***************************************************************** 4/25/01 **** RADIATION BULLETIN(RADBULL) **** VOL 9.101 ***************************************************************** RADBULL IS PRODUCED BY THE ABALONE ALLIANCE CLEARINGHOUSE ***************************************************************** NUCLEAR POWER CONTENTS 1 500 million will suffer from Chernobyl 2 Nuclear Poll Glance 3 Study: Public danger from plant unknown 4 Document search is magical mystery tour 5 NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Standard Review Plan for the 6 Peace Farm speaks out against waste site bill 7 Guest Column: Don't waste energy with nuclear power argument 8 'Mobile Chernobyl' 9 State Approves License to Dump Nuke Waste as Site Continues to Leak 10 Nuclear industry was its own worst enemy 11 State, plant operators disagree over decommissioning plan 12 Filters Appear To Be Fighting Uranium 13 Editorial: 'Bias' isn't part of his vocabulary 14 USEC Inc. adopts shareholder rights plan 15 Uranium Institute News Briefing 01.17 | 18 - 24 April 2001 16 Japan's Prince Hitachi Visits Panama; Protests About Ship 17 Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Hot house 18 Nuclear plant fully operational again 19 Consultant to advise on delayed nuclear fuel plant 20 Temelin Opponents Say More Fuel to Arrive in Temelin Soon 21 Tour spurs support for Yucca site 22 Anti-nuclear activists try to stop Sellafield cargo 23 Nuclear Waste Transport Goes Smoothly 24 Dounreay receives safety award 25 FORATOM: EU energy policy -- Why Europe needs nuclear power 26 Sweden, Russia to continue talks on nuclear waste accord 27 Ukrainian reactor reduces output because of malfunction 28 Ukraine Marks Chernnobyl Anniversary 29 Chernobyl death count still disputed 30 Chernobyl Cattle 31 Inna Bahina, 21, looks at the house where she used to live, 32 Radioactive rains fall on Moscow 15 years after Chernobyl 33 NRC Will Hold Public Meeting in Charlotte on Environmental Review 34 Poll: Anxiety over nuclear power easing 35 Nuclear Poll Method 36 Guinn: Report more proof of Yucca bias NUCLEAR WEAPONS CONTENTS 1 CROET changes meeting schedule 2 Hearing set to discuss DOE report from plant 3 Tests measure contamination near Nike Park 4 Review of DOE probe sought 5 Hanford guards question reduction 6 Hanford guards riled over lack of security 7 National Lab to Host International Conference 8 Teller says Garwin designed H-Bomb 9 General Dynamics To Buy Newport News 10 Size doesn't matter 11 France studies Gulf War health problems 12 Study: Sierra Army Depot is California's top polluter 13 Legislators aim to restore uranium cleanup funds 14 Uranium Waste Cleanup Gets No U.S. Funds **************************************************************** ***************************************************************** NUCLEAR POWER ARTICLES ***************************************************************** 1 500 million will suffer from Chernobyl The Russia Journal Annie Serebriakova, Alexandre Shishilov MOSCOW - Russian environmentalist Alexei Yablokov told a news conference in Moscow that for future generations, as much as 500 million people will suffer from the effects of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, reports Gazeta.ru. On the eve of the 15th anniversary of the accident, Yablokov, citing inform ation from U.S. scientists, said th at Belarus is already spending 20% of its budget on its own, while Ukraine now spends 10%. By 2000, overall spending the cleanup had already reached $300-360 billion, and by 2015 it need to climb to $560 billion, thus, states Yablokov "exceeding all possible profits from nuclear power engineering." Environmentalists claim that over 40 large-scale incidents have occurred in the last 10 years at Russian nuclear fuel and power facilities and that over the last 50 years, the Russian atomic industry has registered 385 different accidents. ***************************************************************** 2 Nuclear Poll Glance Wednesday April 25 1:39 AM ET *By The Associated Press, * Some details on demographic preferences from an Associated Press poll question about support for nuclear power to generate energy. The error margin for the poll of 1,002 adults taken April 18-23 is plus or minus 3 percentage points, larger for subgroups. When results don't total 100 percent, the remainder either didn't know or refused to answer. Do you support or oppose using nuclear power to generate electricity? BY GENDER Men -Support, 63 percent -Oppose, 27 percent Women -Support, 38 percent -Oppose, 33 percent BY INCOME Under $25,000 -Support, 37 percent -Oppose, 39 percent From $25,000 to $49,900 -Support, 52 percent -Oppose, 30 percent From $50,000 to $74,900 -Support, 58 percent -Oppose, 20 percent $75,000 and over -Support, 61 percent -Oppose, 26 percent BY RACE White -Support, 54 percent -Oppose, 27 percent Black -Support, 27 percent -Oppose, 46 percent BY PARTY ID Democrats -Support, 39 percent -Oppose, 39 percent Republicans -Support, 68 percent -Oppose, 20 percent Independents -Support, 49 percent -Oppose, 30 percent ***************************************************************** 3 Study: Public danger from plant unknown The Hawk Eye Special: IAAP April 25, 2001 By Dennis J. Carroll The Hawk Eye nÊAgency recommends more extensive survey at Army plant to determine possible health threat. MIDDLETOWN -- A federal health study of radioactive contamination at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant concludes that the threat to public health in the area cannot be determined from available information and reinforces questions about former worker and public exposure to radioactive wastes. The survey was conducted over the past year by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service's Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. The report, released March 19 and obtained from the office of Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, is based on information supplied by the Army regarding operations of the Atomic Energy Commission from 1947 to 1975. The AEC assembled and later disassembled nuclear weapons at IAAP from the late 1940s to the 1970s, and at least in latter years, tested components of the weapons. The information used by the health study was supplied by the Army and "included memoranda, letters, waste shipments, environmental reports and similar documents" prepared during the AEC's tenure at the plant, the report said. Some of the information, particularly regarding "hydroshot" testing of weapons components, which produced large amounts of depleted uranium wastes, has been revealed over the past 18 months. However, the report also contains new information and helps to confirm other disclosures in recent months. The new study notes that radioactive materials were released into the environment at the plant by AEC operations in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including the burning of radioactive wastes that had been placed in drums and burned at a high-explosives disposal site. The report was not clear on just what radioactive wastes were burned. However, the report suggests that workers handled such radioactive materials as plutonium, enriched uranium, radium and tritium. The materials often were contained in the sealed components of nuclear weapons, but releases of radioactive materials apparently did occur, the report said. "Other information available suggested that radioactive cobalt and cesium may have been used or is present in the environment," the health survey said. The study also notes a 1971 health protection survey at the plant found problems with the plant's system for monitoring radiation contamination. "Areas not covered by the monitoring system included the change room (dress out) and cafeteria areas," the new federal report said. The 1971 report noted that workers wearing potentially contaminated contractor-supplied clothing would wear the same clothing to the cafeteria. The new report seems to support claims by some former workers that they were not adequately protected and often brought contaminated materials home, such as their lunch buckets. In a 1999 report, the same agency concluded that conditions at IAAP did not pose any apparent public health risks. In the March radiological report, however, the department noted that "information supplied to ATSDR is not complete with respect to potential routes of human exposure or extent of contamination in the environment." The report concludes that "no determination as to the impact on public health can be made at this time." The new report also mentions a recent radiological survey of former AEC areas by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory that found depleted uranium contamination in floor seams and cracks in several buildings, and chunks of depleted uranium at Firing Site 12. Those findings indicated that previous remediation efforts had not been totally successful. The new study also noted that in one building the Oak Ridge survey found air filters that "appeared to be relatively new" that contained elevated levels of contamination. In light of that finding, the heath study has recommended that some AEC buildings and the areas around them be more extensively surveyed for possible surface and air contamination. The survey also recommended that the extent of radiological contamination at Firing Site 12 be fully determined. That is currently being done by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Department of Energy. In response to the survey, Harkin urged the Army to "step up the pace to ensure the plant is safe and all contamination that is found is cleaned up." He said the study "confirms that much more work is needed just to find out if there is still a health threat from radioactive contamination at IAAP." The plant continues to be a major health concern "not only to those who worked with these nuclear materials but anyone who lives in the vicinity of IAAP," Harkin said. Donald Flater, chief of the Radiological Bureau of the Iowa Department of Public Health, said the new study reinforces his call for a flyover of the entire 19,000-acre facility with a specially equipped low-flying aircraft to determine whether there may be other radiation-contaminated areas. "They are going in the same direction we are," Flater said. "We don't know what's out there. It needs to be defined." The Hawk Eye 800 S. Main St., Burlington Iowa 52601 319-754-8461 Front Desk ' ' '| ' ' '319-754-6824 FAX ' ' '| ' ' ' 1-800-397-1708 Outside Burlington [this is a line and that's all ***************************************************************** 4 Document search is magical mystery tour April 25, 2001 By Frank Munger News-Sentinel senior writer Earlier this year, the Energy Department sold a slice of floodplain property to developers for $54 an acre, setting off howls of protests from conservationists already upset with the agency's land-use planning. The 182-acre parcel along the Clinch River was sold to the Oak Ridge Land Co., which plans to create a smart-growth community -- incorporating facilities for residents to work, play and live -- on nearby land (about 1,200 acres) purchased from the Boeing Co. The floodplain is important to the project because it provides river access to the development. Conservation groups that earlier had contested DOE's plan to sell the property were incensed by the sale price, calling it a sweetheart deal and suggesting the ecological value of the property was much greater. "Heck, for the price of dinner for two the other night, I could have bought an acre of wetlands," said Dev Joslin of Advocates For the Oak Ridge Reservation. "I could have traded in one of our cars for the whole 182 acres." Research scientist Virginia Dale called the $9,828 transaction "very sad." At the time, DOE had little to say. "The land was sold at fair-market value," agency spokesman Steven Wyatt said. "That's determined by the appraised value of the land." Was the controversy unwarranted? Was the low price reasonable, since the floodplain apparently was viewed as unsuitable for development? Should DOE have come out strongly in defense of the land transaction, which is governed by specific rules and regulations? Some folks thought so. DOE officials, however, appear to have no interest in defending the property sale. In fact, the agency appears to be incapable of it. When asked for a copy of the property appraisal, a DOE spokesman offered an all-but-unbelievable response: The agency doesn't have a copy of the appraisal, and nobody in the Oak Ridge office remembers who the appraiser was. Can you imagine a DOE manager testifying to that during a congressional hearing? Following my inquiry, DOE's chief lawyer, Jennifer Fowler, wrote a March 26 letter to Oak Ridge Land Co. asking for a copy of the appraisal. "In connection with the sale of 182 acres of floodplain by the Department of Energy, you engaged the services of a DOE-approved certified appraiser and provided the resulting appraisal to DOE. However, we have discovered that the appraisal is not contained in DOE's files," Fowler wrote. "On behalf of the Department of Energy, I am requesting a copy of the appraisal so that our records of this real estate transaction will be complete." There apparently has been no response to that letter. "We didn't keep a copy," Michael Ross, chief manager of Oak Ridge Land Co., said this week when asked about the property appraisal. Ross said he doesn't think Oak Ridge Land Co. got sweetheart treatment from DOE. "I do feel like we got a good value," he said. He said developers wouldn't have paid about $3 million for the Boeing parcel if they hadn't been assured of getting the waterfront property from DOE. Ross said he was somewhat surprised by the controversy, but he said Oak Ridge is a special place. "There are certainly a lot of great and good things about Oak Ridge, and one of those great and good things is that there are a lot of very inquisitive and inquiring minds," he said. "We plan to do something very special over there, and we think it will be in keeping with what Oak Ridge wants, even the folks that are our critics," Ross said. He also said the project poses special challenges. Ross said there is no final design or name for the proposed project because the company is still conducting market studies and evaluating land-use issues. But he indicated one focus would be on providing ways for walkers to enjoy the natural areas. Meanwhile, what about that elusive appraisal on the riverfront property? "We requested a copy from the appraiser, but he didn't keep a copy," Ross said. "He can get it through some kind of printing process .... But we just have not done that. If it becomes a major issue, we will." Senior Writer Frank Munger covers the Department of Energy for the News-Sentinel. He can be reached at 865-482-9213 or at twig1@knoxnews.infi.net. This column is also available on the Web at www.knoxnews.com/editorsview/munger/ ***************************************************************** 5 NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Standard Review Plan for the Gaseous Diffusion Plants; Notice of Availability Story Filed: Tuesday, April 24, 2001 3:55 PM EST Washington, DC, Apr 24, 2001 (FedNet via COMTEX) -- Because of significant changes to current draft U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) standard review plan for the recertification of the gaseous diffusion plants, NRC is offering the opportunity for public review and comment on the addition of an introduction to the draft report NUREG-1671 retitled, "Standard Review Plan for the Gaseous Diffusion Plants." DATES: Submit comments to the address listed below by May 25, 2001. Comments received after this date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but the Commission is able to ensure consideration only for comments received on or before this date. AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission. ACTION: Notice of availability. Copyright 2001 FedNet *Copyright © 2001, FedNet Government News, all rights reserved.