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12/21/01 **** RADIATION BULLETIN(RADBULL) **** VOL 9.303
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RADBULL IS PRODUCED BY THE ABALONE ALLIANCE CLEARINGHOUSE
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NUCLEAR POWER CONTENTS
1 Sellafield go-ahead
2 Dublin protests at move on production at Mox plant
3 Smith calls for closure of Sellafield
4 British Energy appeals decision to ringfence NEA revenue from
5 Protesters plague start of `white elephant' N-plant
6 Finnish, Slovak premiers discuss nuclear safety, mutual ties, EU
7 German nuclear power law contravenes EU law
8 Russia earmarks funds for floating nuclear power plants
9 Reactor halted for repairs and refuelling at Ukrainian nuclear
10 Nuclear power to solve energy crises of Russian Far East, says
11 Russian Duma passes law on allowances for nuclear tests victims
12 Protests greet plutonium decision
13 AU: Nuclear security easily breached
14 Officials can't justify battle after review
15 What Spencer Abraham missed
16 Gibbons urges labor to go it alone on Yucca
17 SA: Nuclear Energy Boss to Face Probe
18 Guinn seeks support against Yucca
19 Letter: Send nuke waste to Washington
20 GAO: Yucca would 'not be practical'
21 No-fly zones over nuclear facilities unlikely
22 IAEA Daily Press Review Date 2001-12-21 Number 240
23 MOX plant start-up widely condemned
24 MOX plant begins production
25 Wis. 535-MW Kewaunee nuke returns to full power
26 NRC must ensure nuke plant decommissioning funds-GAO
27 Dublin protests at move on production at Mox plant
28 Mox open for business
29 Sellafield plant opening unleashes wave of fury
30 Comments from Sellafield outrage anti-nuclear protesters
NUCLEAR WEAPONS CONTENTS
1 Russia: There is no crime
2 Fast Flux Test Reactor Closed Permanently
3 Russia's Gepard submarine arrives at permanent base
4 K-25 worker ambivalent about $150,000 check
5 FFTF loses restart fight
6 More funds needed for FFTF
7 Nuclear Waste Vessel, Sub Collide
8 FFTF decision must not hurt Hanford cleanup
9 FFTF: Citizens made difference
10 Permanent Shutdown Ordered for Fast Flux Reactor
11 Hanford facility runs out of reprieves
12 Nwep: Richard Butler comments on defector
13 LANL Cleanup Project Completed
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NUCLEAR POWER ARTICLES
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1 Sellafield go-ahead
The Scotsman - UK - Sellafield go-ahead
Fri 21 Dec 2001
A CONTROVERSIAL new nuclear reprocessing plant was switched on
yesterday, amid protests from environmental campaigners.
After standing empty for more than five years, the mixed oxide
(MOX) plant at Sellafield, Cumbria, began recycling used uranium
and plutonium to produce fuel to be used in power stations across
the world.
British Nuclear Fuels said that plutonium would be gradually
phased into the manufacture of fuel.
Jack Allen, head of operations at the plant, said: "This is
wonderful news and is the best Christmas present we could have
had."
But environmental campaigners promised that protests were far
from over. Martin Forwood, a spokesman for Cumbrians Opposed to a
Radioactive Environment, said that in bringing plutonium into the
plant for the first time, BNFL was setting in motion "a plant
that has no future from day one".
©2001 scotsman.com | contact
*****************************************************************
2 Dublin protests at move on production at Mox plant
By Andrew Taylor, Utilities Correspondent
Published: December 20 2001 21:43 | Last Updated: December 20 2001
22:15
The first steps towards starting commercial production at the
controversial nuclear fuel recycling plant in Cumbria prompted
angry responses on Thursday from the Irish government and
environmental protesters.
About 70 protesters, mainly from the Irish Republic, gathered
outside the £472m ($684.8m) Sellafield plant as plutonium-bearing
material was introduced to test equipment before commercial
manufacture could start.
The British government last month authorised state-owned British
Nuclear Fuels to start production of the mixed oxide fuel after
an independent study concluded that it was more viable to let the
project proceed.
The Irish government and environmentalists have since mounted a
series of legal challenges to stop the plant, so far to no avail.
They say pollution from the works will be carried to Ireland. Joe
Jacob, the Irish minister responsible for nuclear safety, said on
Thursday that the republic would "continue to exploit every
available legal avenue" to halt the plant so "that justice be
gained for the people of Ireland".
He said: "It is morally wrong to pollute the environment, any
environment. But when that environment forms part of another
jurisdiction I can only describe it as a form of selfishness that
knows no bounds and one that recognises no boundaries."
The Dublin government is challenging the development under the
United Nations convention on the law of the sea and under the
Oslo and Paris convention, a treaty signed by north Atlantic
countries to protect the marine environment.
Its attempt at an inter-national tribunal to win an interim
injunction to stop the plant opening was defeated last month in
Hamburg.
Borge Brenda, Norwegian environment minister, this week visited
Dublin, London and Sellafield in an attempt to persuade British
authorities to halt Mox production.
Environmental groups Greenpeace and and Friends of the Earth said
starting the controversial plant would lead to huge clean-up
costs for taxpayers; increase pollution, threatening safety; and
increase the risk of radioactive materials ending up in terrorist
hands. The decision to start commissioning the plant followed
approval this week by the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, an
arm of the Health & Safety Executive.
Jack Allen, British Nuclear Fuels' head of Mox operations, said:
"This is the best Christmas present we could have had.
"I also want to thank our customers, who have been very patient,
and we now want to get on with the job of manufacturing Mox fuel
for them.
"This is just the beginning of Mox fuel manufacture," he added.
*****************************************************************
3 Smith calls for closure of Sellafield
Thu December 20th 01
Welcome to The Anglo Celt
By Michael Cryan
THE Irish government has strong reservations about the building
of the new MOX plant at Sellafield and has constantly raised the
matter with their British counterparts at every opportunity,
stated Deputy Brendan Smith this week.
The Fianna Fail deputy said the decision of Government to place a
full-page advertisement in The Times newspaper was an attempt to
address the concerns of the party directly to the British public.
The Cavan-Monaghan TD added that from Cumann to Cabinet level
members were determined that Sellafield be shut once and for all.
In Hamburg recently the Government sought an injunction against
the opening of the proposed Mixed Oxide Fuel (MOX) Plant at
Sellafield.
Pursuing
Twenty-one judges from the various counties assembled there to
hear their case under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, he
said. The Government was pursuing its case under the OSPAR
Convention and they also intended to bring a case against
Sellafield to the European Court of Justice. They would
relentlessly pursue every legal avenue to shut the plant, said
Deputy Smith.
According to the Fianna Fail TD Sellafield posed an unacceptable
risk to the environment of these islands. From the Windscale fire
in 1957 right up to the present, it had polluted these Islands
with nuclear waste, he claimed. Continuing Deputy Smith said that
as the largest party in Ireland they wanted to bring home to the
British public just how strongly they felt about the existence of
Sellafield and in particular, the proposed new MOX Plant.
Believed
He believed that the issue of Sellafield was as much an issue for
the people of Britain as for Ireland. That's what Fianna Fáil was
seeking to highlight.
They also indicated to the British Government that they would
campaign relentlessly to prevent the opening of MOX and for the
final closure of the entire Sellafield operation.
Concluding, he said he was surprised at Fine Gael's statement
criticising their actions, and he was disappointed with their
attitude to an issue which should command all party support.
© Copyright Unison
*****************************************************************
4 British Energy appeals decision to ringfence NEA revenue from
Scottish Power
AFX (UK); Dec 21, 2001
LONDON (AFX) - British Energy PLC said it will appeal a court
ruling saying that some revenue due to be paid by rival Scottish
Power PLC should go into a special account while a dispute
between the two companies plays out.
Yesterday afternoon the Scottish Court of Session ruled that a
neutral designated trust account be established into which is to
be placed sums that Scottish Power claim they have overpaid and
will in future overpay to British Energy for electricity supplied
under the Nuclear Energy Agreement. Scottish Power estimates that
this amounts to 52.3 mln stg to date.
British Energy said it will seek leave to appeal this decision.
It is anticipated that its application will be heard on Jan 4
2002.
The judgement has no bearing on the principal NEA case, as the
Court were not ruling on the principal dispute, which will not be
discussed until August 2002.
British Energy said it remains confident that it will be
successful in securing a satisfactory outcome in the principal
dispute.
Scottish Power decided in May to take legal action over pricing
of wholesale nuclear power in Scotland, challenging the NEA that
covers that pricing signed more than 11 years ago on the basis
that the market place had fundamentally changed. Scottish
consumption accounts for one quarter of British Energy's nuclear
output.
mps/shw NNN For more information and to contact AFX:
www.afxnews.com and www.afxpress.com World Reporter All Material
*****************************************************************
5 Protesters plague start of `white elephant' N-plant
The Birmingham Post - United Kingdom; Dec 21, 2001
BY JOHN ASHTON
Work finally got underway yesterday at the site of a
controversial new nuclear reprocessing plant amid protests from
environmental campaigners.
After standing empty for more than five years, the mixed oxide
(MOX) plant at Sellafield, Cumbria, yesterday began recycling
used uranium and plutonium to produce fuel to be used in power
stations across the world.
And after finally getting the go-ahead to begin commissioning,
managers at the plant described it as ``the best Christmas
present we could have had''. The National Installation
Inspectorate inspected the plant yesterday and gave its owners,
British Nuclear Fuels Ltd, the go-ahead.
Yesterday, BNFL confirmed that the process of addingplutonium to
help create MOX fuel pellets had finally begun. It said plutonium
would be gradually phased into the manufacture of MOX fuel.
Jack Allen, head of operations at the site, said: ``This is
wonderful news and is the best Christmas present we could have
had.
''I am very proud of the MOX workforce who have worked so hard to
get us to this stage.''
But environmental campaigners said the decision was far from the
end of the protests against the plant, which they called a
``white elephant'' for the area.
Martin Forwood, a spokesman for Cumbrians Opposed to a
Radioactive Environment, said that in bringing plutonium into the
plant for the first time, BNFL was setting in motion ``a plant
that has no future from day one''.
''You will end up with far too much nuclear fuel for no
business,'' he said. ``It is just a whiteelephant for the
Sellafield area.'' He added: ``I find it frankly incomprehensible
that this company can find any satisfaction in opening this plant
that was losing money from day one.
''It really confirms that this area is forced into domination by
BNFL. That is wholly against the thoughts of the people in this
area.''
He warned the company that the protests against them were not
over.
''If the BNFL think their problems are over now then they can
think again. They have major headaches in front of them, they
have no prospects.''
Outside the plant, around 70 demonstrators from the Irish protest
group Gluaiseacht -- mostly made up of students -- marched from
the north gate to the south gate of Sellafield at 7am.
With chants of ``Ireland says no, MOX must go'', the protesters
beat drums and danced outside the gates as workers arrived this
morning.
When the decision to begin commissioning was announced, around 20
of the protesters chained themselves to the railings outside the
plant's main gate for two hours before winding the protest down
around midday.
Despite being completed in 1996, the MOX plant in Cumbria has
lain idle ever since.
Earlier this year Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth failed in
their attempt to block the Government's go-ahead for the
facility.
Approval for the plant had initially been withheld following
financial concerns after documents had been found to have been
falsified.
Once fully operational, the pounds 470 million plant aims to
recover around 97 per cent of used fuels, reducing the amount of
high radioactive waste.
BNFL will then ship MOX pellets -- each of which is equivalent to
one tonne of coal -- to reactors in Japan where it will be used
to generate electricity.
*****************************************************************
6 Finnish, Slovak premiers discuss nuclear safety, mutual ties, EU
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Dec 20, 2001
Text of report in English by Slovak news agency TASR web site
Helsinki, 20 December:
Slovakia is among the safest countries in the field of nuclear
energy from among all candidate countries of the European union
(EU), Finnish Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen told media on
Thursday [20 December] after meeting his Slovak counterpart
Mikulas Dzurinda.
Lipponen said that the distrust of the EU-member countries stems
from the failure of the nuclear reactor in Chernobyl and the
continued use of "Russian technologies" in Central and Eastern
Europe. "Our expertise, however, showed that the security of
nuclear power stations in Central Europe is as high as in the
West," Lipponen said, adding that nuclear energy will play an
important role in the future of the EU.
Dzurinda reiterated that Slovakia pledged to adhere to the
planned side-tracking, or early stopping of production, of the
two blocks of Jaslovske Bohunice (Trnava region) in 2006 and
2008.
Lipponen stressed that Finnish ties with Slovakia are good and
that he enjoys a personal relationship with Dzurinda. He
highlighted the success of Slovakia in its accession talks as
well as the need for "small countries of the EU" and the
candidates to work together on a regional level. 2004 is "a
probable" deadline for the EU expansion, he said.
During private talks with Lipponen, Dzurinda expressed his
satisfaction with the accession process as well, and assured that
Slovakia should finish negotiations on all the chapters of the
acquis communautaire by the end of 2002. He highlighted the fact
that Slovakia overtook other countries of the Visegrad Four (V4)
in the talks, which is partly due to close regional cooperation.
Dzurinda said he hopes that a similar V4 summit as was held
recently with the Benelux countries will be held with the Nordic
countries. Dzurinda said his visit to Finland is also focusing on
luring Finnish investors, as he sees great potential there.
