that mode," said DOE spokesman Frank Juan this
morning regarding security precautions.
As of this morning, Juan said there is no end in sight to the
precautions DOE and its contractors are taking, which include
changes in parking areas, plant access and traffic patterns.
With Tuesday's terrorist attacks putting DOE on alert, it is
also not known how those events or future threats might affect
future plans in Oak Ridge.
For example, Oak Ridge National Laboratory plans to become a
more open campus. If that should happen, the lab's security focus
will be shifting from fences and gates to building-based access.
"For the first 50 or some years, the lab lived behind the fence
and that was the appropriate model," Lab Director Bill Madia told
The Oak Ridger earlier.
"What we did here throughout the Cold War needed to be restricted
and couldn't have the general public walking around."
For the next 50 years, however, that should not be the case,
Madia said during a March interview.
"We don't need a restricted campus for 95 percent of what we
do," he said. "Therefore, taking down the fences and controlling
access at the doors of the buildings is the appropriate security
posture for us to be in."
On Wednesday, Jeff Smith, deputy for operations at ORNL, said
it's possible those plans could be revisited.
"It's too early to start jumping to conclusions about are we
going to change this or stop that," Smith said.
All Contents ©Copyright The Oak Ridger
*****************************************************************
11 Beazley warns of nuclear terror threat
ABC News -
The Federal Opposition leader, Kim Beazley, has warned the threat
of attack by nuclear, chemical and biological weapons still
exists, not because nations are likely to use them but because
terrorists could.
He has put terrorism at the top of threats to national integrity
and he has called for Australia to be part of a global human
intelligence network which can infiltrate terrorist groups.
Mr Beazley says the United States attacks have highlighted the
danger which still exists.
"When you look at how readily this particular group was able to
penetrate and use if you like the common coin of everyday life,
it is still a possibility that they could do that with something
like anthrax," he said.
"So don't rule out the question of weapons of mass destruction."
© 1999 Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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12 Plutonium will be ready to ship if S.C. accepts it
charlotte.com - - - - -
[charlotte.com]
Published Wednesday, September 12, 2001
radioactive showdown
Plutonium will be ready to ship if S.C. accepts it
Packaging continues at Colorado weapons site; talks will resume Friday
Associated Press
GOLDEN, Colo. -- Workers at the former Rocky Flats nuclear
weapons plant have been told to keep preparing plutonium to be
moved to South Carolina by mid-October, despite a dispute over
the shipments.
Rocky Flats spokesman Jeremy Karpatkin says workers will keep
packing the plutonium in special shipping containers with the
expectation the material will begin leaving as scheduled.
"That doesn't mean it will leave on time," Karpatkin said
Monday. "We've been instructed to be prepared to meet the
original schedule."
South Carolina has not agreed to accept the highly radioactive
material, a spokeswoman for Gov. Jim Hodges said.
A meeting is scheduled Friday between S.C. officials and the
U.S. Department of Energy, which oversees Rocky Flats.
South Carolina had an agreement with the federal government to
bring 50 tons of weapons-grade plutonium from Rocky Flats and
elsewhere to the Savannah River Site near Aiken beginning in
October. It would be converted into fuel for nuclear power plants
or immobilized for storage in Nevada.
Hodges threatened to stop the shipments unless federal
authorities agreed in writing to specify when the plutonium would
leave the state.
"We are hopeful this will be resolved to the state's benefit
before mid-October," said Cortney Owings, Hodges' spokeswoman.
Triggers for nuclear weapons were made for 40 years at Rocky
Flats, about 12 miles west of Denver. It closed in 1989.
*****************************************************************
13 Workers prepare plutonium to ship
Columbia, S.C. Wednesday, September 12, 2001 FAQs |
The Associated Press
GOLDEN, Colo. (--) Workers at the former Rocky Flats nuclear
weapons plant have been told to keep preparing plutonium to be
moved to South Carolina by mid-October despite a dispute over the
shipments.
Rocky Flats spokesman Jeremy Karpatkin said Monday that workers
will keep packing the plutonium in special shipping containers
with the expectation the material will begin leaving as
scheduled.
"That doesn't mean it will leave on time," Karpatkin said.
"We've been instructed to be prepared to meet the original
schedule." South Carolina has not agreed to accept the highly
radioactive material, a spokeswoman for Gov. Jim Hodges said.
A meeting is scheduled Friday between S.C. officials and the
U.S. Department of Energy, which oversees Rocky Flats.
South Carolina had an agreement with the federal government to
bring 50 tons of weapons-grade plutonium from Rocky Flats and
elsewhere to the Savannah River Site near Aiken beginning in
October. It would be converted into fuel for nuclear power plants
or immobilized for storage in Nevada.
Hodges threatened to stop the shipments unless federal
authorities agreed in writing to specify when the plutonium would
leave the state.
"We are hopeful this will be resolved to the state's benefit
before mid-October," said Cortney Owings, Hodges' spokeswoman.
Triggers for nuclear weapons were made for 40 years at Rocky
Flats, about 12 miles west of Denver. It was closed in 1989.
© Copyright 2001 The State-Record Company
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14 Pasko case enters decisive stage
Gregory Pasko, an investigative journalist who worked for the
Pacific Fleet's newspaper, was arrested on 20 November 1997 by
the FSB and charged with high treason for his writing about the
nuclear safety issues in the Russian Pacific Fleet.
(Moscow:) The experts who have evaluated whether there are state
secrets or not in the materials that allegedly were confiscated
at Pasko’s flat in November 1997, have finalized their
evaluation. Thus, the Pasko case has entered what may turn out to
be its decisive stage.
Jon Gauslaa, 2001-09-12 11:47
The Pacific Fleet Court announced earlier this week that it would
start its interrogations of the experts on September 12, and it
has apparently planned to use four days on the interrogations.
Independent Court analysis?
- I consider this as a good sign, said defense attorney Ivan
Pavlov.
It does at least indicate that the Court’s intents to make
its own independent analysis of whether there are state secrets
or not in the disputed materials and that it will not just leave
the decision of this question to the experts.
The defense has previously questioned both the objectiveness and
the competence of the experts. -We have already pointed out that
they have a security clearance from the FSB, which means that
they are not independent from the body that initiated the case;
and that they will answer questions of legal character, although
none of them have any legal education, said Pavlov. What
questions we will ask the experts will of course depend on their
conclusions, but we are well prepared for this part of the trial,
as the stage we now have entered may turn out to be decisive.
Grigory Pasko was arrested in November 1997 on charges of
espionage on behalf of the Japanese TV-station 'NHK'. He was
acquitted of espionage in July 1999, but convicted of abuse of
his official authority and freed under a general amnesty. Seeking
a full acquittal, Pasko appealed the verdict, but so did the
prosecution, insisting he was a spy. The Military Collegium of
the Russian Supreme Court cancelled the verdict in November 2000,
and sent the case back to Vladivostok for a re-trial. After
several postponements, the re-trial started on July 11, 2001
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