* ***************************************************************** 6 Peace Farm speaks out against waste site bill Amarillo Globe-News: Local News: By JENNIFER LUTZ Globe-News Staff Writer The director of the Peace Farm wants to stop a state proposal before it even gets off the ground. Mavis Belisle held a press conference Tuesday at the Amarillo Public Library to speak about defeating legislation pending in Austin. She spoke on behalf of the organization located south of the Pantex Plant that describes itself as committed to nonviolent social change. Senate Bill 1541 would require the state to meet its obligation of establishing a permanent management site of low-level radioactive waste. The bill would require the state to meet a federal compact with Maine and Vermont to create a permanent waste site. Last week, Sen. Teel Bivins, R-Amarillo, added an amendment to the original bill to create a second Texas site for Energy Department waste. The bill's sponsor, Sen. Robert Duncan, R-Lubbock, did not vote in favor of the revised proposed legislation. "No state wants to deal with nuclear waste," Belisle said. "The amendment is so grievous that the original sponsor doesn't even want it." Bivins tried in 1995 to pass similar legislation, and supported a bill sponsored by another senator in 1999. "The bill is the most recent attempt after trying for almost 20 years to establish a low-level radioactive site in the state of Texas," Bivins said. The sites would accept mixed and low-level radioactive waste, or solid, liquid or gaseous material whether occurring naturally or produced artificially that emits radiation spontaneously. "The incentives for other states to open a site is even less," Belisle said. "The important thing for Texans to understand is this process has been shielded a great bit from public investigation." No state wants to deal with nuclear waste, and this bill would deter other places from creating dumping grounds, she said. Bivins does not agree. South Carolina and Utah are operating similar sites, and he said he believes other places will emerge. The bill does not specify where the permanent site would be located, but Bivins said many constituents in Andrews County, north of Odessa / Midland, want the facility. "There's a great deal of interest for this in Andrews County," Bivins said. "I have yet to find a person in Andrews County who does not want to have the site located there." Andrews County residents are accustomed to dealing with natural gas because of the abundant oil and gas industry in that region, he said. "It reflects an impressive level of knowledge, ignoring the hysterical headlines and looking at the facts," Bivins said. "The disposal site can be done safely." The bill passed a Senate panel last week, and awaits approval by the entire Senate. ***************************************************************** 7 Guest Column: Don't waste energy with nuclear power argument Amarillo Globe-News: Opinion: By DAVID STEBBENS In his April 13 guest column, "Answer to energy crunch not blowing in the wind," nuclear engineer Raymond L. Ashley touted the advantages of nuclear power plants over wind power. I agree with his assertion that a wind generator's output is dependent on the vagaries of the wind. As a small-scale user of the wind and sun to produce my household electricity, I view the wind as "icing on my cake": a great adjunct to my system, but not a 24/7 energy source. However, Mr. Ashley cited the only negatives regarding a nuclear power plant as being its high front-end capital cost and the complex and lengthy application process. He left out another downside: those pesky spent fuel rods. It seems uranium-235 has a half-life of 24,000 years. That's just its half-life, mind you. That means it might be safe to be near the stuff after just a few hundred thousand years. To put it in perspective, we homo sapiens have been around just 50,000 years. Is it wise to make a material that remains a poison many times longer than we've existed as a species? The current method of disposing of nuclear wastes is to bury them in some economically depressed area where there aren't enough people to complain. The experts assure us these waste depositories are in geologically stable areas. Nobody predicted the earth tremors we experienced in Amarillo last summer. How can they guarantee the stability of an area over 400,000 years? Are there solutions to our pending energy crunch? Sort of: € Conserve. Don't use as much electricity. The federal government, belatedly, is implementing new standards for appliances over the next few years. You'll see higher sticker prices for refrigerators and washing machines, but they'll save you big-time over the life of the appliance. You can start conserving right now by using energy-efficient light bulbs, using a water-conserving showerhead, blanketing your high water heater with insulation, and adjusting your thermostat a little warmer in the summer and a little cooler in the winter. Conservation tips could fill a book. € Photovoltaics. These solar panels convert light into electricity. They have no moving parts and no maintenance. There is nothing to wear out and nothing to bury. Their peak output occurs on sunny days - when air-conditioning loads are highest. Current prices to generate this type of electricity are high, starting at about $3.50 per watt, but prices continue to drop. Several manufacturers offer units that produce 120 volts AC. At least one is UL-approved. Some folks have mounted these units on their roofs and in their back yards to supplement their use of grid-produced electricity. I'm surprised Southwestern Public Service hasn't told us more about this option. € Fuel cells. Essentially a continuously charged battery that uses hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity. Residential-sized units are the size of a refrigerator. They show great promise. Prices are still high - $3 per watt. Trials are being performed on large units at conventional power plants. € Wind energy. It works. It doesn't pollute. It produces energy when the wind blows. Every megawatt produced by the wind is one less megawatt that has to be produced by a coal/natural gas-fired generator or nuclear plant. There are no easy answers to our pending energy crunch. But unless the nuclear industry can find better ways to deal with nuclear waste, or come up with viable isotopes with a really short half-life, nuclear energy is saddled with too many liabilities and hidden costs. Mr. Ashley states in his column that "(nuclear) plants are safe and emit no pollutants into the atmosphere." There's no need to mention Three Mile Island or Chernobyl. I simply challenge Mr. Ashley to get a zoning variance to store a single ounce of uranium-235 in his back yard. David Stebbins is an Amarillo X-ray technician. On Deck: Claudia Stravato discusses the RU-486 pill in the Thursday Daily News. ***************************************************************** 8 'Mobile Chernobyl' Safety groups say congressman heading down wrong road with Zion reactor wastes By Ralph Zahorik STAFF WRITER ZION — A 20-foot-long barbell-shaped replica of a truckload of radioactive waste that could become a familiar sight in Lake County cruised city streets for about two hours Tuesday afternoon. Dubbed the "Mobile Chernobyl" by its builder, Kevin Kamps of the anti-nuclear energy Nuclear Information & Resource Service based in Washington — and festooned with slogans including "Mobile X-ray Machine That Can't be Turned Off" — it drew some double takes from motorists and pedestrians. The replica was designed to draw attention to the danger of hauling high-level radioactive waste across the country, Kamps said. The "Mobile Chernobyl" stopped at Zion, he said, because U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Wilmette, recently appeared in the city to call for moving radioactive waste stored in the closed Zion nuclear power plant to Yucca Mountain in Nevada. "We don't disagree with Kirk's urgency to remove nuclear waste from the community," said David Kraft, director of another anti-nuclear group, the Nuclear Energy Information Service in Evanston. "But we're saying, let's slow this down and take a look at it." If all spent nuclear waste is shipped to Nevada, more than 36,000 shipments will travel by truck and rail through Illinois, more than any state outside Nevada and Utah, Kraft said. If a truck loaded with four spent fuel rod assemblies got "stuck in traffic" for 40 minutes, nearby drivers would get a dose of radiation "equivalent to a chest X-ray," Kamps said. Troubling questions remain about the suitability of Yucca Mountain as a storage site, he said. "Geologically more promising sites" are in Virginia, North Carolina and New Hampshire," he said. "They were abandoned by the Department of Energy because of political opposition." Yucca Mountain is on Western Shoshone Indian land, said Kamps. Another site in Utah proposed for temporary high-level nuclear waste storage is on the Skull Valley Gashute Indian Reservation, he said. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Agency has said nuclear waste can be safely stored at reactor sites like Zion for up to 100 years, noted Kraft. The time should be used to develop better transport casks and finding a better permanent storage site than the Yucca Mountain site, he said. "Don't stampede people into this," he said. Kirk, speaking April 12 in Zion, said storing high-level nuclear waste along the shores of Lake Michigan, could threaten "the entire Great Lakes region" in 10 years. "If that's true, isn't it dangerous to continue producing nuclear waste on the Great Lakes?" asked Kraft. A total of 33 nuclear reactors are currently operating, and producing radioactive waste, on the Great Lakes he said. Kirk said he was "not advocating a nuclear future for the United States" and that he supported development of "renewable energy sources," including sun, water and wind power. The replica cask is based on the GA-4 cask designed by General Atomics and approved in 1998 by the Nuclear Regulatory Agency. The GA-4 cask, as designed by General Atomics, is about 16 feet long, built mainly of stainless steel and can transport up to four spent fuel assemblies from nuclear reactors. Cask production won't begin until an interim or permanent storage facility is approved by the Department of Energy and production "will take several years," the company has said. Some 2,226 bundles or assemblies of fuel rods are stored in the Zion power plant. At four bundles per load, it would take 557 truck loads to empty the Zion plant of its radioactive waste. There have been no recorded injuries or fatalities attributed to spent fuel in more than 3,000 shipments in the United States over the past 30 years, according to the NRC. A 1986 NRC-commissioned study estimated that about one accident in every 80 million shipment miles could cause cask damage that would be "significant enough to cause a radiological hazard that could equal or slightly exceed existing compliance values." The GA-4 replica was scheduled to take part in a protest at the Cook nuclear power plant in Bridgman, Mich., on Thursday, the 15th anniversary of the Soviet nuclear catastrophe. A dozen people were arrested outside the Cook plant in a demonstration last August. ***************************************************************** 9 State Approves License to Dump Nuke Waste as Site Continues to Leak EarthVision Environmental News* FORD, WA, April 25, 2001 - Dawn Watch, an environmental watchdog group whose mission is to collect, organize, and disseminate information Dawn Mining Company's reclamation of its defunct uranium mill in Washington state, is in favor of the implementation of a faster cleanup and reclamation process for the Dawn Uranium Millsite but does not feel that we can afford to ignore safety for the sake of cost cutting. It is the position of Dawn Watch that the State Department of Health ("DOH") has not given due consideration to the possible adverse impacts of the direct disposal of filtercake material in the existing mill tailings pond, which could be detrimental to clean up efforts. Dawn Watch is concerned that the existing liner is worn and will not provide adequate protection of the environment from the tailings. The liner was installed in the early 1980s and is composed of a synthetic material, which degrades with exposure to sunlight. Also, varies holes, cracks and failed seems have been in the liner noted throughout the years. DOH approved the license based on its annual visual inspection of the exposed portion of the liner. The DOH has refused to have any meaningful tests to determine the liner's integrity. Considering that the new material that is to be dumped into the tailings disposal area has twice the concentration of uranium, any weaknesses in the liner could lead to disastrous consequences. Remediation fails to meet water quality standards, nuclear contamination continues. For the past 10 years the mining company has been remediating uranium contamination in the groundwater emitting from the millsite through numerous underground seeps. This contamination enters Chamokane Creek a tributary of the Spokane-Columbia River system. Dawn Watch opposes an action by DOH that threatens further contamination to the site. Without further investigation into the integrity of the liner, the decision to approve the amendment is at best uninformed at best. In its attempt to speed up the closure process at the millsite, DOH and the mining company may have exposed Eastern Washington to a real threat of further radioactive contamination. Submitted By: Dawn Watch ***************************************************************** 10 Nuclear industry was its own worst enemy *Wednesday, April 25, 2001* By BILL VIRGIN SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER COLUMNIST The West Coast energy mess hasn't been a lot of fun for a lot of people, but it does have one group jazzed -- nuclear-power advocates. For two decades, nuclear power, on the list of possible energy sources for the Northwest, has ranked only slightly below the idea of building a wood-fired generating plant, fueled by trees cut down in Mount Rainier National Park. But as the nation looks for new generating capacity, the nuke enthusiasts believe their time has returned. "Hey, we're still here," they jump up and down, waving their arms. "We've changed. We're not the same. We can do it. Pick me! Pick me!" Sorry, guys. While experience in journalism teaches never to dismiss the possibility of something happening, were I a bookmaker, I would assign odds to the possibility of a new nuclear plant being built in the Northwest as being slightly longer than those of clearing out the downtown Seattle Nordstrom store and converting it to an electric generating plant powered by 6,000 hamster wheels. And no, it has nothing to do with the usual crowd of no-nukes or environmentalists or neo-Luddites. They didn't kill the nuclear-power industry, much as they might like to believe they did. The nuclear-power industry killed the nuclear-power industry. It accomplished that feat by promising power that would be, in the now immortal phrase, "too cheap to meter," then delivering power that required two dozen meters and an army of accountants to price, power produced at hideously expensive plants with spotty reliability records. The most scathing indictment of the nuclear-power industry ever written came not from some lefty tree-hugging rag but from Forbes magazine. In his famous 1985 cover story "Nuclear follies," writer James Cook declared that "the U.S. nuclear-power program ranks as the largest managerial disaster in business history." Still, the nuclear advocates shouldn't feel too bad. Their industry continues to serve a useful purpose, as a prime example of an enduring American economic phenomenon: the business or industry that is its own worst enemy. Businesses often cite competition or imports or government regulation for their troubles (some releases from failing dot-com companies suggest they did everything right; it was the market's fault not to recognize the inherent brilliance of their idea), when in fact a good place to look for the cause is in the mirror. I know something about this phenomenon. For 23 years I have worked in an industry, American newspapers, that has repeatedly and continually tried to do itself in, so far unsuccessfully. The industry will tell you that whatever problems it has are because of a succession of competitive information channels (radio, television, the Internet) and changing habits of its audience. In fact, at least as much blame can be assigned to a series of dunderheaded moves, including trying to make newspapers into a pale imitation of television with short, fluffy news (consumers reasonably decided to go with the real thing), ignoring community news (while community papers continued to thrive on what was mockingly dismissed as "chicken-dinner news") or raising prices while cutting the amount of news or even killing entire papers, all while telling readers it's for their own good. And yet, miraculously, readers still keep reading newspapers, no thanks to us. The reason may be that ink on paper is such a basic and compelling communication medium that even we can't completely screw it up, try as we might. But heck, why be so hard on ourselves? We've got plenty of company. American automakers. Automobile retailing. Railroads. Banks. Cable-television companies. Each has a rich history of not knowing or not caring about the way they try to run off their customers. For some businesses, it doesn't matter that they do. Travelers are forever griping about the airlines and lost baggage, guess-the-price fare schemes, strange food, cramped seats and overbooked flights. But if you want to get from coast to coast in a day, what choice do you have? Woe unto those businesses for which an alternative is developed, or government deregulation opens its once-closed industry to competition, or consumer tastes change. Such businesses find they have little cushion of consumer good will upon which they can draw to carry them through a transition. Such a cushion probably wouldn't do many of them much good, anyway; so accustomed are these own-worst-enemy businesses to having customers who endure whatever abuse they dish out, they're probably not equipped to make the necessary changes to deal with the new realities of competition and the market. Yet even if they richly deserve a demise, many of those same businesses will survive. For all the talk of the business world ruthlessly weeding out the weak performers, it's striking how long companies can get by on mediocrity and customer lethargy. Not that I'm advocating such a strategy as a low-effort approach to business survival. The best you can hope for is long and steady decline. The worst you can expect? That even the most patient, long-suffering, put-upon customers finally say "enough" to bad service or, as in the case of the nukes, wasting billions of their dollars, and put an end to their misery and your business. You can get away with a lot in America, but even in this country, there are some things up with which people will not put. *P-I reporter Bill Virgin can be reached at 206-448-8319 or billvirgin@seattle-pi.com. His column appears Mondays and Wednesdays.