Source: TASR web site, Bratislava, in English 1501 gmt 20 Dec 01
/BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter
*****************************************************************
7 German nuclear power law contravenes EU law
(Kommission: Atomnovelle verstost gegen europaisches Recht)
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung -
Germany; Dec 20, 2001
According to the EU Commission, a planned amendment to German law
regarding nuclear power contravene EU law. The EU energy and
transport department recently informed the German government that
plans to forbid exports of used nuclear fuel for reprocessing are
against the law on a common nuclear energy market. Two days
later, however, Germany's ruling coalition voted in favour of the
amendment.
The German department of the environment says that legislative
proceedings can continue as planned, as the letter from the EU
does not entail a standstill. The German government has a month
in which to make a statement.
Abstracted from Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
*****************************************************************
8 Russia earmarks funds for floating nuclear power plants
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Dec 20, 2001
Text of report in English by Russian news agency Interfax
Archangel, 19 December:
The Russian government on Tuesday [18 December] made the decision
to allocate R130m to Archangel Region in 2002 to develop floating
nuclear power plants. This money will be taken from resources
reserved for the implementation of investment projects in the
nuclear energy sector, the press service of the governor of
Archangel Region announced on Wednesday.
The Rosenergoatom concern plans to build two 75-MW floating
nuclear power plants for Archangel Region at the Sevmash
shipyards. Each floating nuclear plant is estimated to cost
100-120m dollars. Construction will last for about five years.
Floating nuclear power plants are expected to fully meet the
needs of Severodvinsk in electricity.
Source: Interfax news agency, Moscow, in English 1131 gmt 19 Dec
01 /BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter
*****************************************************************
9 Reactor halted for repairs and refuelling at Ukrainian nuclear
plant
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Dec 20, 2001
Text of report by Ukrainian news agency UNIAN
Kiev, 20 December:
The No 4 power generating set was stopped for scheduled repairs
at 0114 hours on 20 December [2314 gmt 19 December] at the
Zaporizhzhya nuclear power station, the Ukrainian State Nuclear
Regulation Administration's information centre has told UNIAN.
Fresh nuclear fuel will be loaded into the reactor during the
repairs. According to the Enerhoatom national nuclear energy
company's schedule, the reactor is expected to be reconnected to
the grid by 9 March 2002.
As of today, 11 of Ukraine's 13 reactors are in operation.
Planned repairs are also under way at the No 3 reactor of the
Rivne nuclear power station. It is expected to be reconnected to
the grid on 6 February 2002.
Source: UNIAN news agency, Kiev, in Ukrainian 0727 gmt 20 Dec 01
/BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter
*****************************************************************
10 Nuclear power to solve energy crises of Russian Far East, says
local governor
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Dec 21, 2001
Text of report by Russian news agency ITAR-TASS
Vladivostok, 21 December,
ITAR-TASS correspondent Leonid Vinogradov: Construction of a
nuclear power station is to begin in 2015 in Maritime Territory.
A serious shortage of energy capacity means the Far East is in
urgent need of ways of producing electricity, Maritime Territory
governor Sergey Darkin said today.
He said there would be a parallel search for alternative sources
of electricity. There are plans to build an oil refinery and a
plant to produce liquified gas in Maritime Territory. These will
use the hydrocarbons that are currently being extracted on the
Sakhalin Shelf.
According to the governor, there will be a referendum for
residents of the Territory to express their attitude to the
construction of a nuclear power plant. It will only be built
after comprehensive studies into its ecological safety.
Source: ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow, in Russian 0829 gmt 21 Dec
01 /BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter
*****************************************************************
11 Russian Duma passes law on allowances for nuclear tests victims
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Dec 21, 2001
Text of report by Russian news agency ITAR-TASS
Moscow, 21 December,
ITAR-TASS correspondent Ivan Novikov: The Russian State Duma
today adopted a law on social guarantees for citizens affected by
radiation as a result of nuclear tests carried out at the
Semipalatinsk testing ground.
Social guarantees are established for citizens living in 1948-63
in populated areas of the adjacent territories within the Russian
Federation as well as outside it. Social guarantees are also set
for children under 18, the first and the second generation
descendants of the said citizens, who suffer ill health as a
result of their parents being affected by radiation. The Russian
government is to set up a procedure of establishing which persons
are to be included in such categories.
Citizens affected by significant dozes of radiation are
guaranteed to receive a number of allowances and compensations,
including free medical help and medicines, specialized mandatory
health checks throughout their lives, priority in receiving
annual treatment at health spas and resorts, also free of charge.
In addition, they are to receive monthly compensations to be used
for purchasing foodstuffs. There are a number of allowances set
for children under 18, who suffer ailments resulting from the
radiation effects on their parents. They are entitled to free
treatment at health spas and special resorts, as well as free
medical help and prescription medicines.
Source: ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow, in Russian 0813 gmt 21 Dec
01 /BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter
*****************************************************************
12 Protests greet plutonium decision
Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian |
Paul Brown
Friday December 21, 2001 The Guardian [http://www.guardian.co.uk]
Protests on both sides of the Irish Sea, including at Sellafield,
greeted the news yesterday that British Nuclear Fuels has finally
introduced plutonium into its £470m mixed oxide (mox) plant at
Sellafield after a five-year wait.
The plant uses plutonium and uranium from spent nuclear fuel
reprocessed in the giant Thorp reprocessing plant next door to
make new fuel for nuclear reactors around the world.
The plant has been fiercely criticised by environmental groups
and foreign governments, particularly Ireland and Norway, which
object to what they see as more radioactive pollution. Irish
students chained them selves to the gates of the Sellafield plant
yesterday in protest.
Staff at the plant were delighted with the start-up which
safeguards 200 jobs directly and about 2,000 in the reprocessing
works.
Attempts in the high court and court of appeal by Friends of the
Earth and Greenpeace failed to stop the plant.
The Irish government has cases pending in three international
courts disputing the decisions by the Department of Environment
to give the go-ahead for the plant in October after four years of
indecision.
Jack Allen, head of operations at the site, said: "This is
wonderful news and is the best Christmas present we could have
had. I am very proud of the mox workforce who have worked so hard
to get us to this stage."
Martin Forwood, a spokesman for Cumbrians Opposed to a
Radioactive Environment, said: "It is just a white elephant for
the Sellafield area. I find it frankly incomprehensible that this
company can find any satisfaction in opening this plant that was
losing money from day one."
Outside the plant, about 70 demonstrators from Irish protest
group Gluaiseacht - mostly made up of students - marched from
Sellafield's north gate to the south gate at 7am.
Green MEP Nuala Ahern said the action was "arrogant,
irresponsible and irreversible and would make a nightmare
Christmas present for people living around the Irish Sea."
Useful links
British Nuclear Fuels Ltd
[http://www.bnfl.co.uk/website.nsf/default.htm] Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament [http://www.cnduk.org/] HSE nuclear glossary
[http://www.hse.gov.uk/nsd/ilrwglos.htm] UK atomic energy
authority [http://www.ukaea.org.uk/] National Radiological
Protection Board [http://www.nrpb.org.uk/] World Nuclear
Association [http://www.uilondon.org/]
[UP] Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001
*****************************************************************
13 AU: Nuclear security easily breached
The Australian:
[December 22, 2001]
THE NATION
By Claire Harvey
FIVE months before two jets flew into the World Trade Centre in
New York, the designers of the new nuclear reactor planned for
Sydney's Lucas Heights were pondering a strange scenario.
What would happen if an aeroplane was flown at full speed into
the reactor?
It was just a wild theory – but the safety report written in May
2001 declared the new reactor was so safe it could even withstand
the impact of a light aircraft.
The designers, Argentine firm INVAP, included in their report a
startling diagram showing a Cessna 500 jet flying into the
fortified reactor.
At the same time, Greenpeace nuclear activists James Courtney
and Steve Campbell were dreaming up a brash protest to show the
world how vulnerable Lucas Heights would be to an attack.
They wanted to infiltrate the Lucas Heights facility and climb
to the top of the reactor, just to prove how easy it would be for
a terrorist to do the same. They spent months planning the
protest: scouting the facility, enacting role-plays in which
protesters took the role of guards and training workers in
climbing large structures.
The idea occurred to Courtney and Campbell on January 22 this
year, as they stood in the dry suburban heat outside the reactor,
trying to stop the exportation of a load of radioactive waste.
Security at Australia's only nuclear plant was almost
non-existent – a couple of Australian Protective Service officers
standing inside the gate.
Campbell and Courtney were intrigued: if security was this poor,
what was to stop terrorists getting inside the facility itself?
The idea was to show that Lucas Heights' managing authority, the
Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, was lying
when it claimed its facility was secure and presented no danger
to the people of Sydney's south.
"The people who are telling us that Lucas Heights is completely
safe and secure are the same people who are telling us that Lucas
Heights is essential for producing medical radioisotopes – when
in fact there are much safer ways of producing them," Courtney
says.
Planning for the protest was so secret that not even the other
anti-Lucas Heights community groups saw it coming.
Staff and volunteers were flown in by Greenpeace from Brisbane,
Adelaide, Melbourne and Perth.
The volunteers were simply told they were needed for an
important protest. On Friday night last week, when they had all
assembled in Sydney, they were informed of their mission and
issued with cardboard barrel costumes marked "Uranium".
"The point of dressing up as barrels was to make sure we didn't
look like terrorists," Courtney says.
"It's very important in this kind of direct action not to scare
the security guards or the police into opening fire, so we wanted
to look as innocuous as possible."
The job of the human barrels was to run around being as comical
as possible to distract the guards and clear the way for three
climb teams, each composed of eight recruits trained in climbing
large structures.
The climbers would scale two of Lucas Heights' supposedly most
secure buildings: the reactor itself and Building 27, where
radioactive waste is stored. The third team was to climb another
metal tower, used as a weather station, to unfurl banners and
conduct telephone media interviews. "We're all trained as
industrial access technicians," Courtney says. "Some of the guys
have worked as riggers and we could all get rigging jobs with our
qualifications."
At 7pm on Sunday, Greenpeace media officer Carolin Wenzel rang
trusted journalists at each of Sydney's three commercial TV
stations, ABC radio, the wire service AAP, and one newspaper
reporter, telling them to be ready at a shopping centre car park
near Lucas Heights at 6.45am.
Before dawn on Monday, the climb teams assembled at a Greenpeace
warehouse, drove to the suburban fringe and walked through the
bush to Lucas Heights, waiting at the fence for orders.
"All teams proceed at your leisure," came the two-way radio
message at 7.10am.
The human barrels arrived at the Lucas Heights gate in two
Thrifty rental trucks, jumped out and tried to run into the site.
The two Australian Protective Service guards on the gate,
scrambling to round up the barrels and TV camera crews, didn't
notice the climb teams scaling the 4m fence at the back of the
establishment and climbing up the buildings.
The APS officers called 000 for help, but Greenpeace claims the
extra police did not arrive until 45 minutes later – at 7.55am.
Detective Inspector Laurie Pettiford of Sutherland police says
the time lag was more like 15 minutes.
"Police were on the scene very promptly. The call came out for
cars which were on the road to go to the facility, and with the
traffic at that time of the morning, that is simply how long it
takes."
All protesters were arrested for trespassing.
Security was supposed to be beefed up at Lucas Heights after the
air strikes on Afghanistan began in October, on instructions from
the federal Government.
In November, ANSTO was ordered to conduct a review of security –
including the likely impact of a large jet being flown into the
reactor – by John Loy, head of the Australian Radiation
Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency, the watchdog that oversees
Lucas Heights. The report is due out in mid-January.
But public tours of the facility continue and Courtney says
Greenpeace cannot find any evidence of extra security at the
site.
Nuclear scientist Jim Green, a researcher at Wollongong
University, regularly enters Lucas Heights to use the library.
"They issue you with a visitor's pass, but nobody ever checks the
pass," Green says.
"When you go in on the bus, the security guards get on and ask
everyone to wave their pass in the air but I'd just not bother
and I have never been stopped."
Construction is due to begin on a new research reactor on the
Lucas Heights site in April.
The INVAP report said terrorism was nothing to worry about
because anyone who entered the facility would have to show
identification.
"The facility has design provisions to deter attacks or
sabotage," the report declared. "To access the facility, a person
must go through several physical barriers and ID checks."
INVAP consulted experts in terrorism and explosive devices, who
found "none of these attacks would threaten the integrity of the
reactor core or create radioactive releases greater than those
analysed from other . . . accidents."
But, with Bankstown Airport only 14km away and Sydney airport
22km to the northeast, the possibility of an aircraft crashing
into the building had to be considered.
The federal Government's Environment Australia department had
warned in a report dated February 1999 that: "An aircraft crash
at the proposed reactor could have catastrophic consequences."
But the INVAP report said the reactor core was protected by
"Aircraft Impact Steel Framed Grillage", a casing which could
withstand the blow of a Cessna 500 aircraft.
"The vertical component of an aircraft impact would be
transferred to the foundations through the four corner columns,"
the report notes. "The loading will impart little if any
additional stress to the reactor block."
Green says thousands of Sutherland Shire residents could suffer
radiation doses if there was an accident or attack on the
facility and the 800 Lucas Heights workers would certainly be
seriously affected, suffering cancer and organ failure.
But ANSTO's website says that in any accident, the reactor would
automatically close down and the reactor's steel casing would
contain any radioactivity.
"No member of the public would be exposed to significant doses
of radiation."
© 2001 The Australian
*****************************************************************
14 Officials can't justify battle after review
This story was published Thu, Dec 20, 2001
By Les Blumenthal Herald Washington, D.C., bureau WASHINGTON --
It was a decision a string of energy secretaries tried to avoid,
an issue that left Washington state's two Democratic senators
walking a political tightrope and a top priority for an Oregon
senator who never stopped trying.