* ***************************************************************** 11 State, plant operators disagree over decommissioning plan By Diane Scarponi, Associated Press, 4/24/2001 16:19 CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) The operators of Connecticut Yankee clashed with the state and an anti-nuclear group Tuesday over the plans to decommission and clean up the nuclear power plant site. The state Department of Public Utility Control and the Citizen's Awareness Network claim that Connecticut Yankee's plan to disassemble the plant and restore the site is not specific enough. The plant's operators said their plan meets all regulatory requirements. The Atomic Safety and Licensing Board of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission must decide if any issues raised by the state and the anti-nuclear group deserve full hearings. The arguments Tuesday before the three-judge board focused on legal issues of the licensing, decommissioning and cleanup process for the Haddam Neck plant. These legal issues, however, could determine how much the public is informed about cleanup procedures and efforts to prevent contaminated soil and water from leaving the site and polluting other areas, critics said. ''There must be a level of detail in these plans, to allow an evaluation of whether these plans are adequate to protect public health and safety,'' said Randall Speck, a lawyer for the DPUC. Connecticut Yankee's lawyer, Robert Gad, said details for specific work must be developed as engineers go through the decommissioning and cleanup process over several years. Any specific procedures that are written today could be meaningless later, when the work actually has to get done, he said. Also, in many cases, workers will use procedures that already have been approved for the regular day-to-day running of the plant, Gad said. The state and the Citizen's Awareness Network also want the board to require Connecticut Yankee to do a historical report of contamination of the entire site, because radioactive material including concrete blocks and wood has been mishandled in the past. ''Connecticut Yankee has a history of losing control of their radiological materials,'' said Rosemary Bassilakis, a member of the anti-nuclear group. Gad and lawyers from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission agreed such a historical report is not required under regulations. Connecticut Yankee operators would like to clean up one section of the plant's property at a time, so that some of the land can be used to build a gas-burning power plant. Critics of this plan said it could lead to recontamination, if soil or water from a contaminated part of the property were to travel to the cleaned-up part. The plant was first issued a license in 1967. It was shut down in 1996, 11 years ahead of its license schedule, amid safety concerns. Plant operators decided the reactor was too costly to keep running. Decommissioning, cleanup and fuel storage is expected to cost $500 million and take seven years. The plant is owned by several New England utilities, under the name Connecticut Yankee Atomic Power Co., with the largest portion owned by Northeast Utilities of Berlin. [Boston Globe Online ***************************************************************** 12 Filters Appear To Be Fighting Uranium April 24 09:22 PM EDT Two experimental filters appear to be working in the fight against uranium-contaminated water in southern Greenville County, officials said Tuesday. Culligan installed a filter in one home in the Jenkins Bridge Road area on April 19. That neighborhood has been affected by high levels of uranium in their drinking water. After the first run of tests, the uranium and radon that was also found in the water dropped to safe levels. Tests on another less expensive filter show that uranium levels dropped, but radon levels remained higher than government recommendations. State environmental testers said that they want many more tests conducted before they'll recommend the $5,000 Culligan filter. Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! and . ***************************************************************** 13 Editorial: 'Bias' isn't part of his vocabulary April 25, 2001 Nevadans were left shaking their heads in disbelief after the U.S. Department of Energy's inspector general asserted Monday that there was no evidence to "substantiate the concern that bias compromised the integrity of the site evaluation process" on the Yucca Mountain Project. After all, from its very inception, it has been clear that the Yucca Mountain Project has been imbued with a bias that a repository should be built in Nevada. Considerable scientific evidence has been ignored that shows how dangerous it would be to store 77,000 tons of high-level nuclear waste just 90 miles from Las Vegas. The inspector general investigation was sought last year by then-Energy Secretary Bill Richardson and U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev. The probe was prompted after the Sun reported that a DOE subcontractor, in a two-page memo that accompanied a 60-page draft overview on the Yucca Mountain Project, concluded that Yucca Mountain was safe to store radioactive waste. This obviously demonstrated bias since the DOE wasn't supposed to have formed an opinion before the scientific studies had been completed. Inspector General Gregory Friedman may not have been able to bring himself to use the word "bias" in describing the DOE contractor's activities, but it sure sounds like that is what he found. Friedman noted that the DOE contractor had been "inappropriately advocating a position" that Yucca Mountain would be suitable. Friedman defended the department, however, saying that its officials had told the contractor the language used was inappropriate. What's missing from the inspector general's report, though, is an acknowledgement that since the DOE relies so heavily on outside contractors to run its programs, as is the case with Yucca Mountain, genuine oversight is virtually nonexistent. So when Friedman writes that the department objected, it really was a meaningless gesture because it's not minding the store in the first place. Another disturbing piece of information is that one witness told the inspector general that the DOE has not created incentives to "rock the boat." The witness said that while the DOE "has changed assumptions when provided supporting data, two factors must be true before assumptions will be changed: (1) the evidence must be unambiguous, and (2) the resulting change cannot threaten the program." In other words, "showstoppers" that question Yucca Mountain's suitability are swept under the rug. This appalling attitude shows that the Yucca Mountain Project has nothing to do with science. Meanwhile, it should be noted that the inspector general's investigation was severely restricted -- the probe did not assess the validity of the technical and scientific review of Yucca Mountain's suitability. So the Yucca Mountain Project's inept performance to date wasn't p ursued, which offers little comfort to Nevadans. A problem with the federal government's advocacy of a single national repository to handle this deadly waste all along has been its haste, which is an excellent example of bias. Don't forget that at one time three states were under consideration -- Nevada, Texas and Washington state. Then in 1987 political pressure led Congress to remove the latter two states from the list, leaving only Nevada to be studied. So much for objectivity. The DOE knows where Congress stands on nuclear waste storage, and the department has done everything in its power to please its master that holds its purse strings. In this case it means running a slipshod review that the department tries to pass off as a scientific inquiry. It is disheartening that the inspector general didn't see through this ruse as others already have. All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc. ***************************************************************** 14 USEC Inc. adopts shareholder rights plan Yahoo - Tuesday April 24, 5:45 pm Eastern Time BETHESDA, Md., April 24 (Reuters) - Enriched uranium maker USEC Inc. (NYSE:USU - news) on Tuesday said its board adopted a shareholder rights plan designed to fend off any unwanted takeover bids. The Maryland-based company, which earlier this month said it would cut 526 jobs at a gaseous diffusion plant, said the plan is not in response to any known effort to acquire the company. Many companies adopt shareholder rights plans, often called ``poison pills,'' as a way to defend against unsolicited takeovers. Under USEC's plan, one right will be distributed as a dividend for each share of common stock held by shareholders of record as of the close of business on May 9, the company said. The rights will expire on May 9, 2011, it added. The rights generally will be exercisable only if a person or group acquires beneficial ownership of 15 percent or more of the company's common stock, USEC said. Once exercised, each right will entitle shareholders to buy shares of common stock at a 50 percent discount to the market, the company said. Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy ***************************************************************** 15 Uranium Institute News Briefing 01.17 | 18 - 24 April 2001 A weekly summary of international news relevant to uranium and the nuclear energy industry. [NB01.17-1] Japan: The president of JCO, Tomoyuki Inami, has pleaded guilty on behalf of the company for the accident at the Tokaimura uranium processing plant. Six staff in total pleaded guilty to breaching nuclear reactor regulations at the initial hearing at the Mito District Court in Ibaraki Prefecture. *(Financial Times Online, 23 April; see also News Briefing 00.45-6)* [NB01.17-2] Taiwan: The official report into the loss of off-site power at Taiwan’s Maanshan nuclear power plant has stated that the overall response of personnel was appropriate but highlights room for improvement in other areas. Taiwan’s Atomic Energy Council (AEC) ordered both staff and independent investigation teams to look into the incident. The report into the most notable event in 22 years of nuclear power generation in Taiwan noted that no radioactive release or environmental impact was observed throughout the whole duration of the incident. *(NucNet News 138/01, 19 April; see also News Briefing 01.13-15)* [NB01.17-3] A team of French doctors who work with ionising radiation have said that it is vital that the public get a true picture of the health effects of the Chernobyl accident. Exaggerated accounts of the incident is affecting public health with patients refusing treatments and panic over a rise in thyroid cancer in France which could not be linked to Chernobyl. They cited a growing radiation phobia after the introduction of the 1997 Euratom directive on protection of patients against ionising radiation as fuelling public fears of possibly life saving therapies. *(Nucleonics Week, 12 April, p1) * [NB01.17-4] Japan: The governor of Yamaguchi province, Sekinari Nii, has agreed in principle to a plan to build a nuclear power plant at Kaminoseki Prefecture. *(Kyodo News Online, 23 April; see also News Briefing 01.07-2)* [NB01.17-5] The Russian lower parliament, the Duma, has passed the second reading of a bill that will allow the country to receive spent fuel imports from other countries for storage and reprocessing. Atomic Energy Minister Alexander Rumyantsev told the Duma that Russia had good reprocessing technology and could generate US$20 billion from the programme. *(Nuclear Market Review, 20 April, p2; see also News Briefing 01.15-5)* In an interview with NucNet Alexander Rumyantsev stressed the social benefits of Russia’s nuclear programme both for the people of Russia and in generating funds to clear up environmental problems associated with previous defence activities. *(NucNet Background No.4-A, 24 April)* [NB01.17-6] Ukraine: Vlamir Asmolov of the Kurchatov Nuclear Institute has put the cost of a new sarcophagus for the entombed nuclear reactor at Chernobyl at between US$1.5 and US$2.5 billion. He added that there had been no radiation leaks since 1986 with the original structure. Mr. Asmolov who helped build the original sarcophagus was responding to questions about the safety of the structure. *(Agencie France Press, 23 April)* [NB01.17-7] Canada: Total reserves of uranium at the McArthur River are more than 400 million pounds of U3O8 (153 857 tu) and the average ore yield 21 per cent according to Bernard Michel the chairman of Cameco Corporation. This is a further increase on the revised estimates of May 2000. *(Nuclear Canada, 23 April, p1; see also News Briefing 01.05-8)* [NB01.17-8] South Africa: Preliminary reports for the uranium mining industry show an increase of 10% in production levels for the first quarter of 2001 over the equivalent period the previous year. *(FreshFuel, 23 April, p4*) [NB01.17-9] Energy Resources of Australia Ltd (ERA) have made a profit after tax of US$0.706 million whilst production has increased slightly to 1278 tonnes (1083 tu) for the first quarter of 2001. *(Energy Resources of Australia, 24 April)* [NB01.17-10] The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has approved the transfer of the operating authority for the Palisades Nuclear Power Plant from Consumers Energy Company to Nuclear Management Company. *(NRC, 20 April; see also News Briefing 00.45-7) * [NB01.17-11] US: The Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corporation has formally announced the auction of the generation assets of the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. The investment banking firm of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co are to conduct the auction sale process. *(Nuclear Market Review, 20 April, p3; see also News Briefing 01.12-17)* [NB01.17-12] US: Edison International, the parent company of Southern California Edison (SCE), has announced a loss of US$1.9 billion for the year 2000. The company has been hit by the state-set electricity rates in California however the sale of its transmission system to the state of California could offset these losses. *(Nucleonics Week, 16 April, p2; see also News Briefing 01.15-4) * [NB01.17-13] Sweden: The closure of the Barseback-2 nuclear power plant may possibly be put back as the government there wrestles with the problems of global warming and electricity demand. The Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson said that the plant, scheduled for closure in 2003, would only be shut down when firm replacement sources of electricity had been found. *(FreshFuel, 23 April, p4; see also News Briefing 00.40-1)* [NB01.17-14] Germany: A shipment of spent nuclear fuel has begun its journey from Germany for the reprocessing plant at Sellafield in the UK. The fuel from Neckarwestheim has left the power plant on board trucks and will be joined by more from the Biblis nuclear power plant before continuing the journey by rail and sea. A total of five flasks will make up the transport which will travel by train to Dunkirk ready for shipment across the channel. *(BBC News Online, 24 April; see also News Briefing 01.16-17) * [NB01.17-15] The US Department of Energy has committed an additional US$5 million for uranium deposit remediation work at the Portsmouth gaseous diffusion plant. This is in addition to the US$125.7 million announced in March 2001. *(FreshFuel, 23 April, p3; see also News Briefing 01.10-10)* [NB01.17-16] The French Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) has warned that six of the installations of the Atomic Energy Commission’s Cadarache site are incapable of withstanding earthquakes and should be closed down. The installations are used for research purposes and in the production of mixed oxide (MOX) fuel. *(SpentFuel, 23 April, p3; see also News Briefing 00.32-14) * [NB01.17-17] US Department of Energy (DOE) has proposed a budget of US$445 million for the country’s used nuclear fuel programme and US$223 million for nuclear energy, science and technology. Congress is to consider the requests which represent a rise of 14% in the used fuel programme and a cut of 9% in spending on nuclear energy, science and technology over the 2001 budget. The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has also put in a request for an increased budget of US$25.8 million to US$513 million for the year 2002. *(NucNet News, 135/01 and 136/01,18 April) * [NB01.17-18] US: General Electric (GE) is demanding US$50 million in compensation from Taiwan Power for losses incurred when construction of the Lungmen nuclear power plant was stalled. GE was contracted to provide two reactors and construct fuel-related facilities for the plant. *(Ux Weekly, 23 April, p4; see also News Briefing 01.08-1)* [NB01.17-19] The European Union plans to press ahead with the ratification of the Kyoto treaty even if the United States pulls out of the process. At a meeting of 40 environment ministers in New York some compromises were offered to the US including the use of forests as carbon sinks which soak up carbon dioxide and thereby reduce totals emitted. Jan Prank the environment minister for the Nederland’s declared however that all parties bar the US were agreed in supporting the Kyoto agreement. This includes Australia who previously had seen to be supporting the US position. *(BBC News Online, 22 April; see also News Briefings 01.16-20) * [NB01.17-20] The European Nuclear Society (ENS) has announced the appointment of Stephen Pernau as the organisation’s new secretary general. *(NucNet Insider, No 5/01, 18 April)* The World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO) Toyko centre has elected V K Chatuurvedi of the Nuclear Power Corporation of India (NPCIL) as chairman of its governing council. (NucNet Insider, No 6/01, 18 April) Yuri Nedashkovsky has been appointed ‘executive president’ of Ukraine’s state-owned nuclear utility EnergoAtom thus ending the situation where EnergoAtom had two ‘presidents’, Mr. Nedashkovsky and Mr. Nur Nigmatullin. Mr. Nigmatullin is state operator of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants while retaining his role as deputy fuel and energy minister. *(NucNet Business News, No 38/01, 19 April; see also News Briefing 01.06-16)* Previous News Briefing NB01.16 *Prepared by the Uranium Institute Information Service. All news and views are those of the publications cited.