But in the end, Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham couldn't find a
mission to rationalize keeping the Fast Flux Test Facility open,
and even U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., whose district includes
the Hanford reservation, appeared resigned to the fact the fight
may finally be over.
"The secretary promised a fair, open and thorough review," said
Hastings, who had convinced Abraham to conduct an eight-month
study of whether enough medical isotopes could be manufactured at
FFTF to justify its restart. "While not the result we had hoped
for, this was a battle absolutely worth fighting -- and those in
the Tri-Cities community who fought the battle with us have every
reason to be proud of their tremendous effort."
Former Energy Secretary James Watkins first suggested it might be
time to permanently shut down the test reactor, but the first
Bush administration never followed through.
Former Clinton administration Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary put
FFTF on "hot" standby in 1993 but never agreed to close it for
good or order a restart. Another Clinton administration energy
secretary, Federico Peña, also declined to make a final decision.
Washington state politicians, led by Hastings, former Republican
Sen. Slade Gorton and former Republican Rep. Sid Morrison, always
appeared able to tantalize Congress and the energy secretaries
with one more possible mission for FFTF. Those included producing
tritium for nuclear weapons, destroying warheads facing
elimination under arms control treaties, burning highly
radioactive waste, producing nuclear fuel for deep space probes,
testing fuel for the next generation of nuclear reactors and,
finally, producing medical isotopes.
State politicians took on some of the toughest members of
Congress, including U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., the
longtime chairman of Senate Armed Services Committee who
considered restarting FFTF a direct threat to the Energy
Department's Savannah River complex. They also battled with
powerful appropriations chairmen such as former U.S. Sen. J.
Bennett Johnston, D-La.
In the end, former Energy Secretary Bill Richardson pulled the
plug in the final days of the Clinton administration. On
Wednesday, Abraham declined to plug it back in.
For the state's two Democratic senators, Patty Murray and Maria
Cantwell, FFTF has been a no-win proposition. On the west side of
the state, their core Democratic constituencies traditionally
have included the environmental and anti-nuclear communities.
Both groups adamantly opposed restarting FFTF.
In the Tri-Cities, community leaders and organized labor, another
core Democratic constituency, have supported restarting the
reactor. But the senators have to run statewide, and there are
simply more voters west of the Cascades.
Though lukewarm in her support, Murray believed DOE needed to
thoroughly study the medical isotope proposal. She took a lot of
heat at a state Democratic Party convention several years ago for
her stand.
Last year, when the department needed to reprogram money to pay
for an ongoing study, U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., sought to
block it. Wyden had long complained money to restart the reactor
would come out of Hanford's cleanup budget. And he argued nothing
should be allowed to interfere with cleaning up the reservation,
which he considered part of Oregon's back yard.
Wyden went to New Mexico Sen. Jeff Bingaman, who as the top
Democratic senator on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee could have stopped the reprogramming for the FFTF
study. Murray, however, convinced Bingaman that the study needed
to be completed. Murray also essentially told Bingaman that she
would abide by the study's conclusions and support any decision
Richardson reached.
Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights
*****************************************************************
15 What Spencer Abraham missed
Yucca Mountain, which Spencer Abraham has not seen in person.
By Heidi Walters
So, there's this guy, and his name is Spencer Abraham, and he's
the energy secretary for the United States. That means he gets to
decide - soon, within weeks perhaps - whether to recommend that
the nation's high-level, deadly, toxic, really really bad nuclear
waste be buried in Yucca Mountain.
Yucca Mountain is one of those classic, long-spined, tan,
slant-ridges out in the Southern Nevada dese rt. It's beautiful.
But it's also on a fault zone, a nd though it looks dry as
dinosaur bones scientists have found that a surprising amount of
water can trickle down through its Mojave skin and eventually
into the groundwater. A few miles downgradient of Yucca Mountain
lies one of Nevada's richest, groundwater-fed farm regions,
Amargosa Valley, and a small town of humans. A little farther
downstream is one of the most endemic-species-rich regions on the
planet, springs-dotted Ash Meadows Nation al Wildlife Refuge,
plus more small towns, the Amargosa River and Death Valley
National Park. And 90 miles southeast of Yucca Mountain, there's
Las Vegas, the fastest growing city in the nation. Nuke waste
trucks headed for the mountain would necessarily trundle through
the Top Ramen of freeways in Northtown.
Anyway, this guy Abraham: People have been wanting him to show up
at a local hearing on the site suitability study of the proposed
Yucca Mountain nuke waste dump since forever. He never came.
There was one reall y big meeting in La s Vegas on Sept. 5, where
500 people showed up and 400 spoke, talking long past midnight.
He missed that. Then Sept. 11 happened, and then more hearings,
and still he didn't come. He explained, later: "Sept. 11 made it
really difficult to travel." Which doesn't really explain why he
missed the big Sept. 5 hearing.
So Abraham shows up finally last week, Wednesday, for the 50th
and final hearing, in Las Vegas. Unannounced - which means, for
whatever somnambulant reason, Nev ada's Congressional delegates
weren't there to defend their state before the No. 1 important
witness. (Boy, were they pissed.)
So, Abraham heard Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman, who'd rushed
down to the hearing at Cashman Center as soon as he'd heard
Abraham was there, threaten to sue the DOE if the dump's
approved. He listened to pro-waste wingnuts, including ex-Nevada
Gov. Robert List who's now a paid promoter for the nuclear power
industry, talk importantly a bout the "te chnical illiteracy" of
their fellow Nevadans and about the joys of nuclear waste-reaped
riches - jobs! pride! retail! (Perhaps here the Secretary's mind
wandered a moment in pleasant reverie: "Heh heh! I can just see
those kids at the raves waving their DOE glowsticks.")
He also heard Calvin Meyers, chair of the Moapa Band of Paiutes,
whose people have been in this region for thousands of years
longer than the State of Nevada, white people and their atom, and
the DOE.
"I do think the DOE has a trust responsibility to the tribe,"
Meyers said. Then, saying, "I'm going to do what you people
probably don't want me to do," he prayed. Then he said,
"Spirituality is something I hold dearly. But how much longer am
I going to be able to be a Paiute? The DOE has not offered us one
thing, [except] to run us over with their [nuclear waste] casks.
To me, it's another onslaught against tribal people."
A few more yay and nay speeches from the people, and then Abraham
scooted upstairs for a token news conference with Las Vegas'
hungry media. Where he said, in essence, nothing. His decision,
he offered, would be based on "a thorough review of the science"
and on the public's comments.
Ah? Well, then, tell us, Mr. Energy Secretary, what did you feel
when people from local tribes, for instance, said they don't want
your nuclear waste on their land?
"It 's important to hear from different people," he nonanswered.
"I will try and take all those feelings into hand."
But the question was, were you personally touched by any
of the testimony, either for or against the project, you heard
today?
"That's why I chose personally to extend the comment period..."
he nonanswered.
Meanwhile, the hearing downstairs limped along. People kept
drifting in, look ing frazzled but driven, after having seen on
Channel 13 that the energy secretary had dropped in for a
surprise visit. They were angry they'd missed him - after the
briefing, he left. Jennifer Viereck, who has spoken at nearly
every hearing, was one of them.
"When I heard the energy secretary was going to be here today, I
took off from my job as an advocate for children and drove three
hours to be here, only to miss him by five minutes," she said. "I
understand that the secretary's visit was unannounced for reasons
of security. Well, I ask the DOE, if you believe one man is a
serious target, what on Earth do you think will happen" when all
those targets are driving across the country?
Abraham also missed testimony from Heather Waitman, who for the
first time decided to come to a hearing after she saw on TV that
Abraham was in town.
"My friends, my famil y, everybody is here," she said. "And we lo
ve Nevada. I didn't even know this was going on! I got home from
work, got into my pajamas, turned on the television ..."
And even though the secretary was long gone by the time she got
there, she pleaded, "Please don't do this. My grandfather and my
father worked at the Test Site." One fought cancer twice, she
said. Sixty of their coworkers have died from cancer. "Gosh, I
don't know if one person like me will make a difference in this
world, but I hope you think of me wh en you go back to Washington
to make this decision."
Las Vegas City Life
*****************************************************************
16 Gibbons urges labor to go it alone on Yucca
[Las Vegas Review-Journal]
Friday, December 21, 2001
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
By STEVE TETREAULT
DONREY WASHINGTON BUREAU
WASHINGTON -- Rep. Jim Gibbons has challenged the Nevada AFL-CIO
to distance itself from its national counterpart over the
proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository.
The Nevada Republican urged Danny Thompson, executive secretary
of the Nevada State AFL-CIO, to "withdraw" from the national
AFL-CIO, whose construction trade branch supports the disposal of
spent nuclear fuel in the state.
"I call on you, at the earliest opportunity, to take the
necessary and appropriate action," Gibbons said in a letter sent
Wednesday.
Gibbons told Thompson the Nevada AFL-CIO should follow the
example of the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce, which withdrew
membership from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce after the national
group launched a pro-repository campaign.
Thompson responded that he will not act on the suggestion. He
said the support of one union branch for Yucca Mountain is not
indicative of the entire AFL-CIO, which he said has not taken a
position on nuclear waste.
"Rather than lecturing me, he would be better served by lecturing
the Republican secretary of energy against Yucca Mountain and the
Republican president and the Republican House," Thompson said
Thursday.
The Nevada State AFL-CIO, with 165,000 members, has not adopted a
policy on Yucca Mountain, and Thompson acknowledged that its
membership is split on a project promising a couple of thousand
jobs during years of construction.
"There are groups who support Yucca Mountain just like there are
businesses in the chamber who support it," he said.
"We don't want it any more than anybody else does," he said of
the repository. "But if they build it, they should do it with
qualified people."
Officials from the AFL-CIO's Building and Construction Trades
Department in Washington did not respond to e-mailed questions
about its Yucca Mountain policy.
The national head of the Building and Construction Trades
Department, an AFL-CIO branch of 14 affiliated trades, has
expressed support for a repository in Nevada.
President Edward C. Sullivan wrote a Sept. 21 letter to Energy
Secretary Spencer Abraham in which he said the building trades
"heartily endorse the expedited approval and construction of the
Yucca Mountain storage facility" for nuclear waste.
"A highly secure, state-of-the-art facility like the one proposed
for Yucca Mountain is unquestionably in the best interest of our
country," he wrote.
In its latest newsletter, the Nuclear Energy Institute lists the
union organization and other backers of the Yucca Mountain
Project as evidence that support for a repository "comes from a
wide range of business, labor and policy groups."
Following a Dec. 6 delegation meeting, Nevada's four members of
Congress announced a coordinated effort to oppose the government
proposal to develop Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las
Vegas, as a repository for spent nuclear fuel.
Gibbons' challenge to Nevada unions was done on his own, said
Mike Dayton, his chief of staff.
"Every member of the delegation does their own thing at times,"
Dayton said. "The national AFL-CIO supporting Yucca has political
implications that are pretty major."
Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., said she wants to talk to Thompson
first "and see what the facts of the case are," said Richard
Urey, her chief of staff. With the House adjourned for the
holidays, Gibbons and Berkley were flying to Nevada on Thursday
and could not be reached for comment.
Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., had not seen the letter and would not
comment on it, his spokeswoman said.
Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., had no immediate comment. Reid aides
"are trying to figure out what Gibbons wants," one said.
This story is located at:
http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Dec-21-Fri-2001/news/17720836.html
[http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Dec-21-Fri-2001/news/17720836.html]
*****************************************************************
17 SA: Nuclear Energy Boss to Face Probe
allAfrica.com:
Business Day (Johannesburg)
December 20, 2001
Pule Molebeledi
THE newly appointed CEO of the Nuclear Energy Corporation of SA,
Senti Thobejane, might be headed for trouble following an inquiry
by his former employers, the Northern Province government, which
revealed possible irregularities in the awarding of a R94m tender
to a local information technology (IT) company.
Sources said yesterday the main findings of the four-person
inquiry, which was appointed by Northern Province health MEC
Sello Moloto, found that there was inadequate management of the
tender process.
The inquiry also raised questions about dealings concerning the
awarding of the department's hospital information system tender
to a local IT company.
The report is likely to recommend that Moloto invoke the Public
Finance Management Act against Thobejane, who was the head of the
provincial health department, and hence its accounting officer,
at the time.
The act provides for a fine, or imprisonment for up to five
years, for accounting officers who are found to be willfully
negligent and who fail to comply with general budgetary controls
or reporting responsibilities.
If the MEC acts on the report, Thobejane would become one of the
first casualties of the act, which has stringent provisions for
accounting officers.
The results of the inquiry, commissioned in October, are expected
to be released today.
It is seen as very likely, because of the limited powers of the
investigation, that Moloto will refer the matter to external
agencies, including the SA Police Services, for further
investigation.
Sources said heads could roll after the implementation of the
report and the completion of the police investigation.
The investigation followed a furore sparked in the province by
the cancellation by Thobejane of a R116m IT tender held by IBM
since 1996 after he joined the provincial health department as
superintendent-general in 1999.
Thobejane, who was also chairman of the provincial tender board,
appointed the local company to manage the IT tender.
The company's brief was, allegedly, to undo much of the work
conducted by IBM.
The inquiry was conducted by Lazarus Mahlangu of provincial legal
services, John Petje of the provincial IT bureau, Antonio
Fernandes of the Gauteng health department and Jack Buitendag of
the State Information Technology Agency.
Its terms of reference included determining whether there were
any flaws in the processes leading to the awarding of the tender,
whether the tender complied with specifications and whether the
implementation process provided value for money.
The report came a month after Thobejane assumed his new position
at the nuclear corporation.
Thobejane could not be reached for comment last night.