* ***************************************************************** 16 Japan's Prince Hitachi Visits Panama; Protests About Ship Wednesday, April 25 11:10 AM SGT PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP)--Prince Hitachi, brother of Japanese Emperor Akihito, and his wife Princess Hanako were given the keys to Panama City Tuesday. A few blocks away, demonstrators protested against the passage of Japanese ship carrying radioactive cargo through the Panama Canal. The protests apparently weren't visible from the city hall where the princes were honored during the second day of their three-day visit to Panama. "The princes are welcome, ships with plutonium are not," read a sign carried by one of the handful of local environmentalists who participated in the protest. Last week, the ship Pacific Swan carried a load of radioactive material from Japan through the canal on its way for treatment in Britain. Environmentalists say they are concerned about the possibility of leaks and spills from such shipments. Prince Hitachi and Princess Hanako arrived in Panama Sunday, are to attend a state dinner with President Mireya Moscoso Tuesday night and leave the country Wednesday. Copyright © 1994-2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 17 Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Hot house Hot house When police raided Alfonso Sandoval's house, their Geiger counters went mad. But what was a Colombian doing with £1m worth of uranium? Had it come from the former Soviet Union? And where was it heading next? By Ian Traynor in Moscow and Steven Dudley in Bogota Wednesday April 25, 2001 The Guardian On a warm Friday afternoon last month, six Colombian secret policemen, along with members of the prosecutor general's office and various geologists, knocked on the door of Alfonso Sandoval. Although located in a posh western suburb of Bogota and close to the US embassy, Sandoval's house showed signs of ageing. The walls were coming apart and the paint was chipping. The agents had been closely following Sandoval for two months and believed they had gathered enough evidence to search for illegal substances in his home. The unassuming-looking Sandoval let in the agents who scoured the first and second floors. Just beyond the kitchen in a back room they found a computer, a spectrometer for measuring the purity of radioactive elements, and two lead canisters with 600 grams of highly concentrated uranium. The geologists' Geiger counters immediately showed heavy signs of radiation. The house was severely contaminated. The FBI was alerted. And Sandoval instantly fell under suspicion of being at the centre of a new and lethal international smuggling ring ultimately aimed at flogging a nuclear warhead, or the wherewithal to make one, to any unsavoury regime or dictator. Sandoval's uranium was not weapons-grade, at least not yet. But it was much more highly enriched than the material used in civilian nuclear energy generation and was roughly of the degree of enrichment used to fuel Russia's ageing fleet of nuclear submarines - around 66% pure. The Colombian authorities estimated the local market value of the 600 grams at just over £1m. The files on Sandoval's computer revealed detailed information on uranium enrichment processes. The Colombian investigators believe that Sandoval was engaged, however implausibly, in a high-risk, home-grown uranium enrichment exercise. That scenario is scorned by the experts who point out that enriching uranium is an extraordinarily intensive and complex process. They add that Saddam Hussein, with limitless funds, has spent 10 years trying and failing to produce weapons-grade uranium using the rudimentary techniques employed by the US in the Manhattan Project in the 1940s. So what was Sandoval up to? And where did the uranium come from? Given the assumed links between Russian and Ukrainian mafias and Colombian drugs cartels, speculation about the origins of the nuclear pellets is focusing on the huge and chaotic nuclear industries of the former Soviet Union, although in the decade since the communist behemoth collapsed there has been only one significant confirmed case of weapons-grade fissile material being smuggled west and sold. Interestingly, that case also bore Colombian and Russian fingerprints. "The uranium could be of Russian origin," says David Kyd, spokesman for the International Atomic Energy Authority (IAEA) in Vienna. "But you would need detailed laboratory analysis and a number of days before you would be able to find a signature." Weapons-grade uranium is 95% enriched, while the stuff used in nuclear power stations is 2%-3% enriched. The 66% enrichment, says Kyd, is "bizarre". Given the corrupt and impoverished condition of the Russian nuclear and military industries, there is no doubt that through the past decade, Russian boffins have been selling the secrets of their arcane trade to the highest bidders, whether in Iraq, North Korea, or Libya, despite US aid programmes aimed at securing Russian scientists' salaries, safely disposing of weapons-grade uranium and plutonium, and de-nuclearising other parts of the former Soviet Union. Filching and smuggling of low-level radioactive materials, however, is rife in Russia. "There have been repeated attempts to take radioactive metals to Finland this year," admits Dmitriy Kokko, an officer with the customs service in north-west Russia. "Cases of smuggling or accidental export are taking place all the time." A St Petersburg conference two weeks ago was told that there had been 500 attempted cases of radioactive materials being smuggled out last year alone. But most of these cases entail relatively low-risk isotopes, metal being sold for scrap in the west, or materials stolen from medical laboratories. Innocent people may get sick from this, but it does not have the makings of a nuclear bomb. In a typical week earlier this month, a container of radioactive isotopes was stolen from an aluminium plant in Ukraine and offered for sale, while two sailors in Russia's Pacific fleet were arrested in Vladivostok after trying to sell parts taken from a naval nuclear installation. "You can only get the highly enriched uranium and the plutonium at a few closed centres in Russia and we don't get reports of this being stolen," says Igor Kudrik, a Russian expert at the Bellona nuclear watchdog in Norway. "But the situation is very serious. The Russians don't report thefts of fissile materials, but three or four times a year it emerges that someone has been arrested for stealing fissile materials. We're never told what happened to the material." Apart from not being of the required degree of enrichment to make a bomb, the Sandoval uranium stash was also very small - just over half a kilo - experts say you need 25 kilos to make a bomb. Nuclear weapons can be made from two types of radioactive material - enriched uranium and plutonium. Natural uranium contains two kinds of atoms, U-233 and a tiny amount of U-235, which is radioactive - that is, it decays, giving off energy and particles. Sometimes, the decaying U-235 atom will turn a U-233 atom into another U-235 atom. If the concentration of U-235 reaches a high enough level, it can produce new U-235 faster than it decays. If uranium is enriched so that U-235 reaches 2-3%, it can generate enough energy for nuclear power. If it reaches 95%, and there is enough uranium in the first place, there will be a nuclear explosion. Plutonium, which does not exist naturally, works in the same way, but with a different set of atoms. The most notorious case of nuclear smuggling from the former Soviet Union entailed plutonium. In 1994, a Colombian, Justitiano Torres Benitez, was arrested at Munich airport after arriving on a flight from Moscow carrying 340g of plutonium. Together with two Spanish middlemen, he was jailed in 1995. He got just under five years. He should be out by now. Yet that case illustrated all the ambiguities of the shadowy world of nuclear smuggling, with spies, counter-spies, journalists and double agents pursuing crooks, fraudsters, scientists, businessmen and buyers, with nobody sure what game is really being played. The nuclear material in Torres' case really did come from Russia. Alarming. But the buyer, and to many the instigator of the entire crooked sting, was the German state, in the form of the German Federal Intelligence Service. Had a German undercover agent not offered the men £170m for enough plutonium to make a bomb, the defence argued convincingly, the shipment would never have taken place. The Germans were embarrassed. The Russian were incandescent. There has never been evidence to suggest that any of the nuclear warheads in the former Soviet bloc have gone missing or been sold off. Former Warsaw Pact countries such as Hungary or Poland never had control over the warheads on their territory, which have long since been withdrawn; Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus have all renounced the warheads on their territory, and these have, it seems, been accounted for and returned to Russia. That still leaves a grey area in Russia itself, where, behind their security screens, the 10 closed cities involved in nuclear weapons production have become hotbeds of entrepreneurship. No unauthorised visitors are supposed to go there. But they do. A few years ago Victor Osipov, director of a technology park in the closed plutonium-making city of Seversk, told the Guardian: "There are 5,500 small businesses registered in the town - but only about 1,000 pay taxes. There's a strong core of entrepreneurs who would be capable of starting a whole nuclear industry from scratch." And a further part of the problem is that no one really knows how much bomb-grade material exists in Russia. For several years now the US department of energy has been funding a programme to track and trace all the uranium and plutonium across Russia. The result so far is inconclusive. The inventory is not complete, meaning it is harder to establish the facts if and when some of the stuff goes missing. And among the experts, the fear is now that the new and hard-nosed Bush administration in Washington will cut back on such aid programmes which, in any case, are humiliating to the Russian atomic lobby, once the Soviet elite. President Bill Clinton and his energy secretary, Bill Richardson, viewed the nuclear containment aid to Russia as a US national security priority. "Under Spencer Abraham [Bush's new energy secretary] those programmes will be whittled back," says Kyd of the IAEA. Sandoval in his backyard bomb factory, meanwhile, seems an unlikely lynchpin of a new international syndicate trafficking in the nuclear nightmare. For a wannabe boffin with an atomic absorption spectrometer, he has no formal education and, at the time of the raid, he was recovering from open-heart surgery, though he has admitted to having spent time in Russia. He was also arrested in Spain in the early 1980s on charges of drug trafficking but released shortly after. Government investigators are still monitoring Sandoval's possible associates, but have yet to link any of the other illicit networks with the one that may have brought the uranium to Colombia. While there are natural deposits in uranium in Colombia, there are no uranium mines. If convicted, Sandoval could face between three and eight years of prison. But Colombian law is very vague about the crime in question, and Sandoval has been released while the investigation proceeds in the prosecutor general's office. Authorities say they released him because he could aggravate a heart condition he has if left in jail. Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited ***************************************************************** 18 Nuclear plant fully operational again The Taipei Times Online: 2001-04-25 Wednesday, April 25th, 2001 TECHNICAL GLITCH: One of the two generators of a nuclear plant in Kenting, which had to be shut down after an electrical fire in its circuitry, is to be restarted more than a month after the incident By Chiu Yu-tzu STAFF REPORTER One of two electricity generators at a nuclear power plant in southern Taiwan, forced to close by a fire in mid-March, is ready to be put back into service, officials at the plant said yesterday. Officials at Kenting's Third Nuclear Power Plant (®Ö¤T¼t), run by the Taiwan Power Company (Taipower, ¥x¹q), said that the No. 2 electricity generator and peripheral facilities are ready to resume operations after passing a series of tests. Chen Pu-tsan (³¯¥¬Àé), deputy station manager of the plant, said that the Atomic Energy Council (AEC) approved the proposal to restart the generator last week. "We will restart the No. 2 generator immediately after receiving notification of the AEC's approval," Chen said, adding that afterwards the plant would supply 9,510 megawatts of electricity daily. The plant has stopped supplying electricity since March 17 when two electricity generators at the plant were closed after an electricity transmission malfunction, apparently triggered by the accumulation of salt crystals on transmission lines. Sudden short circuits occurred on four electricity transmission lines connecting the power plant and two high voltage towers at Ta-peng (¤jÄP) and Lungchi (Às±T). At the time Taipower officials said that the short circuits could be attributed to a failure to remove the salty particles stuck on electricity transmission lines. The generators are used to produce electricity for part of the process of cooling the plant's nuclear reactors. A day after the short circuit, a fire erupted when operators tried to use diesel-powered generators to bring the No.1 electricity generator back on line. The emergency measure unfortunately caused two breakers, commonly known as switchers, to malfunction. The mechanical malfunction increased the temperature on the circuit and soon heavy smoke damaged more than 100 breakers, officials said at the time of the accident. Chen said that repairs on the first electricity generator and related facilities would be finished by the end of this week. "A series of tests scheduled to be carried out next week will be crucial to the AEC's decision on the generator's return to service," Chen said. Chen said that the electrical engineering systems had been re-checked after the fire. Since the accident took place environmentalists have been turning up the pressure on Taipower, accusing the state-run firm of lax management. They claim that the design of electrical systems at the plant was inadequate and that the AEC was unaware of the systems' weaknesses. Anti-nuclear activists from the Taiwan Environmental Protection Union (¥xÆWÀô«OÁp·ù) have queried the results of a report released on April 11 by the Executive Yuan, which attributed the damage of the breakers to insulation tubes of the circuit breakers burning out. This story has been viewed 304 times. URL=[http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/2001/04/25/story/0000083087] Copyright © 1999-2001 The Taipei Times. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 19 Consultant to advise on delayed nuclear fuel plant April 24, 06:01 PM LONDON (Reuters) - The Government has appointed independent consultants to assess whether there is an economic case for opening a controversial nuclear fuel plant built by state-owned British Nuclear Fuels. "Consultants Arthur D Little will report in around seven weeks," a spokesman for the Department of Environment, Transport and the Regions (DETR) said on Tuesday. The 460-million-pound Sellafield Mox Plant (SMP) has lain idle since completion in 1997 because it has been unable to secure regulatory approval to start up. "Once the report has been completed the Secretary of State for the DETR and the Secretary of State for Health will decide whether there is enough information to make a decision (on giving the green light to SMP) or whether they need more information," the DETR spokesman said. "The decision will take several weeks." The government has consistently refused to grant a full operating licence because of fears the mixed oxide fuel, a combination of plutonium and uranium, will have trouble finding buyers following a scandal nearly two years ago. In late 1999 BNFL's Mox fuel created an international furore after revelations that quality control data on a batch of fuel sent to Japan had been falsified. The fuel at the centre of the storm was manufactured at BNFL's Mox demonstration facility and not SMP. Despite attempts by the company and senior government officials to reassure customers the fuel was not dangerous, two key customers, Japan and Germany placed import bans on BNLF Mox fuel raising questions about the size of future export markets. Critics of Mox, including environmental group Greenpeace, say the fuel, which is more more expensive than uranium and requires modifications to most reactors before it can be burnt, has no real market. Greenpeace argues that Mox is merely a vehicle by which BNFL repatriates to its overseas customers the plutonium created when the company reprocesses foreign spent nuclear fuel. Before the SMP is allowed to start up it needs to pass a test of justification required by European law proving that the benefits of a practice involving ionising radiation outweigh any environmental impact. Copyright © 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or ***************************************************************** 20 Temelin Opponents Say More Fuel to Arrive in Temelin Soon Czech Today on Central Europe Online - Czech Today - LINZ / TEMELIN, South Bohemia, Apr 24, 2001 -- (CTK - Czech News Agency) The Upper Austrian opponents of the Czech nuclear power plant at Temelin claim that more fuel is likely to be shipped soon to Temelin, the APA agency said today. Referring to the spokesman for the Upper Austrian platform against the atomic danger Josef Puehringer and head of the Greens in the Upper Austrian land assembly Rudi Anschober, APA said that the next supply of fuel to Temelin is expected in the next few days. A train transporting nuclear fuel for Temelin arrived secretly on Sunday afternoon in Temelin and the secrecy was strongly criticized by environmentalists as well as municipalities along the route who said they should have been told. Temelin spokesman Milan Nebesar today told CTK that he cannot comment on the allegations concerning a further transport of fuel. "The route, the timing, and the quantity of the fuel are all state secrets," Nebesar said. The new supply should arrive from the Polish port of Sczeczin and will again be secret which Puehringer criticized. Anschober said the supplies should be stopped, APA wrote. The very first fuel arrived in Temelin on May 21, 1997. The Temelin reactor contains about 81 tons of uranium, of which about 3 kilograms are split daily. *((c) 2001 CTK - Czech News Agency)* News Headlines Top Stories Business News + Renewed Austrian Protests Over Czech Nuclear Plant 28 Apr 2001 10:32 GMT + NATO Summit in Prague to Take Place on November 21-22, 2002 28 Apr 2001 15:16 GMT + Three out of Eight Planned May Day Events Banned 28 Apr 2001 15:16 GMT + Anti-Temelin Blockade of Wullowitz Crossing Ends 28 Apr 2001 15:16 GMT + Austrian Environment Minister Unhappy About Prague's Temelin Note 28 Apr 2001 15:16 GMT ***************************************************************** 21 Tour spurs support for Yucca site [Las Vegas Review-Journal] Wednesday, April 25, 2001 Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ELKO -- Several Elko County officials who visited the Yucca Mountain site on a tour organized by the local Navy League came away impressed and supportive of plans to build a nuclear waste dump there. Elko County Commissioner Mike Nannini and university system Regent Dorothy Gallagher are among those who toured the site last week and want to see it activated. Ralph McMullen, executive director of the Elko Convention and Visitor's Authority, and Bill Nisbet, an authority board member, also support the proposed high-level waste site about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. "I have confidence in what I saw," Nisbet told the Elko Daily Free Press. He said he feels comfortable with the safety precautions being taken at the Yucca site. Nisbet helped organize the tour as president of the local chapter of the Navy League, a group supporting the interests of the Marine Corps, Navy, Coast Guard and Merchant Marine. Many modern Navy ships and submarines use nuclear power. This story is located at: http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Apr-25-Wed-2001/news/15946537.html ***************************************************************** 22 Anti-nuclear activists try to stop Sellafield cargo ireland.com - The Irish Times - WORLD April 25, 2001 By Derek Scally, in Berlin GERMANY: Five containers of radioactive nuclear waste began their surface trip to the Sellafield reprocessing plant in Cumbria yesterday amid protests from German anti-nuclear activists. Police detained over 50 demonstrators who blocked the road from the Neckarwestheim nuclear plant in southern Germany in an attempt to halt this latest shipment. It is the second shipment of nuclear waste in recent weeks and the first shipment to Britain in three years. Yesterday's protests were lowkey in comparison to the running battles that accompanied the shipment of waste from France to Germany earlier this month. "This shipment will have serious effects on the environment. Sellafield is the biggest environmental hazard in western Europe", said Mr Veit Bürger, an energy spokesman for Greenpeace. Over 2,500 police officers were on hand yesterday to remove the 70 demonstrators staging a sit-in on the road near the nuclear plant, and the transport got underway after an hour's delay. This shipment, along with waste from another plant, will be brought to the German town of Wörth today and then on to Dunkirk in France. Authorities expect the shipment to reach Sellafield next week. Protests against this latest shipment began on Monday when a dozen protesters chained themselves to railway tracks. They have vowed to further disrupt the shipment, in Germany and Britain, to make future cargoes prohibitively expensive. Shipments of nuclear waste were suspended in Germany in 1998 after concerns were raised about radioactive leaks. The resumption of shipments has divided public opinion in Germany. Anti-nuclear activists accuse the Environment Minister and Green Party member, Mr Jürgen Trittin, who supported the last protests in 1998, of selling out. Mr Trittin says Germany has a moral duty to be responsible for its own nuclear waste. The resumption of transports also form part of an agreement to phase out Germany's 19 nuclear reactors by 2025. Germany has no facilities for reprocessing nuclear waste and must export waste for treatment to France and Britain. The suspension of waste transports in 1998 has caused huge problems for the nuclear plant operators who have little storage space for the highly dangerous waste. "We have a huge backlog of waste here. To clear that, we have to ship around 128 tonnes of waste in the next five years", said Mr Werner Zaiss, technical manager of the nuclear plant in Neckarwestheim. ***************************************************************** 23 Nuclear Waste Transport Goes Smoothly F.A.Z. - English Version [Frankfurter Allgemeine] Police on horses lead a convoy of three trucks carrying nuclear waste in front of the nuclear power plant in Neckarwestheim near Heilbronn in Baden-Württemberg on Tuesday. Protesters delayed but did not stop the shipment. (Photo: Reuters) *By Alfred Behr * STUTTGART. Spent fuel rods from the Neckarwestheim nuclear power plant in the German state of Baden-Württemberg completed the first leg of their journey to the Sellafield reprocessing plant in England on Tuesday with a slight delay caused by protesters, but no serious hitches. Shortly after 7:30 a.m., a convoy of trucks loaded with three Excellox containers carrying 21 of the spent rods left the nuclear power station, located north of Stuttgart. The journey via cordoned-off roads to the Walheim coal-fired power station, five kilometers (3.1 miles) away in Ludwigsburg district, took about 45 minutes. In Walheim, the containers were transferred to a train scheduled to stop in Wörth, near the French border, on Wednesday to pick up nuclear waste from the Biblis plant in Hesse. It is then to continue to Dunkirk, where the cargo will be stowed on a ship. The "Castor Resistance Union for Action" took part in the demonstrations, though the shipment did not actually contain any Castor containers. These large receptacles have a double-lid design that makes them suitable as storage containers, which is why they are used for trips to temporary storage facilities. Excellox containers, on the other hand, are purely for transport. Early Tuesday, police had cordoned off the transport route between Neckarwestheim and Walheim. Despite the security, a hundred or so demonstrators managed to plant themselves in the road near the nuclear site, and were carried away by police. The state of Baden-Württemberg is demanding a "carrying fee" of DM62 ($28) from protesters who must be forcibly removed. About 2,500 police officers and federal border guards were on duty Tuesday. Some 300 people demonstrated, and police made 68 arrests. The Neckarwestheim nuclear plant uses about a hundred fuel rods a year, which require disposal. In past years, 170 loads were transported from Neckarwestheim to the nuclear reprocessing plants in Sellafield and La Hague without much ado. The last load was transported to Sellafield in 1998. Since that time, however, Germany's policy on nuclear energy has changed. The current government coalition of the Social Democratic Party and Alliance 90_The Greens no longer tolerates nuclear waste reprocessing, and also demands that radioactive waste no longer be brought to the temporary storage plants in Ahaus and Gorleben. Instead, the government has ordered that it be stored in facilities located at the nuclear power plants. As Neckarwestheim has no temporary storage facility, the federal agency for radiation protection authorized that an "interim facility" be used. Neckarswestheim residents now fear that the interim facility will turn into a permanent waste disposal site. Nuclear energy opponents are against both interim facilities as well as transports to reprocessing plants.Apr. 24, 2001 © Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 2000 All ***************************************************************** 24 Dounreay receives safety award BBC News | SCOTLAND | Tuesday, 24 April, 2001, 16:58 GMT [Dounreay] The plant is said to a safe place to work The Dounreay nuclear plant has received an award as one of the safest places to work in Britain. The UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) - which runs the plant - won a gold award from the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents. The occupational safety award covers the last year in a four-year span, with the accident record considered against official national average statistics for the period. Colin Gregory, head of technology at Dounreay, said staff deserved the highest praise for the award. The plant has been criticised over its safety record in the past But Lorraine Mann, of Scotland Against Nuclear Dumping, said the accolade was misleading. Ms Mann said: "This kind of thing does no more than bring the society into serious disrepute. "These people do not really look at radiological or radioactive matters. "They concentrate on things like persons injuring themselves on slippery floors or spanners falling from above and hitting someone below". A different impression The UKAEA has been fined three times since 1997 for safety breaches including two cases involving workers becoming illegally contaminated with radioactivity. In 1998, Britain's two main nuclear safety watchdogs provided a damning indictment of the state of many of Dounreay plans and work-practices. It ordered the UKAEA to take action to rectify 143 safety lapses to bring the complex up to modern national and international standards. Mark Wheeler, of the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, said 34 of the upgrades demanded in the Health and Safety Executive's 1998 report had now been completed and passed by his organisation. 'The highest praise' He said: "Up until the end of March the authority told us that it had completed work on a further 41 of the recommendations for action. "All of these are now being assessed by our inspectors over a period of up to six months". Mr Gregory said: "This award demonstrates that the site here is actually one of the safest places to work, contrary to the impression that is sometimes portrayed. "Given the hazardous nature of some of the work that we do and the complexities of a site like Dounreay, the safety teams and the staff generally deserve the highest praise". The gold award to Dounreay was one of around 500 given to different firms and organisations throughout the UK. ***************************************************************** 25 FORATOM: EU energy policy -- Why Europe needs nuclear power [M2 Communications Ltd.] Story Filed: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 12:19 PM EST Brussels, Apr 25, 2001 (M2 PRESSWIRE via COMTEX) -- Europe's nuclear industry has told top EU officials that the nuclear power option must be retained in the European Community to strengthen security of energy supply, increase energy independence and hold down greenhouse gas emissions. These key messages were presented to senior officials at the European Commission yesterday (Tuesday) by FORATOM, the trade association for the nuclear industry in Europe. FORATOM has just issued a detailed position statement in response to a Commission Green Paper, dealing with security of energy supply, which was released last November. The Green Paper was published to promote a wide-ranging debate on Europe's energy future. FORATOM's statement is the industry's main contribution to the debate, which has another seven months to run. FORATOM recommends that the Commission should promote further discussion of the role of nuclear in the EU energy mix, both during and after the Green Paper debate. According to FORATOM, nuclear's future potential should be examined in order to define new orientations and objectives. The EU is currently dependent on external sources for 50% of its energy needs, but this is due to rise to 70% over the next 20 years. Greater use of nuclear for electricity generation would reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels and reduce atmospheric pollution. The industry believes that, as nuclear plants emit virtually no CO2, the Commission should recognise nuclear's important contribution to the avoidance of greenhouse gas emissions. According to FORATOM, this should be factored into EU policy measures aimed at meeting the Community's commitments under the Kyoto Protocol. Other recommendations include: - Commission support for political and public processes leading to the creation of permanent solutions for the storage of all radioactive wastes; - Continued provision of significant funding for nuclear research, with special emphasis on radioactive waste management and development of new reactor types; - Policies encouraging 'a level playing field' for competing EU energy producers; - Greater efforts by the Commission to increase public awareness of nuclear energy issues and radioactive waste management. The FORATOM statement makes a series of points on specific issues such as security of energy supply, the environment, waste, research, economics and public acceptance. In addition, detailed answers are given to 13 questions posed by the Commission in the Green Paper. The full text of the position statement is available on the FORATOM website ( www.foratom.org), and a key passage from the document is given below: Nuclear is a secure, stable and abundant source of energy, currently providing about 35% of the EU's electricity. There are many conventional uranium sources around the world, and availability is not politically sensitive. Large stocks of fissile material are already available inside the EU, and there are enough fuel assemblies (completed and in production) to provide for three to four years of normal nuclear power plant operation. Furthermore, the cost of nuclear electricity is not highly sensitive to the price of uranium. A 50% rise in the price of uranium ore would result in a tariff increase of only 2.5%, whereas in the case of oil or gas it would be around 38%. Fossil fuels have many industrial applications besides their combustion for electricity generation. Uranium has virtually no other practical uses, and its use in nuclear reactors, therefore, makes it possible to conserve valuable and finite fossil fuel reserves. For all these reasons, nuclear energy provides a robust and stable buffer against external changes that could affect other sources of energy supply. Evidence of environmental damage from greenhouse gas emissions, coupled with recent instabilities in fossil fuel pricing and supply, illustrate the potential fragility of our situation as far as energy consumption and dependency are concerned. Furthermore, we have seen in the US state of California - even in the world's most developed economy - that serious disruptions to electricity supply are possible. These events, taken together, demonstrate that energy cannot be taken for granted. Energy availability on demand is not something that just happens. Energy supply has to be thought about and planned for in a comprehensive manner, taking into account a number of important constraints. All energy technologies have a role to play in meeting our needs within acknowledged constraints. It is important to develop renewable energies and energy-conservation technologies so that they can reach their full potential. Appropriate funding mechanisms should be developed, but this should not be at the direct expense of other energy sources. It is appropriate now to reassert the valuable contribution that nuclear makes to meeting the need for abundant and clean baseload* electricity in the EU. The industry sees the European Commission as a key player in this process. Nuclear is strategically important to European energy supply because it offsets dependence on oil and gas, which are politically sensitive. Nuclear also makes a valuable contribution to the avoidance of greenhouse gas emissions. The Commission should therefore support the promotion of nuclear as part of the EU's energy mix. * the power needed round-the-clock, day after day CONTACT: Jack Ashton, Media Relations Manager Tel: +32 2 505 32 26 e-mail: ja@foratom.skynet.be Karen Daifuku, Communications Director Tel: +32 2 505 32 20 e-mail: kd@foratom.skynet.be PressWIRE can be obtained at http://www.presswire.neton the world wide web. Inquiries to info@m2.com. Copyright 1994-2001 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD ***************************************************************** 26 Sweden, Russia to continue talks on nuclear waste accord [M2 Communications Ltd.] Story Filed: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 9:15 AM EST Apr 25, 2001 (NORDIC BUSINESS REPORT via COMTEX) -- Sweden and Russia are to continue to discuss problems related to a conclusion of a multilateral accord on the utilisation of nuclear waste during an upcoming visit to Moscow of the Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson. This statement was reportedly made by Persson yesterday (24 April) at a joint news conference with his Russian counterpart Mikhail Kasyanov which was devoted to the results of talks between the two premiers. At an earlier meeting yesterday Kasyanov discussed with Birgitta Dahl, the head of Swedish parliament, a range of international issues, including the situation in the Balkans and Yugoslavia, enlargement of the EU and NATO's eastward expansion, reported the Russian news agency Itar-Tass. Comments on this story may be sent to nbr.feedback@nordicbusinessreport.com Copyright 1998-2001 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD http://www.m2.com ***************************************************************** 27 Ukrainian reactor reduces output because of malfunction The Associated KPnews.com -- News about Ukraine 25 Apr 2001 Press KYIV, April 25 - Workers were forced to reduce a nuclear reactor's output at Ukraine's Yuzhnaya atomic power plant due to a malfunction in the circulation pumps, the Emergency Situations Ministry said Wednesday. The output of Yuzhnaya's reactor No. 3 was reduced by 80 percent while repairs were conducted Tuesday, and the reactor was expected to reach full output by Wednesday afternoon, it said. No radiation leaks were reported. The malfunction was reported just a day before the 15th anniversary of the reactor explosion and fire at the Chernobyl plant, the world's worst nuclear disaster. Chernobyl remained a source of international concern until it was shut down for good in December, but much work remains to be done to fully decommission the plant and make a sarcophagus covering its ruined reactor environmentally safe. Ukraine operates 13 nuclear reactors at four atomic plants. They produce about 40 percent of the former Soviet republic's electricity but are frequently shut down for maintenance or because of malfunctions. © 2000 SputnikMedia.net ***************************************************************** 28 Ukraine Marks Chernnobyl Anniversary April 25, 2001 KIEV, Ukraine- Fifteen years after the Chernobyl disaster sent a radioactive cloud over much of Europe, the infamous plant has finally been idled and a beleaguered nation struggles to deal with its deadly legacy. The plant - site of the world's worst nuclear accident - continued operation after the April 26, 1986 explosion and fire, amid profound international concern over safety issues. The last reactor was shut down in December and the plant stopped operating for good. The greatest worry remains the leaky concrete and steel sarcophagus over the ruined reactor - a $758 million internationally funded project aims to make it environmentally safe. Now, with promised Western aid in limbo, the economically struggling Ukraine must provide for about 6,000 Chernobyl workers who depended on the plant to survive. "The 2001 budget did not provide for the social needs and for works related to the plant's closure," Chernobyl director Vitaly Tolstonohov said. "We had to do much work in resolving the questions of financing, and have partially solved them." The government is frustrated because it has not received money promised by the international community to compensate for the loss of Chernobyl electricity, in particular