(allAfrica.com).
*****************************************************************
18 Guinn seeks support against Yucca
Las Vegas SUN
December 21, 2001
Governors asked to consider other options
By Cy Ryan
< [cy@lasvegassun.com] >
SUN CAPITAL BUREAU
CARSON CITY -- Gov. Kenny Guinn called on governors in nine
states where nuclear power plants are located to join him in
opposing Yucca Mountain as a burial site for high-level
radioactive waste.
"While I am not unsympathetic to the very legitimate concern you
face having nuclear waste stored in your state, we should not
rush headlong into placing that waste in an inferior site," Guinn
said in the letter, referring to the proposed dump 90 miles
northwest of Las Vegas.
Guinn complained that the Nuclear Energy Institute has started a
massive advertising campaign to convince Congress and the Bush
administration that the Nevada site was safe after 20 years of
studies.
The governor said there has been a pile of reports by the
Department of Energy, but he suggested the governors read a
preliminary site suitability evaluation released last July by the
agency.
The report said rain or snow could seep into the repository and
corrode the metal packages that contain the nuclear waste. The
water could then transport this radioactive material into the
water table.
"If you find it acceptable that the citizens of Nevada be
exposed to nuclear waste contamination through the water table,"
Guinn wrote, "than I suppose the statements in the NEI
advertisement can be justified.
"However, it is far more likely that the NEI has failed to
explain the true status of the Yucca Mountain project."
The governor's letter was prompted by advertisements in
Washington news publications with a headline, "Governors Agree."
He said he cannot disagree more with the NEI.
The letters went to governors of Alabama, Georgia, Kansas,
Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee and
Vermont.
Guinn said it may be 15 years before any of these states could
ship its nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain, if the Energy
Department ever found it suitable.
As a short-term solution, Guinn cited an example in
Pennsylvania. He said the Energy Department has negotiated an
agreement with PECO energy to take title to waste at its
Pennsylvania reactor and assume the liability for the spent fuel.
The governors, Guinn said, should demand Congress reassess the
nuclear waste program for a long-term solution.
"The goal should be to assure the safety of spent fuel at
reactor sites immediately, develop technology to dramatically
reduce the quantity of waste and locate a suitable long-term
disposal option thereby assuring that nuclear power has a viable
future as an energy source."
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
19 Letter: Send nuke waste to Washington
Las Vegas SUN
December 21, 2001
I read the Dec. 18 letter from Washington, D.C., resident Brian
O'Connell, who is program director for the Nuclear Waste Office
of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners.
He argues against there being any threat to the health and safety
of people who live in Nevada if high-level nuclear waste is
buried at Yucca Mountain.
If people like him feel so strongly that there is no danger to
us here, I strongly feel that the waste should be buried in
Washington, D.C., along with the waste that lives there.
Has anyone noticed that politicians and individuals who live
far, far away are always happy to tell us here how safe it is to
live with nuclear waste? Let them have it.
KERRY ADAMS- WHITE
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
20 GAO: Yucca would 'not be practical'
Las Vegas SUN
December 21, 2001
By Mary Manning
< [manning@lasvegassun.com] >
The Energy Department should indefinitely postpone construction
of a high-level nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain, the
General Accounting Office said in a report today.
The GAO, the nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress,
concluded in a 35-page final report released this morning that
making a site recommendation at this time would "not be prudent
or practical."
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham had been expected to recommend
Yucca Mountain to President Bush this winter. But in a recent Las
Vegas visit, he said no decision has been made and he has no
deadline.
The report says, "We agree that the secretary has the discretion
to make such a recommendation at this time; however, we question
the prudence and practicality of making such a recommendation at
this time, given the expressed statutory timeframe for a license
application."
If Abraham were to recommend Yucca now, the law requires the
Energy Department apply for a license from the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission within 90 days. However, the report says 293 technical
and scientific issues remain unanswered.
"We are glad GAO has acknowledged in their final report that the
Secretary has the discretion to make a decision on Yucca Mountain
suitability at this time. What this tell us is, that contrary to
the opinions expressed by some that the draft GAO report signaled
the beginning of the end for this program, the final report may
in fact be the end of the beginning -- whatever the decision may
be," said Joe Davis, Energy Department spokesperson.
The final report included comments from the Energy Department,
but the bulk of the response to a draft report released earlier
this month was based on technical aspects such as wording.
Bechtel SAIC, Yucca's main contractor, took issue with the
draft's characterization of its difficulties with the project.
The draft said that Bechtel scientists had said they would not
be able to complete studies of the mountain until 2006. In the
final report, the company denied that it would be unable to
complete them on time.
A DOE spokesman could not be reached this morning for comment.
The Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board and a National Academy
of Sciences panel have criticized the Energy Department's
research and progress.
To date, the department has spent $8 billion and 15 years
studying the site, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., requested the GAO investigation in
January after receiving an anonymous letter criticizing the
project.
"The conclusions of this report is a major victory in Nevada's
campaign to stop the Yucca Mountain project," Berkley said today.
"The GAO report combined with Nevada's aggressive strategy in the
courts and on Capitol Hill puts us in the best position to kill
the Yucca Mountain project that we've ever been in. The momentum
has changed 180 degrees. The approval of Yucca Mountain is not
inevitable."
Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., who joined Berkley's request, was
flying to Nevada and could not be reached for comment, press aide
Tessa Hafen said today.
Nevada officials, who oppose the repository, lauded the report.
Bob Loux, Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects director, said, "We
didn't think there would be any substantial response, because the
GAO used the DOE's own data," Loux said. "What else could (it)
say?"
The Energy Department and Nuclear Energy Institute -- the trade
organization for nuclear utilities -- are the main supporters of
a Yucca repository for 77,000 tons of radioactive waste, Loux
said.
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
21 No-fly zones over nuclear facilities unlikely
[Thestar.com]
Dec. 20, 05:45 EDT
OTTAWA (CP) — Canada is unlikely to impose no-fly zones over its
nuclear reactors or station missiles around them, a senior
nuclear regulatory official says.
In the event of a credible threat to the reactors, Norad would
likely be called on to protect them with jet fighters, said Jim
Blythe, manager of security review project at the Canadian
Nuclear Safety Commission.
There's also an ongoing study of engineering and procedural
improvements to make the reactors less vulnerable to attack,
Blythe said in an interview Thursday.
Washington imposed no-fly zones over U.S. reactors after Sept.
11 and France installed missile units around some of its nuclear
facilities, fuelling speculation about similar measures in
Canada.
But the feeling is that it wouldn't be feasible to impose no-fly
zones in Canada, said Blythe.
"That you could, say, draw an arc around Pickering of a certain
diameter and a certain height and say commercial and private
aircraft shall never fly in these zones — from a navigational
perspective, that would be exceedingly difficulty."
Enforcement would be equally problematic.
"The Canadian Armed Forces doesn't have the resources, the
personnel or materiel to have, say, F-18s in the area on a
continuous basis."
It's also hard to justify the use of missiles that automatically
shoot down any aircraft violating a defined space, Blythe said.
"That instantaneous, irreversible application of deadly force is
not something that, in the absence of dire circumstances, I think
. . . is acceptable in this society."
He denied that U.S. measures are tougher, saying the no-fly zones
there are temporary and not vigorously enforced. Planes that
violate the zones are simply warned or fined, he said.
As for France, anti-aircraft units have not been installed at
reactors, only at fuel reprocessing facilities where the
potential for radioactive release is much greater, he said. Candu
reactors don't require such facilities.
The commission is continuing to work with intelligence agencies,
police and Transport Canada to ensure that appropriate measures,
such as jet patrols, can be invoked quickly in case of a credible
threat.
The study of how to make the facilities less vulnerable to air
attack could come down to straightforward measures such as
reinforcing protective walls.
Nuclear plant operators have already taken extra security
measures against the risk of ground attack, such as stationing
armed guards on site.
Canada has 22 nuclear power reactors, a few research reactors,
and some 4,000 facilities that use radioactive materials in
military or industrial applications.
any material from www.thestar.com
*****************************************************************
22 IAEA Daily Press Review Date 2001-12-21 Number 240
1. Non-proliferation
US House of Representatives calls on Iraqi President to allow
unrestricted return of UN weapons inspectors, warning his
continued refusal poses mounting threat to US.
(DAW; T - 20/12) Iraq; UN; United States of America
2. Terrorism
Bush administration discloses new details that suggest Osama bin
Laden may know much more about building nuclear weapons than
originally thought.
(NBC - 20/12) United States of America
3. Nuclear power
According to poll, 66% of Austrians do not believe that upcoming
national petition campaign will manage to halt Temelin NPP; plant
staff prepares repeated test of feedwater pumps. Report on
Slovene-Croatian agreement on joint ownership and status of Krsko
NPP. EU critical of Germany's nuclear phase-out. Senior official
of European Commission's transport and energy directorate-general
gives outline of how EC sees its own role in shaping future of
nuclear energy policy among EU member States.
(DW; NUC; R - 20, 21/12) Austria; Croatia; Czech Republic;
European Commission; European Union; Germany; Slovenia
4. Nuclear Safety
Kashiwazaki Kariwa NPP unit 5 operating normally, despite
radioactive leak in turbine room.
(JAP - 21/12) Japan
5. Radwaste, fuel
Russia's State Duma gives initial approval to commission on
importing spent nuclear fuel. UK consent to BNFL for plutonium
plant commissioning at Sellafield prompts angry responses from
Irish Government and environmental protesters.
(BBC; FT; R - 20/12) Russian Federation; United Kingdom
6. UN
According to WHO, if world's rich countries were to increase
spending on health in Third World fivefold over next two decades,
about 8 million lives could be saved each year.
(WP - 21/12) UN
*****************************************************************
23 MOX plant start-up widely condemned
ireland.com - The Irish Times - IRELAND
Friday, December 21, 2001
By Dick Ahlstrom, Science Editor
The Government and Opposition parties reacted angrily to
confirmation that operations have begun at the controversial MOX
plant at Sellafield. Workers brought radioactive plutonium into
the plant early yesterday morning in a move that will see
increased levels of nuclear waste dumped into the Irish Sea.
The action was universally condemned here but heralded by
Sellafield as a positive development. "This is wonderful news for
[the MOX plant] and is the best Christmas present we could have
had," the head of operations for MOX, Mr Jack Allen, said
yesterday.
Sellafield's operator, BNFL, acknowledged that it had "commenced
the first stage of active plutonium commissioning" of the plant.
At 2.15 a.m. yesterday morning it had "transferred
plutonium-bearing material" into the plant as part of a "phased
and prudent ramp-up of commissioning for MOX fuel manufacture". A
group of about 100 Irish protesters gathered later yesterday
morning outside Sellafield's north gate. Two politicians, Mr John
Gormley (Greens) and Senator Fergus O'Dowd (Fine Gael) also
attended.
There were police on hand but no arrests were made, Mr Gormley
said. He criticised the Government's performance on the issue,
claiming it was "completely reactive".
The opening of the MOX plant was regrettable, according to the
Minister of State for Public Enterprise, Mr Joe Jacob. He added,
however, that it represented the beginning "of a long journey of
legal initiatives from which we will not be diverted".
"Today's start-up serves to harden our determination to stop
this MOX facility and to have Sellafield shut down," said Mr
Jacob, who holds special responsibility for nuclear safety.
The commissioning of MOX was "a damning indictment" of the
Government's record on Sellafield, according to the Labour TD, Mr
Emmet Stagg. "The Government should hang its head in shame at
today's news," he said, while criticising its "belated efforts"
to challenge the decision to authorise the MOX plant.
"An examination of the Government's record reveals the fact that
Ireland's campaign against Sellafield was significantly
downgraded when FF and the PDs came to office," he added. "Its
record has been appalling."
Senator O'Dowd, who also attended the Sellafield protest action,
urged the Government to begin forming a coalition of
parliamentarians from other EU states who could help lobby
against the Sellafield complex. He also said the Government
should publish a UN document, Report on Protection Against
Nuclear Terrorism, published on November 30th by the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), of which the Republic
is a member.
It was not for the Government to publish the UN report, a
spokeswoman for the Department of Public Enterprise said
yesterday. "It is a restricted document and not in the public
domain," she added. Any decision to release the report lay with
the IAEA.
BNFL built the £663 million (€842 million) MOX plant to
manufacture fuel pellets for use in nuclear reactors. It blends
powdered uranium and plutonium recovered from spent reactor fuel
and bakes this into ceramic pellets for export to reactors around
the world. It will take two or three weeks before the plant
begins manufacturing useable fuel pellets.
*****************************************************************
24 MOX plant begins production
news.telegraph.co.uk -
By Charles Clover, Environment Editor
(Filed: 21/12/2001)
THE controversial mixed oxide fuel (MOX) plant at Sellafield
finally began preparing to make fuel for nuclear power stations
yesterday despite protests from environmental campaigners and the
Irish government.
After standing empty for five years while it waited for approval
from the Government and environmental regulators, the plant
received the go-ahead from the Nuclear Installations
Inspectorate.
British Nuclear Fuels managers the permission as "the best
Christmas present we could have had". Earlier this year,
Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth failed in their attempt to
block the operation of the £470 million facility in the High
Court.
The Irish Government, which has opposed the expansion of
Sellafield, said the decision represented "supreme arrogance" on
the part of the British authorities.
Joe Jacob, minister with responsibility for nuclear safety, said:
"It is morally wrong to pollute the environment, any environment,
but when that environment forms part of another jurisdiction I
can only describe it as a form of selfishness that knows no
bounds and one that recognises no boundaries."
[http://www.telegraph.co.uk
*****************************************************************
25 Wis. 535-MW Kewaunee nuke returns to full power
[Reuters]
Thursday December 20, 1:20 pm Eastern Time
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 20 (Reuters) - Wisconsin Public Service
Corp.'s 535-megawatt (MW) Kewaunee nuclear unit in Wisconsin
returned to full power on Wednesday following a refueling and
maintenance outage, plant operator Nuclear Management Co. (NMC)
said on Thursday.
Kewaunee's steam generators were replaced during the outage, a
$100 million project that was the largest in the plant's 27-year
history, the statement said. The plant, in Carlton, Wis., had
been limited to about 96 percent of its output for the past five
years because the efficiency of the steam generators had
declined.
The return of 35 megawatts, bringing the plant back to its full
535-MW output, is enough to serve an additional 25,000 homes with
electricity. Kewaunees's outage began Sept. 23 and ended Dec. 4.
But the ascent to full power was slower than in prior outages
because plant operators conducted additional tests and monitoring
associated with the new steam generators before returning to full
power, the statement said. Nuclear Management Co. operates the
Kewaunee plant for Wisconsin Public Service's parent, WPS
Resources Corp. NMC also operates the nuclear units of Alliant
Energy, Wisconsin Energy Corp.'s Wisconsin Electric Power, Xcel
Energy Inc. and CMS Energy's Consumers Energy.
*****************************************************************
26 NRC must ensure nuke plant decommissioning funds-GAO
[Reuters]
Thursday December 20, 6:27 pm Eastern Time
By Chris Baltimore
WASHINGTON, Dec 20 (Reuters) - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission
falls short in its oversight of funds for U.S. nuclear power
plant decommissioning, according to a report released on Thursday
by Congress' main investigative arm.
Decommissioning a retired nuclear plant typically costs between
$300 million and $400 million, and involves dismantling it and
removing its radioactive components for safe storage.
The General Accounting Office report said that in some instances,
the NRC's reviews were ``not always rigorous enough'' to ensure
adequate decommissioning funds, according to the report.
The shortfall could leave U.S. taxpayers on the hook for
``potential liability in the billions of dollars'' if private
companies are not able to obtain the funds needed to decommission
mothballed nuclear plants, said a spokesman for Rep. Edward
Markey, a California Democrat and long-time nuclear industry
critic who requested the GAO report.
``The commission will review the report carefully and take
whatever action they feel is appropriate,'' an NRC spokesman
said. The agency oversees all 103 U.S. nuclear plants.
The NRC failed to obtain needed information from Exelon Corp, the
biggest owner of U.S. nuclear plants, the report said.
Exelon was formed by the merger of Unicom and PECO Energy Co.
Through three subsidiaries, the newly created company controls 16
operating and four decommissioned nuclear plants in Illinois, New
Jersey and Pennsylvania. ``The new companies involved in the
merger did not provide, nor did NRC request, copies of
contractual agreements'' documenting access to decommissioning
funds for the plants, GAO said.
Markey linked the findings to a failure of federally mandated
deregulation of wholesale electricity markets in 1996. The new
regulations allowed utilities to sell assets they viewed as
economically unpromising, and many nuclear plants were sold to
other companies. Reorganizations and mergers have led to 30
license transfers, GAO said.
When those transfers occurred, ``NRC did not always adequately
verify the new owners' financial qualifications to safely own and
operate the plants,'' GAO said in the report.
In most instances, GAO found that post-deregulation license
transfers have seen enhanced assurance of decommissioning funds,
which have traditionally been raised by charges embedded in
utilities' billing structure, GAO said.
The upshot of deregulation is that new nuclear operators no
longer have access to a secure pool of funding for
decommissioning costs, Markey said. ``Deregulation of electricity
markets has led to many mergers and ownership transfers ... with
the potential for the plants' decommissioning funds to be lost in
the shuffle,'' Markey said. The NRC must ensure such funds are
available, he said.
*****************************************************************
27 Dublin protests at move on production at Mox plant
By Andrew Taylor, Utilities Correspondent
Published: December 20 2001 21:43 | Last Updated: December 20 2001 22:15
The first steps towards starting commercial production at the
controversial nuclear fuel recycling plant in Cumbria prompted
angry responses on Thursday from the Irish government and
environmental protesters.
About 70 protesters, mainly from the Irish Republic, gathered
outside the £472m ($684.8m) Sellafield plant as plutonium-bearing
material was introduced to test equipment before commercial
manufacture could start.
The British government last month authorised state-owned British
Nuclear Fuels to start production of the mixed oxide fuel after
an independent study concluded that it was more viable to let the
project proceed.
The Irish government and environmentalists have since mounted a
series of legal challenges to stop the plant, so far to no avail.
They say pollution from the works will be carried to Ireland.
Joe Jacob, the Irish minister responsible for nuclear safety,
said on Thursday that the republic would "continue to exploit
every available legal avenue" to halt the plant so "that justice
be gained for the people of Ireland".
He said: "It is morally wrong to pollute the environment, any
environment. But when that environment forms part of another
jurisdiction I can only describe it as a form of selfishness that
knows no bounds and one that recognises no boundaries."
The Dublin government is challenging the development under the
United Nations convention on the law of the sea and under the
Oslo and Paris convention, a treaty signed by north Atlantic
countries to protect the marine environment.
Its attempt at an inter-national tribunal to win an interim
injunction to stop the plant opening was defeated last month in
Hamburg.
Borge Brenda, Norwegian environment minister, this week visited
Dublin, London and Sellafield in an attempt to persuade British
authorities to halt Mox production.
Environmental groups Greenpeace and and Friends of the Earth said
starting the controversial plant would lead to huge clean-up
costs for taxpayers; increase pollution, threatening safety; and
increase the risk of radioactive materials ending up in terrorist
hands.
The decision to start commissioning the plant followed approval
this week by the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, an arm of
the Health &Safety Executive.
Jack Allen, British Nuclear Fuels' head of Mox operations, said:
"This is the best Christmas present we could have had.
"I also want to thank our customers, who have been very patient,
and we now want to get on with the job of manufacturing Mox fuel
for them.
"This is just the beginning of Mox fuel manufacture," he added.
*****************************************************************
28 Mox open for business
THURSDAY 20/12/01 17:22:11
A controversial nuclear reprocessing plant finally opened for
business today despite protests from environmental campaigners
and the Irish government.
After standing empty for more than five years, the mixed oxide
(MOX) plant at Sellafield, Cumbria, began preparing to recycle
used uranium and plutonium to produce fuel for power stations
across the world. It expects to be producing fuel early next
year.
When it was given approval to begin commissioning, managers at
the plant described it as ``the best Christmas present we could
have had``.
The National Installation Inspectorate inspected the plant
yesterday and gave its owners, British Nuclear Fuels Limited, the
go-ahead. The decision was formally announced today.
Tonight BNFL confirmed it had spent the day testing the
sensitivity of plutonium detectors in the plant.
A spokesman said: ``Things have gone as normal, I am not aware of
any problems.``
Once the testing is complete, which is expected to take a
fortnight, the plant will begin producing the MOX fuel.
Environmental campaigners said today`s decision was far from the
end of the protests against the plant.
Martin Forwood, a spokesman for Cumbrians Opposed to a
Radioactive Environment, said that in bringing plutonium into the
plant for the first time, BNFL was setting in motion ``a plant
that has no future from day one``.
``You will end up with far too much nuclear fuel for no
business,`` he said. ``It is just a white elephant for the
Sellafield area.``
And he added: ``I find it frankly incomprehensible that this
company can find any satisfaction in opening this plant that was
losing money from day one.``
He warned the company that the protest was not over.
``If the BNFL think its problems are over, then it can think
again. It has major headaches in front of it, it has no
prospects.``
Outside the plant, around 70 demonstrators from the Irish protest
group Gluaiseacht - a 200-strong organisation mostly made up of
students - marched from the north gate to the main gate of
Sellafield at 7am.
With chants of ``Ireland says no, MOX must go``, the protesters
beat drums and danced outside the gate as workers arrived this
morning.
When the decision to begin commissioning was announced, around 20
of the protesters chained themselves to the railings outside the
plant`s main gate for almost two hours before winding the protest
down around midday. No-one was arrested.
Despite being completed in 1996, the MOX plant in Cumbria has
lain idle ever since.
Earlier this year, Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth failed in
their attempt to block the Government`s go-ahead for the £470
million facility.
Outside the plant, John Gormley, the Green Party member for
Dublin South East, said protesters were there to highlight the
problems with MOX fuels.
Sellafield directly affects Ireland with its nuclear emissions,
especially with the heightened terrorist threat following the
atrocities of September 11, he said.
``If Sellafield goes up in an attack, the prevailing wind will
take it right into our country.``
Speaking after the decision was announced, the 42-year-old
politician added: ``It is just very regrettable. It is something
we expected, nevertheless it is still very depressing.
``MOX is essential for the future of Sellafield which means the
plant is going to be with us for quite some time.
``We are vowing to continue fighting against this and it has only
reinvigorated the campaign.``
Tonight BNFL would not add to its earlier statement but said the
introduction of plutonium was simply one process of many within
the plant.
The Irish Government said today`s decision represented ``supreme
arrogance`` on the part of the British authorities.
Joe Jacob, minister with responsibility for nuclear safety, said:
``It defies logic. It defies reason. It defies the laws of
natural justice.``
He went on: ``The expansion of Sellafield with the operation of
the MOX plant flies in the face of reason.
``It is morally wrong to pollute the environment - any
environment - but when that environment forms part of another
jurisdiction I can only describe it as a form of selfishness that
knows no bounds and one that recognises no boundaries.``
Mr Jacob, from the Department of Public Enterprise, vowed that
the Fianna Fail Government would continue to exploit every
available legal avenue to ``determine that justice be gained for
the people of Ireland``.
``The operation of the MOX plant serves to harden our resolve to
have Sellafield shut down, including the MOX facility,`` he said.
The Irish Labour Party also attacked the commissioning of the MOX
plant as a ``bleak day for Ireland``.
Public enterprise spokesman Emmett Stagg said it represented ``an
expansion and intensification of role Sellafield plays in the
British nuclear industry``.
But the criticism was not just directed at Britain.
Mr Stagg said: ``Recent belated efforts by the (Irish) Government
to challenge the MOX decision have been little more than a public
relations exercise, designed to cover up its record of inaction
since day one.``
*****************************************************************
29 Sellafield plant opening unleashes wave of fury
Irish Newspapers -
Date: Fri December 21st 01
THE controversial new nuclear reprocessing plant at Sellafield
yesterday opened for business, pushing Anglo-Irish relations to
their lowest ebb in years.
After standing empty for more than five years, the mixed oxide
(MOX) plant began preparing to recycle used uranium and plutonium
to produce fuel for power stations across the world.
It expects to be producing fuel early next year.
The development was hailed as "wonderful news" by British Nuclear
Fuels Limited (BNFL), the company that runs the plant, and
welcomed locally as a jobs boost.
But yesterday's 2.15am move provoked the fury of the Irish
Government.
Joe Jacob, Minister with Responsibility for Nuclear Safety,
described the action by the British authorities as "one of
supreme arrogance".
"It defies logic. It defies reason. It defies the laws of natural
justice," he said.
"It is morally wrong to pollute the environment any environment.
But when that environment forms part of another jurisdiction I
can only describe it as a form of selfishness that knows no
bounds and one that recognises no boundaries." Mr Jacob vowed
that the Government would continue to exploit every available
legal avenue to shut down the plant.
It is believed that the first highly radioactive shipment was
moved into the Cumbrian plant under darkness.
Commissioning the plant will increase radioactive discharges to
the Irish Sea and expose Ireland to potentially catastrophic
contamination from an accident or terrorist attack at Sellafield,
the Government warned.
Yesterday's move also clears the way for armed shipments of
nuclear waste and MOX nuclear consignments to travel through the
Irish Sea next year less than 30 miles off the east coast of
Ireland.
Green Party deputy John Gormley, who led a protest outside the
plant yesterday, also expressed outrage that the British
Government had allowed the new MOX plant to open.
The protest started at 8am yesterday with protestors chaining
themselves to the railings outside the plant. Mr Gormley fronted
a blockade with more than 100 protesters from the environmental
campaign group, Gluaiseacht, in a bid to disrupt the plant's
commissioning.
"This is an outrageous decision," Mr Gormley said. "This new MOX
plant poses an enormous threat to the well-being of future
generations of Irish people.
"It is unnecessary, it is not an economically viable proposition
and it will now make it easier for terrorists to obtain nuclear
material."
Mr Gormley said opponents would concentrate on future action.
This would include continuing with the UN case; a possible legal
challenge in the EU Court of Justice; a review of the Euratom
Treaty and the building of a diplomatic international coalition
against Sellafield.
This would include bringing pressure to bear on countries such as
Japan and Germany who are sending spent fuel to Sellafield for
reprocessing. The National Installation Inspectorate gave the go
ahead after inspecting the plant yesterday..
Operations head Jack Allen said: "I am very proud of the MOX
workforce who have worked so hard to get us to this stage."
Treacy Hogan Environment Correspondent
© Copyright Unison
*****************************************************************
30 Comments from Sellafield outrage anti-nuclear protesters
online.ie : News
The Irish Examiner 21 Dec 2001
By Michael O' Farrell
ANTI-NUCLEAR protesters at the MOX facility in Sellafield were
outraged yesterday when the plant boss described the opening of
the facility as the best Christmas present ever.
"This is the wonderful news for SMP (Sellafield MOX Plant) and is
the best Christmas present we could have had," said head of
operations Jack Allen. "This is just the beginning of MOX fuel
manufacture and our focus is now on delivering the first fuel to
our customers."