to complete two new reactors. Instead, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, which guides the aid project, raised new conditions for its loans. "I consider this as unwillingness to fund construction of the reactors," an angry President Leonid Kuchma said recently. "Why do we go with our hand outstretched, and they always beat us on our hands by various conditions? Didn't we know that it would be so when we were closing down Chernobyl?" The government also faces criticism for not adequately providing for those who suffered the effects of Chernobyl's fallout, which contaminated large areas of the former Soviet republic of Ukraine, Russia and Belarus. More than 4,000 who took part in the hasty and poorly organized Soviet cleanup effort have died, the government says, and more than 70,000 Ukrainians were disabled by the disaster. About 3.4 million of Ukraine's 50 million people, including about 1.26 million children, are considered affected by Chernobyl. Of them, 400,000 adults and nearly 1.1 million children are entitled to state aid. About 5,000 Chernobyl victims demonstrated in Kiev over the weekend, saying many entitled to state aid were not receiving benefits and compensation for living on contaminated land. Yuriy Andreev, who heads a victims' union, said Chernobyl victims are now owed $136 million, and the debt grows by up $7.4 million every month. Post-Soviet economic distress forced Ukraine to steadily underfund Chernobyl-related social programs, though that has changed somewhat. But the health of those affected has deteriorated steadily. A dramatic surge in thyroid cancer among Ukrainian children was reported last year, along with a high number of other diseases among affected children. Also, 100 percent of those evacuated from their homes feel the disaster "has ruined their lives and they have no future," said Yuriy Saenko, of the National Academy of Sciences' monitoring department. Work goes on to stabilize the sarcophagus, believed to contain tons of radioactive waste. Officials dismiss suggestions that the shelter was threatening collapse, but admit its condition is cause for concern. "Time is passing and we have to understand full well that it is an object in an unclear state, due to its grave radiation conditions," Tolstonohov said. All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc. ***************************************************************** 29 Chernobyl death count still disputed 25/04/2001 10:13 - (SA) Kiev - The fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl blast contaminated three-quarters of Europe, irradiating millions of people in far-flung corners of the continent, yet the precise toll of the disaster remains hotly disputed 15 years on. Up to 30 000 people have died as a result of the explosion on April 26, 1986, of Chernobyl's reactor number four, which spewed radiation into the atmosphere equivalent to 500 times that of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. But official estimates from the Soviet era put the death toll at only 31, of which 29 are said to have died of radiation sickness, while the pro-nuclear lobby has deliberately clouded the issue in a bid to protect the image of atomic power. The margin of error, or dispute, is wide and has become a political battleground. Stark evidence from Ukraine's hospitals and clinics points towards the upper end of the tally, with three million citizens, a third of them children, diagnosed with ailments linked to radiation. But few, if any, of these anonymous victims will be present at Chernobyl on Thursday when President Leonid Kuchma attends a memorial ceremony for the those killed by the disaster. The death toll controversy continues to spark tension between the uneasy partners. Under a 1995 protocol, the West promised $2.3 billion, comprising $500 million in grants and $1.8 billion in loans, to help provide substitute power for Ukraine, make the site safe, and help soften the social impact of the closure. It has also stumped up around $700 million as part of a hazardous multinational effort to contain the radioactive magma buried inside the crippled reactor's concrete "sarcophagus". The Ukraine government has repeatedly criticised the West for taking the moral high ground over the Chernobyl disaster, while hampering efforts to publicise the inherent dangers of their own nuclear power plants. "The Western countries, being amply provided with nuclear reactors of their own, try to hush up the subject of Chernobyl in order not to alarm their own citizens," a senior Ukraine health ministry official told AFP. At the same time, Kiev is accused of inflating the figures in order to get even more international aid. Yet even in the fog of statistics, of charge and countercharge, one irrefutable fact stands out: thousands of young people in Ukraine, Belarus and Russia suffer from thyroid cancer caused by their unwitting exposure to radioactivity in those first cruel moments after the 1986 explosion. In total, nearly 1 400 tumours were reported between 1986 and 1997, according to the Institute for Nuclear Protection and Safety, an organisation overseen by France's environment and industry ministries. Meanwhile, the United Nations last January estimated that over 11 000 thyroid cancer cases were linked to the 1986 disaster. Worried researchers expect to see an upsurge in the reported number of leukaemia cases among those in the 20-25 year age group. According to some independent surveys, the number of leukaemia cases could double among the so-called "liquidators" - those 650 000 men and women who came from all corners of the Soviet Union in 1986 to carry out the unenviable task of decontaminating the 30km zone around Chernobyl. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) notes that it is difficult, however, to distinguish between radioactivity-linked tumours and everyday cancers, for lack of reliable data. Besides, there are other ailments that have provoked scientific and medical debate. For example, inhabitants of the worst-affected regions - where the effects of radiation illness have since been diagnosed as chronic - suffer from a much higher than average incidence of cardio-vascular disease, digestive problems, sexual and nervous dysfunctions. The number of eye-related illnesses and respiratory diseases is also markedly on the increase. "Their conditions get worse year by year," Ukraine's deputy health minister, Olga Bobyleva, said in April. Even though many of these illnesses may be congenital or psychosomatic, the respected Russian academic Yury Dubrova has published her research in the British journal Nature suggesting that cases of genetic mutation are twice as common in children born to parents in the radiation zone. The Institute of Hereditary Diseases in Belarus reported in 1997 that congenital abnormalities had risen by 81 percent in recent years. - Sapa-AFP ***************************************************************** 30 Chernobyl Cattle A Bovine Nuclear Family *by our Science Editor Liesbeth de Bakker, 24 April 2001* [Uranium the bull] ‘Uranium' the bull was one of the few domesticated animals to survive the Chernobyl nuclear accident in April 1986. When he was captured, one year after the disaster, he was unable to sire offspring. But now, fifteen years later, he's fathered more than 180 calves who form a prime study object for geneticists. The accident at Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant happened in the early hours of April 26, 1986. Of the 50 tonnes of radioactive dust and debris that was produced, a large amount landed in the immediate surroundings. The people in the area were evacuated but they had to leave everything behind, including pets and farm animals. Survivors In the months that followed, hairless dogs and dead animals were not an uncommon site in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, the 30 kilometre circle around the nuclear power plant that has been a no-go area ever since the disaster. However Uranium the bull and three cows named Alpha, Beta and Gamma survived the ordeal. "When our scientists found them, the animals suffered badly," [Igor Cherzjevski (left)] says senior researcher Igor Cherzjevski of Chernobyl's Radio Ecological Centre. "They had lost almost all their hair and were completely wild. They didn't allow people to approach them. But we managed to catch them and bring them to an experimental farm where we looked after them. And after only one year the first calf was born". No Monster Contrary to layman's expectations, this calf didn't have two heads or five legs. It looked perfectly okay and didn't suffer from any birth defects. There were only minor indications that it was born of special parents, says Dr. Cherzjevski: "If you took a blood test, you would see that certain levels were higher. But this only indicated that just like his parents, this calf was fighting against the impact of the radioactive pollution in the area." One Big Family To date, Uranium's offspring number 186, but not all of them are from Alpha, Gamma and Beta. In fact Alpha and Beta died, not because of illnesses related to radiation, but because of old age. So now Uranium's daughters and granddaughters are inseminated with the bull's sperm to study the impact of radiation on many generations of cows. Evolution Backwards Now, in the fourth generation, the geneticists are starting to see minute changes in the genetic make-up of Uranium's descendants. Professor Valeri Glasko from the Institute of Agri-Ecology and Biotechnology in Kiev supervises the genetic studies. "The genetic changes don't affect the way the calves look. We just see differences on the cell level. And the interesting thing is, we find that the cattle's genetic structure is now more similar to that of a beef cow than a milk-cow, which they originally are. A milk cow is a very specialised animal, but a beef cow is more general. It can deal better with changes in the environment. So it seems that the milk cows are losing their specific characteristics in order to cope with the radiation that's still present in the Exclusion Zone." [Prof Glasko (2nd from left) and team] An Effect of Inbreeding? When asked about the danger of inbreeding, Professor Glasko says that even in normal, self-perpetuating herds genetic processes occur that resemble these changes from milk cow to beef cow, but in Uranium's herd the rate of change is faster - suggesting that this is partly a response to radiation and not simply the usual process. Radiation Protection The Chernobyl Exclusion Zone is unevenly polluted with radioactive compounds. Some places are now close to normal again, but in many areas the level is still several times higher than normal background radiation and there are even some ‘hot spots'. So Dr. Cherzjevski and his team are working on ways to protect the cows. The biggest danger for the animals is if they eat radio-active particles, because once these poisons are in the body they can settle in the muscles or bones and wreak havoc there. "We've made a medicine which consists of active coal and several kinds of clay, and when a radioactive element such as Caesium is ingested, it's absorbed by the medicine and excreted. This way the Caesium cannot settle in the body and cause the animal harm." Life at Chernobyl: + Andrey Archipov, Radio Biologist, Chernobyl Exclusion Zone + Dr. Oxana Garnets, Coordinator of the UN Chernobyl Programme + Hanna Alexeyva Zavarodna Radio Netherlands http://www.rnw.nl/science/ ***************************************************************** 31 Inna Bahina, 21, looks at the house where she used to live, fifteen years ago, in the town of Pripyat, just nine kilometres from Chernobyl. 25Apr01 On Thursday 26 April 1986, the fourth reactor of the Chernobyl nuclear plant exploded -- releasing 150-200 million curies of radioactivity into the air. An area of 155,000 square kilometres, home to over seven million people, was contaminated. Now, 15 years later, millions of people in Ukraine, Belarus and Russia are still suffering from severe physical and psychological harm in the wake of the disaster. The incidence of cancer is 16 times higher than in countries not affected by the disaster, and the Red Cross predicts that symptoms linked to the radiation are now only beginning to peak. Research shows that the toxic wastes of Chernobyl will be around for a terrifying 244,000 years. Fifteen years on, the effects of Chernobyl are painfully felt by the young people living in the contaminated areas. The incidence of thyroid cancer continues to increase in young adults who were children (0-18 years old) at the time of the disaster -- and who make up the group the Red Cross is targeting for screening of thyroid cancer. Since 1992, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), together with the Red Cross Societies in the three affected countries, has operated six mobile diagnostic laboratories, which over the past nine years have assisted more than 2.5 million people. The Red Cross is the *only organisation* screening the affected population in their hometowns through its Chernobyl Humanitarian Assistance and Rehabilitation Programme (CHARP), where Red Cross doctors and technicians annually examine up to 90,000 people, travelling into remote areas where no other services reach. Morbidity is increasing in the region, although thyroid cancer is curable in up to 95 percent of all cases if it is detected early enough. Lena Lukashova is one of the lucky ones who was cured: *"Thanks to the programme carried out by the Red Cross, it was possible to detect my disease, which would never have been possible with the local capacities. Now, it is all over -- it is all in the past. I am making plans for the future, I will graduate from school and will try to go to university. I will continue to live."* Lena, who is 17 now, was only two at the time of the disaster, but in January 2000 she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. Two months later her thyroid gland was completely removed. Apart from the physical effects, more than three million people are estimated to suffer from post-traumatic stress reactions such as anxiety, tension, insomnia and a sense of insecurity about the future -- not to mention addiction to drugs and alcohol. The Red Cross has therefore built psychosocial services into the CHARP programme -- providing psychological support through counselling sessions with individuals, groups and family members. It is often enough to give people adequate information to relieve them of their fears. The experience of psychologist Olgerd Kanzler, who is a member of the mobile clinic team, shows that people affected by the Chernobyl catastrophe desperately need psychological assistance and information about how they can cope, because time does not diminish their problems, and instead they accumulate and increase. Olga Beletskaya is one of the survivors that has asked for Red Cross counselling. She lives with her husband and three children in Schorsovka village. The family is forced to eat what they can cultivate on their land -- in contaminated soil -- and what they can find in the forest, even though they know it is dangerous. Olga is worried about her daughter Tatiana. She is 21 years old, and in very poor health -- her heart is weak, she suffers from bad blood circulation and diagnosis has shown she is developing thyroid cancer. She is often depressed, and the smallest things can upset her. * "On her way to school the other day, she just started to cry. I had to rub her hands and her feet to keep her warm, to get her going again. A few months ago we had to go to a clinic to see a doctor. There we discovered that a lot of people have similar problems"*, said Tatiana's mother. To make a secure online donation, click here To find out more, go to the IFRC website Reuters Foundation accepts no responsibility for the accuracy, ***************************************************************** 32 Radioactive rains fall on Moscow 15 years after Chernobyl [ITAR/TASS News Agency] Story Filed: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 9:49 AM EST MOSCOW, Apr 25, 2001 (Itar-Tass via COMTEX) -- Radioactive rains periodically fall on Moscow, but the radionuclide fallout is much less than 15 years ago when a reactor of Ukraine's Chernobyl nuclear power plant blasted in the world's worst disaster ever. April 26 marks day of the Chernobyl nuclear accident which affected Ukraine, neighbouring Belarus and Russia's 14 regions downwind the radioactive cloud which the Chernobyl reactor spewed. Moscow was not officially listed as an affected territory, but radionuclide levels in its environment were 250 times above normal when the accident struck, Natalya Shandala of Moscow's Institute of Biophysics told Itar-Tass on Wednesday. Shandala, who is chief of the laboratory of population radiation safety, said radionuclide levels were high in the air, while milk contamination increased 30 to 40-fold. Only the quality of the drinking water remained unaltered. The situation has been gradually improving in the recent years. Moscow's present-day radiation situation is described by health officials as "calm and good". Radionuclide levels in the drinking water and foods are hundredfold below a normal range. However, the improvement results from physical processes, with radionuclide activity decreasing with time, rather than from meausures of the government and specialists. Scientists admit that many things were too late and too little or were bungled in the wake of the Chernobyl disaster. The result was thousands of "unnecessary" victims and contamination of huge expanses of territory. Doctors see the thyroid cancer morbidity of children as one of the most ominous consequences of Chernobyl. Russia's chief sanitation physician Gennady Onishchenko admitted that specialists made "several omissions" with iodine prophylaxis. "Iodine prophylaxis in many residential areas began with a substantial delay or was not conducted at all," Onishchenko said. A total of 170 cases of thyroid cancer have ben registered in children, 55 of which have been proved to be related to the Chernobyl accident. Another "ommission" hit so-called liquidators, or people who handled the Chernobyl searing rubble with the bare hands in the first days after the accident. About 120,000 Russians were recruited in emergency management. Many had to do "absolutely unnecessary work", Onishchenko admitted. He said more than 300 liquidators were exposed to heavy radiation; of these, 137 got radiation