Over 70 protesters from Environmental group Gluaisteacht who
travelled to Sellafield to disrupt the plant's operation were
outraged at the comment, saying it was a present that would
remain highly radioactive for the next 100 generations.
"I wonder how he would rate Chernobyl on his scale of Christmas
presents?" asked Fine Gael Senator Fergus O' Dowd who joined the
protesters in blocking Sellafield's main gate. "We knew it would
happen but it was important to come to show the British
Government the Irish people will not stand for this," he said.
Protesters marched from Sellafield's north gate at 7am yesterday
chanting "shut down Sellafield" and blockaded the main gate for
several hours. Some members chained themselves to the plant's
perimeter fence, but no-one was arrested.
Green Party TD John Gormley, who also joined the protesters, was
outraged the MOX plant went ahead despite health and safety
concerns.
"The decision of the British Government to open this new MOX
plant is a defiant and aggressive act. This new MOX plant poses
an enormous threat to the well-being of future generations of
Irish people," said Mr Gormely.
"We now have to concentrate on future action and this means
continuing with the UN case, tightening up the OSPAR agreement (a
marine environment convention), a possible legal challenge in the
European Court of Justice, a review of the Euratom Treaty and the
building of a diplomatic international coalition against
Sellafield," he said.
Earlier this year, Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth failed in
an attempt to block the plant's go-ahead.
Martin Forwood, a spokesman for Cumbrians Opposed to a
Radioactive Environment, said: "If the plant is commissioned we
would say it was a retrograde step - certainly for this area. You
will set in motion a plant that has no future from day one. You
will end up with far too much nuclear fuel for no business. It is
just a white elephant for the Sellafield area," he said.
Recycling of uranium and plutonium
THE mixed oxide (MOX) plant at Sellafield will recycle used
uranium and plutonium to produce fuel for power stations.
* Recycling used fuel recovers 97% of valuable, reusable
materials and separates out the remaining 3% as waste.
* Recycling plutonium reduces the amount of high radioactive
waste which must be disposed of.
* One pellet of MOX has the energy equivalent of one tonne of
coal.
* The £470 million MOX plant in Cumbria was completed in 1996 but
has lain idle since.
* Commercial go-ahead for the plant was withheld following
financial concerns and in the wake of a data falsification
incident.
* BNFL, who own the plant, have had a contract to reprocess
Japanese used nuclear fuel since the 1960s.
* Fuel produced at the plant will be shipped back to reactors in
Japan, and used to generate electricity.
* The plant only needs contracts for 40% of capacity in order to
break even.
* MOX fuel is used by utilities supplying electricity in France,
Germany, Belgium and Switzerland.
* The fuel will be transported in ceramic rods in specially
designed casks on ships made specifically for transporting
radioactive materials.
*****************************************************************
*****************************************************************
NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARTICLES
*****************************************************************
1 Russia: There is no crime
The Pasko Case
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. Jump to
section Energy Russia
The Pacific Fleet Court will on December 25 announce its verdict
in the case against Grigory Pasko, who is charged with high
treason through espionage. If the Court rules by the law, Pasko
should be acquitted.
Jon Gauslaa, 2001-12-21 12:39
The re-trial of Grigory Pasko started on July 11, 2001 in the
Pacific Fleet Court in Vladivostok. The subsequent proceedings
have been considerably delayed by a number of unjustified
postponements caused by the prosecution. This has - in violation
of Pasko's right to have the charges against him determined
within reasonable time - contributed to the process dragging out
for more than four years.
No criminal content
Ivan Pavlov of Pasko's defence-team, said after concluding his
closing speech, that he was sure that Pasko would be acquitted if
the Court rules by the law.
Pavlov, who also took part in the defence of Aleksandr Nikitin -
who was acquitted on similar charges as Pasko by the Presidium of
the Russian Supreme Court on September 13, 2000 after almost five
years of proceedings, said that "the trial has proven that the
case contains no crime".
The Pasko case and the Nikitin case are similar both in content
and in the character of violations done by the Russian security
police (the FSB), which investigated the case.
Illegal use of secret military decree
Pasko is accused with collecting and transferring information on
the environmental situation in the Russian Pacific Fleet to the
Japanese TV Company NHK. The disputed information is however,
available in the public domain.
Moreover, the charges are based on an expert evaluation of
various documents that were confiscated from Pasko, of which ten
contains state secrets according to the experts. This allegation
is based on secret decree 055:96 of the Ministry of Defence.
The use of the decree as the basis for the case violates article
15 (3) of the Russian Constitution, according to which
unpublished normative acts can not be used for prosecuting a
person.
In addition the Russian Supreme Court declared on November 6,
2001 the decree as "illegal and invalid" because it was not
registered in accordance with the law. This ruling has reached
legal force, but the prosecutor still insists to base his charges
on the decree.
95% of the evidence gathered illegally
Almost 95% of the 'evidence' in the case are gathered illegally.
No protocol was kept over what was confiscated at the search of
Pasko's flat in November 1997, and neither Pasko nor any other
persons representing him were present in the room where the
investigators worked. Thus, they had every possibility to insert
what they wanted to the heap of 'confiscated evidence'.
The above-mentioned violates several provision of the Russian
Criminal Procedure Code. According to Article 50 (2) of the
Russian Constitution all evidence that is obtained in violation
with the law should be excluded from the case.
Some evidence is also downright falsified. At the first
Pasko-trial in 1999, the Court made a separate decision on this
issue, addressed towards the FSB and the prosecutor's office. One
investigator was reprimanded, but the false evidence was not
removed from the case. Moreover, throughout the trial in
Vladivostok, several witnesses have claimed that they were
pressed by the FSB to testify against Pasko.
Half of the charges dismissed
Even the prosecutor seems to realise that he has a week case. In
his closing speech he dismissed the charges related to five of
the ten documents Pasko was originally charged with.
Besides, regarding four of the remaining five documents, the
prosecutor changed the qualification of Pasko's actions from
claiming that he had transferred them to the Japanese, to
claiming that he had kept the documents at his flat "with the
intention to transfer them". The prosecution is however not even
close to prove that this was Pasko's intention.
The prosecution has neither proven that the last document was
transferred. The only basis for this allegation is that a witness
said that he at the NHK-office in Vladivostok saw a document
"similar" to a document that was confiscated at Pasko's flat.
However, the witness made his observation at the NHK-office in
October 1997, while the document was allegedly confiscated from
Pasko in November 1997…
Prosecutor demands nine years
Despise the weaknesses of his case, the prosecutor still asked
the Court to convict Pasko to nine years of hard labour. This is
three years below the minimum penalty for treason through
espionage. The reason for the prosecutor's "mildness" is that it
had not been established that Pasko's actions had led to any
damage.
The prosecutor also admitted that some "violations" had occurred
in the case. He did however, ask the Court to leave them out of
account since they were made by inexperienced investigators, who
never before had worked with similar cases.
-- Besides, the case has also aggravating circumstances, said the
prosecutor and focused particularly on "the fact" that there
still is an official state of war between Russia and Japan, since
no peace treaty after WW II have been signed.
Court under pressure?
Pasko's defence asked for a full acquittal, and was sure that
Pasko would be acquitted if the Court rules by the law. Ivan
Pavlov had however, still his doubts regarding the outcome of the
case.
-- The Court has handled the case adequately, but we are
uncertain whether it will be allowed to base its decision on the
law or if it have to give in for FSB-pressure, Pavlov said. -- We
have noticed throughout the last part of the trial that the Court
have been subject to pressure, and the date chosen for the
announcement of the verdict - Christmas Day - does not seem like
a coincidence, he said.
Whether the Court will rule by the law or not should be known on
December 25, around 3 PM local time (5 AM GMT). Bellona web hopes
to be able to announce the outcome of the case as soon as
possible after that.
*
Grigory Pasko was an investigative reporter with "Boyevaya
Vakhta", a newspaper run by the Pacific Fleet. He was arrested in
November 1997 and charged with high treason. He spent twenty
months in custody, before being acquitted in July 1999. He was
however, convicted of abuse of his official authority, but
released under an amnesty. The verdict was appealed by both
sides. On November 21, 2000, the Military Collegium of the
Russian Supreme Court cancelled the first verdict and sent the
case back to a new trial in Vladivostok.
Publisher: Bellona Foundation, President: Frederic Hauge
Information: info@bellona.no, Technical contact:
webmaster@bellona.no Telephone: +47 23 23 46 00 Telefax: +47 22
38 38 62 * P.O.Box 2141 Grunerlokka, 0505 Oslo, Norway
*****************************************************************
2 Fast Flux Test Reactor Closed Permanently
Public Citizen
Dec. 20, 2001
Citizen Activist Victory!
Statement of Wenonah Hauter
Director, Public Citizen’s Critical Mass Energy and Environment
Program We applaud the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE)
long-overdue announcement that the Fast Flux Test Nuclear Reactor
(FFTR), in eastern Washington, will be shut down permanently.
This is very good news for the people of the Northwest who live
near the reactor, located at the most contaminated nuclear site
in the world. "Fast breeder" reactors such as the FFTF, are
unstable and dangerous and have experienced at least two
meltdowns in the United States.
The FFTF was built at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in
Washington in 1980 to serve as a fuel and material irradiation
test facility but was closed in 1993. The DOE spent more than $40
million a year to keep the reactor maintained for restart. The
facility could be used for making tritium for nuclear weapons.
However, it was considered unprofitable to keep open solely for
research purposes, and commercially viable uses for it could not
be identified.
Large-scale opposition to reopening the FFTR led to a November
2000 decision by Bill Richardson, energy secretary during the
Clinton administration, to permanently shut the reactor and honor
a 1995 agreement to begin cleaning up. Spencer Abraham, the Bush
administration’s energy secretary, reversed the decision. But
criticism from both citizen activists and members of Congress has
resulted in a favorable decision. Once again we have witnessed
the impact that citizens can have. Not only were thousands of
activists in the Northwest advocating the shutdown of this
dangerous boondoggle, but around the country citizens took
action. We hope DOE can now put its energy toward preventing acts
of terrorism and cleaning up the deadly contamination, which is
threatening the Columbia River.
The successful resolution of this five-year battle is due to
citizen activism in the Northwest, which involved thousands of
concerned citizens. Citizen activists in other regions of the
nation also were active in advocating the shutdown of this
unstable and dangerous fast-breeder reactor.
*****************************************************************
3 Russia's Gepard submarine arrives at permanent base
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom; Dec 21, 2001
Text of report by Russian news agency ITAR-TASS
Murmansk, 21 December,
ITAR-TASS correspondent Vladimir Novikov: The Gepard, a new
multipurpose nuclear submarine, arrived in Gadzhiyevo, a
settlement on the Kola Peninsula, today. It will be part of the
North Fleet submarine unit that is based here.
During its transfer from Severodvinsk where the missile-carrier
was built at the Sevmash works, the crew, under the command of
Captain First Rank Dmitriy Kosolapov, were engaged in combat
training.
The Gepard travelled on the surface across the White and Barents
Seas to Gadzhiyevo.
When they arrived at the base the sailors were met by Northern
Fleet Commander Vice Admiral Gennadiy Suchkov, and by a line-up
of the unit's personnel.
Source: ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow, in Russian 1000 gmt 21 Dec
01 /BBC Monitoring/ © BBC. World Reporter
*****************************************************************
4 K-25 worker ambivalent about $150,000 check
By Frank Munger, News-Sentinel senior writer
OAK RIDGE - Sam Hall isn't sure he deserves a $150,000 check from
the federal government, but he's happy as heck to have it.
"I feel real lucky,'' the 56-year-old Roane County man said
Thursday. "It's something I never expected. I feel blessed.''
Hall, a former instrument mechanic at the Department of Energy's
K-25 Site, was one of the first Oak Ridge workers to qualify
under the federal program that compensates workers made sick by
exposures at government nuclear facilities. But Hall readily
admits he has doubts about whether his K-25 work caused his lung
cancer. He was exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam, worked with
asbestos in another job and lived not far from the smokestack at
TVA's Kingston Steam Plant.
Plus, he is a lifelong smoker, having taken up the habit when he
was still in grade school. Even today, after having part of a
lung removed and undergoing radiation treatments for cancer, he
still smokes. He pulled a pack of unfiltered Pall Mall cigarettes
from his shirt pocket to prove his point. Hall was one of three
local recipients of $150,000 checks who gathered Thursday at the
U.S. Department of Labor's Oak Ridge office in Jackson Plaza,
where sick workers or their survivors can get help filling out
claims forms.
The others who met with the news media were Georgia Herron, a
retired stores clerk at K-25, who suffered from kidney cancer and
breast cancer, and Edna Bunch, the Campbell County widow of
Robert Bunch, a K-25 maintenance mechanic who died 2 1/2 years
ago of lung cancer.
Most of the Oak Ridge workers who've qualified for the program so
far were employed at K-25. K-25 workers are part of a "special
cohort'' created by the federal legislation and are not required
to prove that radiation caused their cancers. It's assumed that
the workplace was the cause.
Besides K-25, the special cohort includes workers at two other
gaseous diffusion plants at Paducah, Ky., and Portsmouth, Ohio.
Cancer-stricken workers at other DOE nuclear facilities, such as
the Y-12 nuclear weapons plant in Oak Ridge, must have their work
records reviewed by an expert panel to determine if their
radiation exposures likely caused their cancers. The difference
in how claims are handled has upset some workers at Y-12 and Oak
Ridge National Laboratory who believe their plants were just as
hazardous as K-25 and the other facilities.
Hall, Herron and Bunch expressed thanks for help and support they
received at the Oak Ridge office in filing out their claims
applications, which ultimately are processed at the Labor
Department's regional center in Jacksonville, Fla. The Oak Ridge
office's telephone number is 1-865-481-0411, and the toll-free
number at the Jacksonville office is 1-877-336-4272.
All three of the recipients said they had ready use for the money
deposited in their checking accounts.
Hall and his wife paid off their mortgage. Herron, who lives in
Knoxville, said she'll use the money to offset the cost of her
many medical bills not covered by the federal benefits. And Bunch
said she'll get her check just in time to buy the family
Christmas gifts she didn't think she could afford.
Shirley White, who manages the Oak Ridge office for Eagle
Research, a Department of Labor contractor, said the local staff,
including four case workers - tries to process the claims as
quickly as possible.
Many of the worker stories are sad, according to White, who
herself worked at the Oak Ridge nuclear facilities for about 20
years.
"It's really hard to detach yourself and not get emotionally
involved,'' she said. "But we step back, and we just try to help
people the best way we can.''
Copyright 2001 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co.
*****************************************************************
5 FFTF loses restart fight
This story was published Thu, Dec 20, 2001
By Annette Cary Herald staff writer
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham found a proposal to restart
Hanford's Fast Flux Test Facility for commercial use too big a
gamble and Wednesday ordered the reactor permanently shut down.
With the previous Democratic administration coming to the same
conclusion as the current Republican administration, the
announcement left little possibility that DOE's largest and most
modern reactor will operate again. It also ends the potential for
any nuclear production at Hanford.
"(I) understand that this decision may come as a disappointment
to you and many in your community," Abraham wrote in a letter to
U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash. "Nevertheless, I want to assure
you that this review was conducted in an objective and thorough
manner."
An analysis of costs concluded that if the commercialization plan
went sour, DOE could be left with $1 billion in extra expenses.
That's in addition to the $1 billion cost of an unbudgeted
federal research project proposed for the reactor.
Supporters of restarting the research reactor called those
estimates ridiculous. With leadership from Hastings, they've
pushed for a restart of the reactor primarily to make isotopes
for medical use, including promising new ways of treating cancer.
Instead of restarting the reactor, DOE is working to expand
medical isotope programs, including at Richland and Oak Ridge,
Tenn., said DOE's report on the commercialization review.
That presumably refers to a Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
program, now commercialized, to produce medical isotopes from
waste. Oak Ridge National Laboratory also is producing medical
isotopes from stockpiled uranium 233.
Those programs produce a total of three types of isotopes for
medicine, while FFTF was being considered for production of 30
different isotopes for cancer treatment.
In the FFTF proposal, Advanced Nuclear and Medical Systems, or
ANMS, of Richland was proposing leasing the reactor for 35 years
and operating it with a team of companies well known for their
nuclear expertise, including Duke Engineering and Services.
Surplus mixed oxide fuel would be imported from Germany.
But DOE was concerned about the financing and costs the
government would be responsible for, according to the review
report.
"The ANMS proposal contained business and legal obstacles that
would likely result in lengthy project delays," Abraham wrote in
the letter to Hastings.
ANMS was asking that DOE continue to spend about the same amount
of money it spends now annually on the dormant reactor, $40
million, for a total of $120 million over three years. But DOE
questioned whether the reactor could surmount legal and other
hurdles to begin operating in three years, requiring further
financial help from DOE.
That includes getting clearance from the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to operate the reactor. DOE has provided safety and
oversight regulation of the reactor to date, but the commission
oversees safety of commercial nuclear ventures.
In the only other situation where a nuclear facility, an Ohio
gaseous diffusion plant, has switched from DOE to NRC regulation,
legislation was required.
DOE also suggested that expensive upgrades might be needed at
FFTF to allow it to meet NRC regulations, which differ from DOE
regulations, even though safety of the reactor has been
unquestioned by DOE.
Should the ANMS venture fall apart during the lease, DOE would be
left with some expensive problems, the report said.
That included surplus fuel from Germany. It's enough of a problem
that Germany is giving $35.8 million to DOE to take the fuel. The
money would cover transportation and conversion costs.
ANMS also would establish a $400 million trust fund for the
eventual decontamination of FFTF from its profits under the
proposal.
"However, if the venture were to prove unviable, DOE would be
left with the entire, and significant, cost of decontamination
and decommissioning," the DOE report said.
However, Bill Stokes, ANMS president, pointed out that DOE
already is faced with decommissioning costs, whether the reactor
restarts or not. If DOE was left with surplus German fuel, a
portion of the $35.8 million would also be unused to deal with
it, he said.
DOE also appeared unimpressed with the Compass Group in Spokane,
an investment advisory firm to building-trade pension trusts,
which would finance the FFTF restart with pension money.
The report characterized Compass as "a small company that, to
date, does not have experience with large projects and has
handled projects valued at $30 million or less."
However, Stokes countered that Compass has invested assets in
excess of $1.3 billion and had a potential pool of as much as $5
billion to be drawn on for the $200 million it was considering
investing in the reactor.
Finally, the Bush administration had the same concerns as the
Clinton administration about commercial demand for medical
isotopes.
"Representatives from the medical industry have voiced general
support of isotope production using FFTF, but there are no
identified commercial buyers in the ANMS proposal," the report
said.
Stokes said with time, ANMS could have produced those
commitments. Its proposal was submitted under a 30-day deadline
for companies to provide proposals for using FFTF.
There were 90 other responses, although none had the kind of
specific commitments that caused DOE to take a second look.
However, DOE interest in also using the reactor for research was
revived by the new administration's energy policy that called for
developing new nuclear energy technologies.
Argonne National Laboratory proposed FFTF be used to demonstrate
a new process that would allow the recycling and reuse of spent
nuclear fuel.
However, the program would cost $1 billion over eight years,
which is not included in budget projections for future years, the
DOE report said.
Tri-City supporters of the reactor said Wednesday that they'll
continue to fight.
"It's a huge blow for the community," said Benton County
Commissioner Claude Oliver. "It's a huge slap in the face to
organized labor."
He and other supporters plan a trip to Washington, D.C., in
January to point out the flaws in the report signed by Abraham,
he said. Organized labor also plans to continue lobbying for a
restart.
Top DOE officials knew that Mid-Columbia supporters believed they
were close to receiving an additional $1 million for the project
from the Hanford Area Economic Development Fund, Oliver said. For
the review to be fair, DOE should have given ANMS and supporters
enough time to finish details of the proposal, he said.
Stokes had proposed a six-month period to identify pharmaceutical
company customers, provide specific financial details for a
binding commitment from the Compass Group and refine other
financial details.
Stokes said the Senate has been more influenced by strong
opposition from Oregon senators than statements from Washington's
Democratic senators calling for a fair review of an FFTF restart.
The Government Accountability Project, which opposed a restart,
credited U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., with forcing DOE to order a
shutdown.
"The fight is over," said Gerald Pollet, executive director of
Heart of America Northwest, which has opposed a restart. "It's
done with, and now it's time for all of us to put the fight
behind us and get FFTF deactivated as fast as possible."
DOE stopped using FFTF after 10 years in 1992 for lack of a
mission for the reactor, but several attempts have been made
since then to find a new use for it. However, once the sodium is
drained from the reactor, it cannot be restarted.
Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald.
*****************************************************************
6 More funds needed for FFTF
This story was published Thu, Dec 20, 2001
By John Stang Herald staff writer
It likely will be months before Hanford crews begin closing the
Fast Flux Test Facility.
Before then, millions of extra money must be found. More workers
must be hired. Training must be updated.
It is expected to take almost $250 million over five years and
eight months to shut down the FFTF to the point where all it
requires is one or two surveillance checks a year, according to a
Department of Energy report issued in July.
That translates to about $44 million a year. Right now, $36.5
million is allocated to keep the FFTF in standby mode for the
2002 fiscal year, which began Oct. 1.
FFTF critic Gerald Pollet, director of Heart of America
Northwest, argued Wednesday that the shutdown could be sped up to
take just three years and to save money.
The biggest parts of shutting down FFTF are draining its heated
liquid sodium coolant and properly treating and packing its spent
nuclear fuel.
According to various sources, here is how the shutdown should
unfold:
One revolutionary aspect of the FFTF is the 260,000 gallons of
liquid sodium used to cool the reactor. It flows through miles of
pipes from the reactor's core to the distinctive squat,
square-shaped cooling towers.
Once the sodium is drained, the reactor will for most purposes
have reached the point of no return. Within a fairly short time,
flaws will begin developing in the cooling pipes. DOE was about
to drain the sodium in 1995, but FFTF supporters convinced the
agency to keep the reactor dormant for more studies -- which led
to Wednesday's shutdown decision.
But Hanford is not as ready today as it was in 1995 to begin
shutdown. Training must be redone and procedures checked.
Equipment must be upgraded. And a few workers must be hired to
join the approximately 240 to 250 employees presently at FFTF.
Then, within a yet-determined number of months from now, crews
will begin draining the liquid sodium coolant, which is heated to
about 400 degrees.
Sodium will have to be cleaned off the spent fuel rods before
they are stored in special casks, which eventually are to go to a
proposed DOE storage site in Nevada.
The FFTF now has 126 fuel assemblies stored in 18 casks, with
another 100 to 200 fuel to be cleaned and stored.
An extra $9 million will be needed for the first year of spent
fuel work. It is unknown now whether that money will come from
the current 2002 budget or in DOE's 2003 budget request, which
goes to Congress in February.
One question is whether FFTF's closure will be financed from
cleanup funds or nuclear energy funds. Its standby budget has
come from nuclear energy funds. Hanford watchers such as Pollet
will be watching to make sure the FFTF shutdown doesn't divert
cleanup funding.
Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. This
*****************************************************************
7 Nuclear Waste Vessel, Sub Collide
Las Vegas SUN
December 21, 2001
Nuclear Waste Vessel, Sub Collide
MOSCOW (AP) - A Russian vessel that collects spent nuclear fuel
collided with a decommissioned nuclear submarine from which it
was supposed to be unloading, but there was no radiation leak, a
marine spokesman said Friday.
The Imandra waste carrier bumped into a mothballed Northern Fleet
submarine in the Arctic Kola Bay, said Vladimir Blinov, spokesman
for the Merchant Marine service in the port of Murmansk.
Blinov would not say what type of submarine it was or when the
accident happened. Russia's state-controlled ORT television said
the collision occurred on Dec. 13.
Radiation experts were rushed to the scene, but an inspection
showed that neither vessel had leaked radiation or suffered any
damage, Blinov said in a telephone interview.
Russia has more than 180 decommissioned nuclear submarines,
according to official data, and most of them have stayed afloat
with nuclear fuel onboard, raising the risk of a nuclear
accident. Some have languished dockside for 10-15 years, their
hulls rusting through. Officials said they lacked funds to build
dismantling and storage facilities.
Some European Union nations have offered to provide funds for
dismantling the submarines, but the talks have stalled over
Russia's refusal to accept full legal responsibility for all
nuclear risks, offer tax breaks or give Western inspectors
unlimited access to all dismantling sites.
All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
*****************************************************************
8 FFTF decision must not hurt Hanford cleanup
Published Dec. 21, 2001
A national asset that seemed to have more lives than a cat
apparently has reached the end, given the Bush administration's
decision to close the Hanford Fast Flux Test Facility
permanently.
Now, Hanford cleanup advocates will have to ensure that its
deactivation does not divert money from other cleanup at the
site.
Although Secretary Abraham's decision is clear-cut - there is no
wiggle room - the conclusion is lamentable because FFTF's
potential will go unrealized. Perhaps given different
circumstances, including more solid commitments from customers
and a more hospitable political climate in the Northwest, the
reactor might well have found new life manufacturing medical
isotopes for cancer treatment and as a nuclear research center.
But it apparently is not to be. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham
concurred with Undersecretary Robert Card's recommendation that
both options - isotope production and research - had "major
drawbacks" and potentially could leave the Energy Department on
the hook for $2 billion.
That makes two administrations - the first Democratic, the second
Republican - to come to the same conclusion. Three, if you
consider former Energy Secretary James Watkins' 1992 suggestion
to close the reactor under the first President Bush because of
the reactor's high operation costs and no mission.
It was sometime after that first decision that the idea of a
medical isotope mission was spawned. Advanced Nuclear and Medical
Systems proffered an unsolicited proposal to run FFTF for medical
isotopes. Former Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary paused FFTF's
march toward decommissioning to study the possibilities. And
about a year ago, Bill Richardson, another former Energy
secretary, decided to shut FFTF down permanently, saying the
United States could fulfill its isotope and research needs
elsewhere.
But Richardson's ruling, made shortly before the Clinton
administration ended, left many questions unanswered. Thanks in
large part to a dedicated band of Tri-Citians who believed FFTF
could provide much-needed medical isotopes, U.S. Rep. Doc
Hastings persuaded Abraham to take another look based on new
information not considered in the previous decision.
This last-chance review produced the same conclusion that FFTF
should be deactivated. Where Richardson's ruling was vague,
Abraham's decision is specific and difficult to dispute - and
political insiders say ironclad.
There apparently are no more considerations to hang another FFTF
incarnation on, although some FFTF advocates vow to keep up the
fight.
If the Bush administration is determined to close FFTF, Energy
Department officials need to make sure the process - expected to
cost $240 million over six years - does not hinder nor delay
other Hanford cleanup.
If FFTF has to go, its closure must not derail existing cleanup
plans. What's your opinon?
Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. This
*****************************************************************
9 FFTF: Citizens made difference
Published Dec. 21, 2001
If there is a silver lining to the Fast Flux Test Facility saga,
it is the Citizens for Medical Isotopes.