sickness. One of this cohort dies every year. Doctors forecast that one out of six liquidators is at risk of developing cancer. The suicide rate in this group is seveal times higher as compared to the nationwide average figure. Specialist say one of the most serious problems of liquidators is not so much radiation exposure as psychological aftereffects of their past stress and present-day social neglect. Mental disorders have been found out in 27 per cent of the liquidators. Doctors also relate the growing disease incidence in people in Russia's contaminated regions, which is 20-30 per cent in adults and 50 per cent in children, to radiation and stress. Over 50,000 peopel were resettled and had to live with traivails of household and job restrictions, and this also affected their health. Health statistics looked bleaker as medical monitoring was becoming more careful in the affected regions. According to forecasts of specialists, the cancer rate in the population of will increase to make an average figure plus 400 new cases. People continue to use radiocontaminated food. About 35 per cent of meat, milk, mushrooms and berries are radioactive in the affected regions. The Chernobyl accident left radiocontaminated 56,000 square kilometers of territory in Russia and 110,000 square kilometres in Ukraine and Belarus. About three million people were affected. A total of 1,717,822 peoplelive in Russia's radiocontaminated regions. The radiation situation improved with time or is safe in 12 of the regions. However, over 150,000 people live in 500 residential areas of Kaluga and Bryansk regions where an annual average irradiation level is above a normal one milliSievert). Russian scientists are of the view that it is technically impossible to resolve at least one of Chernobyl problems, effects of radiation. The Russian Research Institute of Inorganic Materials, whose personnel decontaminated the grounds of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, has developed a cleaning technology. Its use leaves a "green meadow", but Ukraine, Belarus and Russia cannot employ it because required costs are hundreds of billions of dollars. Even the more affluent West cannot afford such technolopgies. The Chernobyl reactor four which exploded on April 26, 1986 also needs multibillion spending. It remains buried in a concrete sarcophagus which was built as a stopgag measure. "The sarcophagus never was an absolutely safe facility," the directo of the Institute of Safety Problems, Vladimir Asmolov, told Itar-Tass. He said experts are uncertan how long this dome can stand intact, and the sarcophagus problem dictates a possibly rapid solution. Asmolov, who was scientific director of the sarcophagus project, said there were about ten new projects of rebuilding the old or building a new sarcophagys. However, they ran into the money snag, as costs would be comparable to building a new nuclear power plant, 1.5-2.5 billion dollars. There have been no radioactive leakages from the Chernobyl sarcophagus since 1986, but if they occur, there wil be no "global disaster any more", as "million of times less" radioactive substances remain at the reactor site than at the time of the accident, Asmolov said. Nonethless, the situation should be permanently monitored by specialists, an increasingly difficult task with Ukraine's being independent. Ideally, the "green meadow" solution is needed, he said. By Itar-Tass writer Veronika Voskoboinikova (c) 1996-2001 ITAR-TASS. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 33 NRC Will Hold Public Meeting in Charlotte on Environmental Review for Proposed Mixed Oxide Fuel Facility Press Release 2001 - 046 - U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Office of Public Affairs Telephone: 301/415-8200 Washington, DC 20555-001 E-mail: opa@nrc.gov Web Site: http://www.nrc.gov/OPA No. 01-046 April 24, 2001 The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will hold a public meeting on May 8 in Charlotte, North Carolina, to obtain comments on what should be included in an environmental impact statement that the agency will prepare on a proposed mixed oxide (MOX) fuel fabrication facility. The Department of Energy is proposing to construct a facility on its Savannah River site near Aiken, South Carolina, through a contract with a consortium of Duke Engineering & Services, COGEMA Inc., and Stone & Webster (together known as DCS). The meeting will be held at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center, 600 E. Fourth Street, in Charlotte. An open house will start at 6 p.m., followed by the meeting, from 7 to 10 p.m. The agency recently held two other such "scoping" meetings in North Augusta, South Carolina, and Savannah, Georgia, on April 17 and 18, respectively. If the NRC grants the license, DCS could build a MOX facility that would convert surplus weapons-grade plutonium, supplied by the Department of Energy, into fuel for use in a limited number of commercial nuclear reactors. Such use would render the plutonium essentially inaccessible and unattractive for weapons use. Commercial nuclear power plants currently use uranium as fuel; the mixed oxide fuel would be a combination of uranium and plutonium. DCS submitted an environmental report on the proposed MOX facility last December, and requested authorization to construct the facility in February. Before deciding whether to authorize construction, the NRC will prepare an environmental impact statement and will conduct a safety evaluation of the application to determine whether it meets NRC requirements. As previously announced, the NRC is offering an opportunity for interested persons to request a hearing on the proposed facility. Such requests should be submitted by May 18 and follow the submission requirements set out in a Federal Register notice published on April 18. To obtain information about the May 8 meeting, or to provide comments or suggestions on the scope of the environmental impact statement, interested parties should contact Tim Harris, at 301-415-6613, or Betty Garrett at 301-415-5808. ***************************************************************** 34 Poll: Anxiety over nuclear power easing [Las Vegas Review-Journal] Wednesday, April 25, 2001 Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal Concerns over handling of waste remain strong By WILL LESTER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON -- Americans have grown slightly more comfortable with nuclear power over the past two years, an Associated Press poll suggests, with half now saying they support using nuclear plants to produce electricity. Supporters of nuclear power were significantly more likely than they were two years ago not to mind a nuclear plant close to their homes. The poll was conducted for the AP by ICR of Media, Pa. The support for the nuclear option now being considered by the Bush administration was strongest among men and those older than 65. "I think it's a safe way to produce energy," said Mike McDonald, 46, a computer consultant from Sparta, Mich. Fifty percent in the poll supported nuclear power, and a majority of the supporters, 56 percent, said they wouldn't mind a nuclear plant within 10 miles of their own home. Three in 10 opposed nuclear power, and the remainder said they didn't know. Two years ago, 45 percent said they supported nuclear power, and fewer than half of those supporters said they would want a nuclear plant nearby. In the new poll, some admitted that concerns over energy shortages and fears of pollution have affected their support for nuclear power. But concerns remained strong about how to handle radioactive waste from the power plants. Almost half said they don't believe nuclear waste can be safely stored for many years, about the same level as two years ago. The number who thought it could be stored safely was up slightly to almost four in 10. Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, is the only site being studied to entomb the nation's highly radioactive waste. The poll of 1,002 adults was taken April 18 through Monday and had an error margin of plus or minus 3 percentage points. Support for nuclear power was lowest and fears of nuclear waste were highest among young adults. The sentiment for nuclear power increased steadily as the age of poll respondents went up. "I'm pretty opposed to nuclear energy," said Liza Lionetti, 25, an Internet company employee from Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. "The biggest issue is the waste products. We bury them and we poison the ground." Among the regions, support for nuclear power was strongest in the energy-starved West, 55 percent. Support for nuclear power tended to increase with education levels. Republicans were twice as likely as Democrats to support it, and men were more supportive than women. Nuclear power plants, which produce 20 percent of the nation's electricity, are the focus of renewed interest. They have become more competitive in cost because of rising natural gas prices and growing concern about pollution from fossil fuel- burning power plants. The nation's 103 nuclear reactors have increased their power output by 25 percent over the past decade along with a steadily improving safety record. A Bush administration energy task force is expected to conclude next month that nuclear power is essential in meeting the nation's energy needs and recommend ways to increase nuclear energy production. No new nuclear plant has been ordered and completed since 1973 and while utilities are determined to run their current reactors longer, no new orders are expected anytime soon. In 1989, an AP poll showed that a clear majority, 55 percent, supported nuclear power. But the sentiment for nuclear power dwindled in the 1990s, before the latest renewal of interest. The slightly improved climate for nuclear power hasn't eased the doubts of some, although two-thirds said they think nuclear power is safer now than it was 10 years ago. The numbers who think a nuclear accident at a power plant is likely has dwindled slightly from half two years ago, to just over four in 10 now. "I'm not in favor of nuclear power due largely to the fact that there's always the chance for error," said Dale Buchanan, 51, a machine operator from Belleville, Pa. He lives about 60 miles from Three Mile Island, site of the nation's worst nuclear accident in 1979. "The closer to home it gets," Buchanan said, "the more you think about it." This story is located at: http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/2001/Apr-25-Wed-2001/news/15953177.html ***************************************************************** 35 Nuclear Poll Method April 25 1:39 AM ET *By The Associated Press, * The Associated Press poll on nuclear power is based on telephone interviews with 1,002 randomly selected adults from all states except Alaska and Hawaii. The interviewing was conducted April 18-23 by ICR, of Media, Pa. The results were weighted to represent the population by key demographic factors such as age, sex, region and education. No more than one time in 20 should chance variations in the sample cause the results to vary by more than 3 percentage points from the answers that would be obtained if all Americans were polled. This margin of sampling error is larger for responses of subgroups, such as income categories. There are other sources of potential error in polls, including the wording and order of questions. The AP poll questions (because of rounding, sums may not total 100 percent): 1. Do you support or oppose using nuclear power to generate electricity? Support, 50 percent; oppose, 30 percent; don't know, 19 percent; refused to answer, 1 percent. 2. (Asked only of the 518 respondents who support nuclear power) Would you support or oppose the construction of a nuclear power plant within 10 miles of your home? Support, 55 percent; oppose, 40 percent; Don't know, 5 percent. 3. Do you think nuclear power plants in the United States are safer now than they were 10 years ago, or not? Safer, 65 percent; not safer, 18 percent; don't know, 17 percent. 4. Do you think radioactive waste from nuclear power plants can be safely stored for many years, or not? Yes, 37 percent; no, 45 percent; don't know, 18 percent. 5. How would you rate the likelihood of a serious accident at a nuclear power plant in the United States - highly likely, likely, unlikely or highly unlikely? Highly likely, 11 percent; likely 33 percent; unlikely, 29 percent; highly unlikely, 21 percent; don't know, 6 percent. Copyright © 2001 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 36 Guinn: Report more proof of Yucca bias Wednesday, April 25, 2001 Gov. Kenny Guinn says the Inspector General's report concluding there isn't enough evidence to prove bias in the Yucca Mountain selection process is just more evidence of that bias. "While I'm disappointed in the conclusion that bias could not be proven, aspects of the Inspector general's report enhance my belief that Nevada has, in fact, been unfairly targeted during the site selection process," said Guinn. "We found several written statements in key Yucca Mountain evaluation documents that could be considered by an impartial observer to be prematurely conclusive or inappropriately advocating a position by the Department or its contractors," the report concluded. But it said there wasn't enough evidence to prove bias compromised the site selection process. Guinn said, however, that he hopes the attention focused on the energy department and its selection process will force them to shape up and focus on scientific evidence. ***************************************************************** ***************************************************************** NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARTICLES ***************************************************************** 1 CROET changes meeting schedule Oak Ridger Online --> Story last updated at 1:13 p.m. on Wednesday, April 25, 2001 from staff reports Members of the Community Reuse Organization of East Tennessee board voted Tuesday to begin meeting quarterly instead of monthly. Several members suggested that the change goes along with the organization's bylaws. However, CROET member Susan Gawarecki said those bylaws might need to be reevaluated, especially since a strategic plan to reorganize the organization was recently approved. She suggested forming a special ad hoc committee to look at the bylaws. Russ Schubert, chairman of the CROET board, said he would consider forming the committee. The CROET board also approved two leases, including a six-month deal with Greenfield Logistics for the shipment of radioactive rubble from the ED-2 property. Gawarecki said it should be specified in the lease that the company will be responsible for cleaning up the area after the transporting is done. All Contents ©Copyright* The Oak Ridger * ***************************************************************** 2 Hearing set to discuss DOE report from plant The Paducah Sun Paducah, Kentucky Wednesday, April 25, 2001 A public meeting will be at 7 p.m. Monday at the Paducah Information Age Park Resource Center to discuss a recent public health assessment concerning the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry will discuss findings of the report, which says the plant poses no apparent public health hazard despite past environmental problems. The meeting will allow people to talk with agency staff about the document and other plant-related activities. The report was released last month. The agency did the work because the plant is a federal Superfund site. Scientists evaluated the chance of human exposure to hazardous substances from the plant, and associated health impacts. Copies of the document are available at public libraries in Paducah and Metropolis, Ill., and libraries at Paducah Community College and Murray State University. The document also is on the Internet at www.atsdr.cdc.gov. Public comments should be sent to Chief, Program Evaluation, Records and Information Services Branch, ATSDR, 1600 Clifton Road, NE, Mailstop E-56, Atlanta, GA 30333. Comments will be received until May 14. Call the agency's Maria Teran-MacIver at 888-422-8737 for other information about the meeting. ***************************************************************** 3 Tests measure contamination near Nike Park [SCNmedia (www.SuburbanChicagoNews.com)] Forgotten history Nike Park evokes Cold War memories By Ron Pazola STAFF WRITER Government agencies continue to monitor levels of a toxic chemical that seeped into the property near Nike Park when the United States Army used the 26-acre Naperville site as a missile base during the Cold War years. "The people in the area have been notified of the possible contamination," said Les Bant, DuPage County Health Department engineer. "We are still conducting tests in the area." In June the Army Corps of Engineers discovered unsafe levels of trichloroethene, or TCE, in the ground water near the former Nike site, now a popular sports complex at Diehl Road and Mill Street. Soldiers used TCE — a multi-purpose liquid — to clean and degrease the launchers. After further testing, however, the Corps said in August that preliminary results of 40 tests of the water wells at Knight's subdivision in unincorporated DuPage County, just south of Nike Park, showed no levels of TCE that exceeded the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency's standards. Three wells showed levels of less than one part per billion, according to Karen Holmes, DuPage County Health Department director of environmental services. The IEPA considers five parts per billion of TCE an acceptable level for drinking water. STAFF WRITER It looked like remnants of a German concentration camp: The barbwire fence, the stark buildings — now abandoned and rundown — the bleak light fixtures, the wire cage where the guard dogs stood watch. John Ellenwood wandered past the front gate, his shoes crunching against yellow scrub grass that stuck out of the hard earth like unruly spikes. In contrast, a bright yellow smiley face loomed from the side of a barn off in the distance. Ellenwood, 65, poked his head into what had once been a guard shack, his eyes gazing at the other buildings scattered throughout the property. The view took him back 40 years. "It looks like the place I was stationed at in Naperville," he said. "The buildings and the layout of the buildings are pretty much the same." Ellenwood was visiting C-47, a former Nike missile base in Portage, Ind., on a recent chilly afternoon. The