This Tri-City-based band of devotees - some community leaders,
some cancer survivors or their family members - can take credit
for helping to create a public awareness that a stable domestic
supply of medical isotopes is necessary.
Citizens for Medical Isotopes, which has signed up members around
the nation, was hoping FFTF would be restarted to manufacture a
portfolio of isotopes to be used in cancer treatment and
diagnostic procedures. Their hopes were dashed Wednesday,
although they vow to fight on.
In the decision to close FFTF, Department of Energy officials
noted the agency was expanding its medical isotope programs in
Richland and Oak Ridge, Tenn. Apparently that refers to Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory work at creating isotopes from
waste and Oak Ridge National Laboratory's program producing them
from uranium 233.
These programs produce three different types of isotopes - a
number that pales in comparison with the 30 planned for FFTF. But
at least the Energy Department has acknowledged its
responsibility to provide a stable supply of these medical
isotopes.
Although it's not much consolation, Citizens for Medical Isotopes
no doubt had a role in that realization. What's your opinon?
Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. This
*****************************************************************
10 Permanent Shutdown Ordered for Fast Flux Reactor
Environment News Service:
By Cat Lazaroff
WASHINGTON, DC, December 20, 2001 (ENS) - The Department of
Energy has decided to permanently close the Fast Flux Test
Facility, a research reactor at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation
in Washington state. The decision was applauded by anti-nuclear
activists and environmental groups that have spent nearly a
decade battling against a proposed restart of the controversial
nuclear reactor.
[reactor] The Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF), located north of
Richland, Washington (Photo courtesy Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory) An "exhaustive, eight month review" of the facility
(FFTF) led to the conclusion that "restart … is impracticable,"
wrote Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham in a letter to
Representative Doc Hastings, the Washington Republican whose
district hosts the Hanford site.
Under the terms of the 1995 Hanford Clean-Up Agreement between
Washington State and the DOE, the reactor must now be fully
deactivated before 2006.
The FFTF is a 400 megawatt sodium cooled nuclear reactor. As part
of the Hanford Reservation, the reactor operated from 1982 until
1992 to test advanced fuels and materials in support of the
national Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor Program.
Breeder reactors burn uranium, and produce weapons grade
plutonium. Many nations, including the U.S., have canceled their
breeder reactor programs due to problems with their operation and
concerns that their plutonium byproducts could be stolen and
turned into weapons.
The FFTF, the last of the U.S. breeder reactors, was also used to
produce a variety of medical and industrial isotopes, including
tritium, and provided research and testing of components and
systems for advanced power systems. Representative Hastings said
Wednesday that he is "deeply disappointed by DOE's decision.
We've worked too long and too hard not to be."
[Hastings] Washington Representative Doc Hastings (Photo courtesy
Office of the Representative) Hastings led efforts to have the
reactor reopened as a potential source for radioactive isotopes
which are used in research and medical treatments. When the
Clinton administration announced plans to deactivate the FFTF in
January, Hastings persuaded Secretary Abraham to review that
decision and consider new uses for the reactor.
"We all hoped - frankly believed - that there was a private
market for medical isotopes, and we believed FFTF could help meet
that need," Hastings said.
The Department of Energy (DOE) has spent more than $40 million a
year since 1992 to keep the reactor maintained for possible
restart. Among the uses proposed for the reactor were
manufacturing tritium for nuclear weapons, or producing plutonium
238.
Under a 1995 agreement, the reactor was to be permanently closed,
and the funds saved were to be devoted to cleaning up the Hanford
site, where dozens of aging, corroding tanks hold millions of
gallons of radioactive wastes. The Clinton administration decided
to close the reactor, but the new Bush administration opted to
review that decision.
Over the past eight months, a team of DOE personnel solicited
proposals from various commercial interests, and narrowed the
possibilities down to two: a DOE funded research mission or
commercialization of the FFTF by a company called Advanced
Nuclear and Medical Systems.
"In the end, both these options were found to have significant
drawbacks and present potential DOE liabilities that collectively
could exceed $2 billion," Secretary Abraham wrote. "Based on
these considerations, prolonged consideration of future missions
was deemed to be impracticable."
[FFTF] Representative Hastings hoped the FFTF would support a
lucrative business in medical isotope production, pumping funds
into his district (Photo courtesy FFTF) Opponents of the
controversial restart applauded the Secretary's decision.
The Nuclear Control Institute (NCI), a nuclear nonproliferation
watchdog group, called the move "a clear nuclear
non-proliferation victory [that] closes the book on the nation's
misguided flirtation with the plutonium breeder reactor."
"Hundreds of millions of dollars have been wasted keeping this
dinosaur alive since the first decision to shut it down in 1992,"
said NCI executive director Tom Clements. "The closure of FFTF
brings to a conclusion U.S. pursuit of plutonium breeder
reactors, a type of reactor which can explode in the event of a
core meltdown and which should be shunned because it produces
weapons grade plutonium."
Even the official review of the proposed FFTF restart raised
controversy. In October, public interest groups charged that the
review was tainted by illegal conflicts of interest on the part
of the company that prepared an Environmental Impact Statement on
the proposed restart.
The groups released evidence indicating that the DOE had paid
SAIC Corporation to review allegations that the Environmental
Impact Statement which SAIC itself prepared was inadequate.
SAIC's review recommended further government funding for the
project.
[tank] The millions of dollars saved by shutting down the FFTF
can be used to help clean up radioactive wastes from storage
tanks at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, which have contaminated
soil and groundwater (Photo courtesy DOE) SAIC Corporation
announced on October 5 that it had withdrawn from the FFTF
reactor restart proposal because of the conflicts of interest.
This fall, Congress indicated that it too opposed restarting the
FFTF. At the urging of Oregon Senator Ron Wyden, the Senate
Energy Committee added language to the Senate version of
comprehensive energy legislation that would bar a restart.
The House included language restricting federal funding for
restart studies in its fiscal year 2002 budget bill for the
Department of Energy. "Keeping this last vestige of the breeder
program on stand-by wasted over $400 million, money that should
have been spent on shutdown and on waste cleanup at Hanford,"
noted NCI's Clements.
The citizens' watchdog group Heart of America Northwest (HAN),
one the most steadfast of the FFTF's opponents, says that
Secretary Abraham's decision will "end one of the most visible
and politically potent environmental battles in the Northwest."
"Families across Washington and Oregon can rest easier tonight
knowing that citizens were able to prevent adding more wastes and
risks of nuclear catastrophe to the threats Hanford poses to our
region and the Columbia River," said Gerald Pollet, executive
director of HAN.
More information on the FFTF is available at:
http://www.fftf.org/
*****************************************************************
11 Hanford facility runs out of reprieves
The Seattle Times:
Editorials & Opinion : Friday, December 21, 2001
Hanford's Fast Flux Test Facility has had more second acts than
Laurence Olivier, and a record of saves the envy of Kazu Sasaki.
A lot of expensive luck ran out when Energy Secretary Spencer
Abraham pulled the plug Wednesday on the experimental reactor.
Years of searching across a succession of presidential
administrations could not find a credible mission for the FFTF.
All of the numbers surrounding the reactor have been big, and
they stay big right until permanent shut-down is final, perhaps
six years in the future.
President Carter built the plant as part of a short-lived
breeder-reactor program. The first Bush administration put the
reactor on standby, but that order was stalled by the new Clinton
administration.
Eight years later, the departing Clinton White House ordered the
FFTF phased out. That decision was postponed by the incoming Bush
administration until it could do its own search.
Nothing ever panned out. Keeping the reactor on life support
costs $40 million a year, and has drained money and attention
from cleanup efforts. Secretary Abraham heard the same pleas and
refusals from the same people. The local community worked hard to
sell the idea of fashioning medical isotopes at the facility.
That was dealt a fatal blow when the National Institute of
Medicine said the reactor was not needed.
A military role in the nation's nuclear arsenal producing tritium
was given to the Tennessee Valley Authority, another blow to
reviving the Hanford shop.
DOE never had a good answer with what to do with any new
radioactive waste from a reactivated FFTF. Finally, the dollars
were daunting. Start-up would cost an estimated $2 billion.
Shutting it down forever will still cost taxpayers $300 million.
Bush made the right call. Stay focused on Hanford's legacy:
cleanup.
Copyright © 2001 The Seattle Times Company
*****************************************************************
12 Nwep: Richard Butler comments on defector
AM - 21/12/2001:
This is a transcript of AM broadcast at 0800 AEST on local radio.
AM - Friday, December 21, 2001 8:04
LINDA MOTTRAM: And after hearing the defector's claims Peter
Cave spoke to Richard Butler who was the chief weapons inspector
for the United Nations in Iraq until UNSCOM was thrown out by
Saddam Hussein in 1998 after ever escalating disputes about
UNSCOM's real motives and about access to sites.
Ambassador Butler spoke via satellite from New York.
RICHARD BUTLER: Peter I've read a lot of such reports from
defectors, from people who have left Iraq. I can't tell you how
many. And you get a feel about them. And as I read what he said I
thought my goodness, this has a real ring of authenticity about
it. Just the detail, the names of places, the sorts of stuff he
was discussing. I thought this is true.
PETER CAVE: What level of production of chemical and
biological weapons is Iraq capable of at the moment?
RICHARD BUTLER: Well they were doing the whole range of both
chemical and biological weapons in the past. When we were there
we destroyed a lot of the manufacturing capability and a lot of
the weapons but it is critical to recognise Peter that why they
threw us out in 1998 was that we wanted to get all of it and we
didn't.
And you know, so they're capable in terms of know how,
equipment, and I think materials, of doing the whole range. And
of course they've been without inspection for three years and
reports like that of this guy and other defectors suggest to us
quite strongly that they're back in business.
PETER CAVE: So clearly it doesn't surprise you at all that
this fellow has said that they vastly increased their production
capabilities as soon as you left.
RICHARD BUTLER: Not in the slightest and you know, I want to
repeat again, just the place names he mentioned and some of the
technologies, it had such a ring of authenticity to me. As I said
I've read many of these things and in considering quite frankly
whether or not to do this interview with you, I asked first to
see that material and when I saw it I thought, you bet, I will do
this interview because this seems to me to be real coin [sic].
PETER CAVE: He spoke mainly about the chemical and biological
weapons. What about nuclear weapons?
RICHARD BUTLER: Well Saddam had a nuclear weapons program which
we stopped after the Gulf War. At that stage the assessment was
he was about six months away from making a bomb. In the meantime
he's got a stockpile of raw uranium, some enriched uranium and in
the three years without inspection I've seen reports that he's
recalled his nuclear weapons design team and Lord knows what he's
been able to acquire on the black market. You know I don't know
if he's got a nuclear weapons capability but it is established
that he wants one and has been seeking one.
PETER CAVE: It's no secret that the White House is looking at
the options of moving the War Against Terrorism to Saddam Hussein
and Iraq. Given this information, given what you know personally,
is that a wise move?
RICHARD BUTLER: Well there's a very vigorous debate taking place
in Washington right now on the issue of whether or not to move
the conflict, the war, to Iraq. It's not yet been resolved.
Information like this, the current information we're dealing
with, could feed into that.
Is it a good or a bad idea? That's actually not my place to say.
I can think of very good reasons why Iraq should be dealt with
because of the threat they pose to their region, because of
Saddam's weapons of mass destruction policies.
On the other hand I'm very well aware of the dangers that
could flow from military action against Iraq and those things
have to be weighed in the balance. That's - you know they're
decisions that will be taken in Washington and you know, they're
not things that I have a particular view on. I'm concerned about
the weapons of mass destruction. That was my job in the past.
That's my concern now. The wider issues other people have to
decide on.
PETER CAVE: Do you know anything about links between the
regime in Iraq and Al Qaeda?
RICHARD BUTLER: Well I don't know directly. There is
circumstantial evidence of such links; the meetings in Prague,
the Iraqi Ambassador in Turkey who was a very senior intelligence
official went south and met Al Qaeda some time ago. There's a
terrorist training camp outside Baghdad which was next to a
biological weapons facility that we used to visit and so we were
aware of that place. There's lots of circumstantial stuff Peter
but the so-called "smoking gun", the direct links, they've not
yet been established.
LINDA MOTTRAM: Richard Butler, the former chief United Nations
weapons inspector in Iraq speaking from New York to our foreign
affairs editor Peter Cave.
[http://abc.net.au] [
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13 LANL Cleanup Project Completed
Thursday December 20 12:22 PM EST
A project to dig up and inspect barrels containing radioactive
waste from a national laboratory has been completed, drawing both
praise and a desire for more from environmental groups.
The state Environment Department in 1992 ordered that 17,000
barrels on Los Alamos National Laboratory property be dug out of
the ground and stored above ground for inspection until they are
sent to their permanent home.
About 30 percent of the barrels had corroded and holes were found
in about 200 barrels after the project's recent completion, LANL
officials said.
Concerns about corrosion and possible leakage of radioactive
material into the ground was what prompted the removal of the
barrels.
"They are now in a state that you can walk around them, to do a
good visual, to determine if you're having any problems with the
barrels," LANL project manager Gilbert Montoya said.
The barrels eventually will be shipped with other LANL
radioactive materials to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near
Carlsbad for permanent storage.
Environmentalists said the removal was good, but expressed
concern that other sites that also pose a threat to the
community's health.
"Eventually, everything moves in the environment," said Greg
Mello of the Los Alamos Study Group, a LANL watch dog
organization. "This waste will be pumped up by roots, washed away
by water and blown away by spring winds."
Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc.
*****************************************************************
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have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
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