facility — one of the few missile batteries in the Chicago area that still has its buildings intact — was one of 23 military installations that protected Chicago from enemy aircraft during the Cold War years. A job to do The missile sites — most of them gone now with no tangible remnants — are a nearly forgotten piece of history. Many people don't know the Cold War was being fought in their back yards and that the Army operated 200 similar missile installations across the country. The government called them Nike sites after the Greek god of victory and strategically positioned them around metropolitan areas. Nearly two dozen sites — including Naperville, Lombard, Lemont, Arlington Heights and Libertyville — surrounded Chicago from the 1950s to the 1970s. Naperville's Nike Park, now a 26-acre sports complex on the southeast corner of Diehl Road and Mill Street, was a working missile battery from 1956 to 1963. The facility, known as C-70 at the time, originally was operated by the U.S. Army, then the Illinois National Guard. Nearly 125 military personnel lived and worked there. The base consisted of three underground missile silos, a missile assembly area, two barracks, a mess hall, a sentry house and various storage sheds. The buildings were one-story concrete structures painted yellow. The barracks and radar system were along Warrenville Road where the BP Amoco campus now sits. The missiles and launching area occupied what is now Nike Park. Ellenwood was stationed at the Naperville facility for six months in 1960. Before that, he also worked at missile sites in Arlington Heights, Lombard and Lemont for three years. Though many of the installations had nuclear missiles called Hercules, the Ajax missiles in Naperville never had nuclear capability. As a missile crewman, Ellenwood assembled the weapons, which were stored underground in three 17-foot pits. During practice alerts, he moved the missiles to an elevator that raised them above ground to the launching area. "It was all pretty safe," said Ellenwood, a longtime Naperville resident. "As soldiers, we didn't feel much fear for the Russians. We had a job to do and we did it." Life on the base But aspects of his job were frightening. One of his least favorite tasks was transporting red fuming nitric acid to the missiles. The acid oxidized the missiles' liquid fuel so it could burn properly. "We had to wear these big rubber suits that made us look like creatures from outer space," Ellenwood said. "The acid was pretty nasty stuff and you didn't want to breath it or touch it." Alden Bos, 64, was one of the first soldiers to be stationed at the Naperville facility. Part of Battery A, 13th AAA Missile Battalion, Bos worked at the base from August 1956 to November 1957. He recalled raking rocks and stones from the ground as he waited for the first missiles to arrive in an area then surrounded by cornfields. "It got real interesting whenever an unidentified flying object was spotted coming our way," said Bos, a Naperville resident who also owns a house in Dowagiac, Mich. "We were put on alert and had to be ready to fire the missiles within 30 minutes. Whenever we were on alert, we had to sleep in the pits with the missiles," he said. In the long run, the soldiers' leisure pursuits posed more of an immediate threat than the threat of Soviet attack. "We knew every tavern within a 50-mile radius of Naperville," Bos said. "A lot of soldiers got into traffic accidents on the way back from a night out on the town." For recreation, soldiers watched TV, paid 25 cents to see a show at the Naper Theater and played softball, basketball, pingpong, pool and cards. Soldiers held occasional open houses for area residents, who toured the facility and viewed missiles displayed in the launchers. The government closed the site in March 1963, and the Naperville Park District acquired the property from the U.S. Department of Interior in 1975. Childhood memories Tom Wehrli of Naperville recalled his boyhood in the '60s, when he would ride his bicycle "to the weed-ridden site out in the middle of nowhere." Wehrli and his twin brother, Chuck, opened a hatch that resembled a manhole cover and climbed down a ladder to where the missiles used to be stored. The boys looked around but only saw tree limbs and empty beer cans. Another time they explored an abandoned military shed that housed electrical equipment. A beam of light sliced through plywood that covered the windows. "When we pulled the plywood off, an alarm sounded. We were so scared, we didn't stick around to see what happened," said Wehrli, who owns Wehrli Wood Refinishing, an antique restoration business in Naperville. Wehrli grew up during the Cold War, a time of rampant paranoia that fostered the fear of a nuclear holocaust and communist enslavement. As a pupil at SS Peter and Paul School, Wehrli and his classmates were required to do air raid drills during school time. "We had to sit on a stairwell, put our hands on our heads and our heads on our laps," Wehrli recalled. "If we didn't do that, a nun came along and hit us with a ruler. We were terrified and a lot of us started to cry." * *The former Naperville missile site also was a place for some terrifying occurrences. In the 1970s, authorities received a call about a boy falling into one of the missile pits. Officers rushed to the property and helped the uninjured teen out of the hole. The pits eventually were sealed. Chuck Wehrli, now a captain with the Naperville Fire Department, was a firefighter in the 1980s when he pulled two construction workers from one of the two-story pits. The steel enclosure over the bin had swung down, plunging the workers to the bottom. The two men, who were helping convert the site into a sports complex, broke both their legs. From a place designed for destruction to a place fostering physical exercise and recreation, Nike Park is a reminder of days when peace was not so close at hand. Many years have passed since the park was a missile base. Children now play soccer and softball there, not knowing the ground they are running on once held guided missiles ready to be fired. Don Bender, a Nike researcher, said he believes it is important to keep the memory alive. "The presence of the Army's Nike missile sites in heavily populated cities, suburbs and towns made it clear that in an age of long-range bombers and atomic bombs, the front lines of the Cold War could be almost anywhere — on the lakefront in Chicago or even in otherwise quiet and peaceful Naperville," Bender said. "The missile sites should be a reminder that even the United States was not immune from attack." ***************************************************************** 4 Review of DOE probe sought April 25, 2001 By Jeff German LAS VEGAS SUN Nevada's congressional delegation today asked the General Accounting Office to review an internal Energy Department investigation that failed to document alleged bias in the Yucca Mountain site-selection process. The delegates said they were worried that the disappearance of key e-mail may have impeded the DOE investigation, which was conducted by Inspector General, Gregory Friedman. Sens. Harry Reid, D-Nev., and John Ensign, R-Nev., and Reps. Shelley Berkley,D-Nev., and Jim Gibbons, R-Nev., requested the review in a joint letter to Comptroller General David Walker, who heads the GAO, the investigative arm of Congress. "While the GAO may be looking into separate allegations regarding mismanagement at Yucca Mountain, it is important they be made aware of the IG's findings and the loss of what could be important e-mail messages," Reid said this morning. "Without this electronic paper trail, we may never be able to determine the real level of bias among the DOE contractors working on the proposed dumpsite." Friedman spent four months investigating allegations that the DOE and its contractors were displaying bias toward Yucca Mountain, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas, as the site for the nation's first high-level nuclear waste dump. On Monday Friedman informed Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham that his investigators could not substantiate the bias. But he urged Abraham to publicly renew the DOE's commitment to a fair and objective Yucca Mountain study amid the erosion of public confidence in the agency's nuclear waste dealings. Federal law prohibits the DOE from taking sides in the site-selection process. In his 14-page report, Friedman acknowledged that his office could not obtain all of the information it wanted, because e-mail with a DOE subcontractor at the heart of the probe had been destroyed during a computer malfunction. The subcontractor, Colorado-based JK Research Associates, wrote a 60-page draft overview for the DOE that suggested Yucca Mountain was safe to store radioactive waste even though scientific studies haven't been completed. A two-page JK Research memo attached to an October draft suggested the overview could be used to help the nuclear industry sell Yucca Mountain to Congress. The memo sought comments about the draft from members of the DOE's nuclear waste community. "According to JK Research Associates, complete electronic mail records were unavailable to the Office of Inspector General due to a computer malfunction." Friedman wrote in his report. "Consequently, because a complete record of interactions between the contractor and the reviewers was not available, the Office of Inspector General was unable to obtain a complete, verifiable history of the development of the draft overview." John Kelly, a longtime Yucca Mountain subcontractor who runs JK Research, has declined comment. In their letter to Walker, the Nevada delegates said they were concerned about the inspector general's inability to obtain the e-mails. "We are troubled by this incident, because it represents a loss of information that may have provided greater insight into the development of the draft overview and related memo," the delegation wrote. "To prevent a further erosion of public confidence in the DOE's site characterization work, we request that you expand the scope of the previous investigation to look at the circumstances of this loss of e-mail." The GAO is probing allegations of misconduct at the DOE's Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management, which is overseeing the Yucca Mountain study. The allegations were revealed earlier this year in an anonymous six-page letter from a DOE insider that was circulated on Capitol Hill. Berkley, meanwhile, sent a separate letter today to Friedman asking him to investigate the circumstances surrounding the missing e-mails, which she maintained likely would have created a "traceable record of bias" toward Yucca Mountain. Berkley also asked Friedman to turn over all of the documents that his office gathered during its four-month probe. Wilma Slaughter, a spokeswoman for the inspector general, defended the investigation this morning. "As stated in our report, our conclusions are based on over 200 interviews of knowledgeable federal and contractor officials, reviews of thousands of pages of relevant documents and our reviews of the activities of the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board," Slaughter said. "Our report on this matter speaks for itself." Slaughter declined comment on whether her office would give Berkley the requested documents. Bob Loux, executive director of the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, the state's Yucca Mountain watchdog, suggested JK Research might have intentionally destroyed the e-mails. "Somebody may have gone to great lengths to keep investigators from seeing all of this," he said. "It doesn't seem inadvertent to me." Loux said important DOE records have a history of turning up missing during Nevada's longtime battle against Yucca Mountain. In 1986,when the DOE narrowed the number of nuclear waste dumpsites to three, the DOE told Congress that technical records showing how that decision was made were inadvertently destroyed, Loux said. A year later Congress passed the "Screw Nevada" bill singling out Yucca Mountain as the lone site in the nation to study, he said. "If all of the records surrounding the overview and the memo now are gone, then the inspector general really didn't give us an answer to our question," Loux said. "All of this then is nonsense." All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc. ***************************************************************** 5 Hanford guards question reduction *Wednesday, April 25, 2001* THE ASSOCIATED PRESS YAKIMA -- The 24-hour security detail at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation's K Basins, two 1.1 million-gallon pools holding lethal spent fuel, is being cut to save money. The Hanford guards union says it's a move that puts the public and the Columbia River at risk should either of those pools be ruptured by terrorist attack or internal sabotage. But the federal Department of Energy and Fluor Hanford, the managing contractor, say the business decision has an acceptable level of risk that will make operations more efficient. [Seattle Post-Intelligencer] 101 Elliott Ave. W. Seattle, WA 98119 (206) 448-8000 ***************************************************************** 6 Hanford guards riled over lack of security This story was published Wed, Apr 25, 2001 By The Associated Press and the Herald staff Hanford's guards union is criticizing a decision not to have a 24-hour security detail stationed at the K Basins. Earlier this month, the Department of Energy approved a Fluor Hanford plan to rearrange parts of Hanford's security setup, including an end to around-the-clock guards at the storage basins for spent reactor fuel. The guards union says the move puts the public and the Columbia River at risk of a terrorist attack or internal sabotage rupturing the radioactive pools 400 yards from the river. "If we drain those basins, it's going to make Chernobyl look like a Girl Scout campfire," said Darryl Sybouts, a former business agent for Local 21 of the International Guards Union of America. The K Basins are two indoor pools of water that hold 2,300 tons of spent uranium reactor fuel from Hanford's Cold War days. DOE spokesman Mike Talbot said DOE's Washington, D.C., headquarters studied the K Basins' security a year ago, followed by a similar DOE Richland office study earlier this year. The studies concluded that it is unlikely that someone would try to steal fuel from the K Basins. Such thieves would risk a deadly dose of radiation, and even if they survived, they'd need a huge, complex chemical plant to extract plutonium from the fuel, Talbot said. K Basins aren't the only part of Hanford to see changes in security after DOE approved Fluor's plan to rearrange much of Hanford security to save money, he said. Talbot declined to discuss the new security setup in detail, saying those arrangements are classified. He said the new security plan cuts back on the time that guards are physically present at the K Basins -- relying more on roving guards in the general area, sensors and physical barriers to protect the basins. Talbot said the changes won't result in layoffs, but will trim back on overtime hours that guards work. The union is not sounding the alarm because it fears potential job cuts or lost overtime, said Charles Nelson, the guards local's current business agent. "Our concern is security," he said. Nelson said the real concern isn't thieves, but someone damaging the basins and allowing the contamination to escape into soil and the Columbia River, which is only 400 yards away from the basins. Without the 24-hour guard, Nelson said, the extra workers brought on board for the K Basins cleanup project no longer are checked routinely for prohibited items, such as drugs, firearms and transmitters. This criticism comes when Hanford has begun moving fuel from the K Basins to spend a short stay at a vacuum facility before being stored in an underground vault in central Hanford. Talbot said the vacuum facility and vault are covered in the revamped security measures. Right now, most K Basins employees work in one shift, which is too soon increase to two, with a third shift to be added in several months. Consequently, the basins area will eventually be staffed by nuclear workers 24 hours a day. Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. This ***************************************************************** 7 National Lab to Host International Conference EarthVision Environmental News* ARGONNE, IL, April 25, 2001 - Environmental scientists and policy experts from around the world will gather at the US Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory May 14-18 for a conference focusing on how new science and technology is being applied to global environmental problems. The conference, titled "Eco-Informa 2001: Environmental Risks and the Global Community - Strategies for Meeting the Challenges," brings together international experts to cover the areas of: 1. sustainable environment, 2. engineering and biotechnology, 3. public policy and due process, and 4. environmental information in the 21st century. Argonne notes that within these areas, some of the topics the conference will touch upon include the cleanup of contamination generated from Cold War activities, resource management, urbanization, and global climate change. Participants will take these and other topics and discuss solutions and tools that will include environmental partnerships and communication, information technology and Internet applications, and geographic information systems and remote sensing. Agencies participating include the US Department of Energy, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US Department of Defense, NATO, UNESCO, the United Nations Environmental Program, the World Health Organization, and the World Bank. Countries represented include Algeria, Austria, Canada, England, France, Georgia, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Morocco, Norway, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Thailand, Ukraine and Uruguay. For more information on the conference, see the Eco-Informa 2001 websiteor call 630-252-1520. EarthVision Stories ***************************************************************** 8 Teller says Garwin designed H-bomb *April 24, 2001* After suffering a heart attack in 1979, Edward Teller sat down with a friend and a tape recorder and offered his views on the secret history of the hydrogen bomb. "So that first design," Teller said, "was made by Dick Garwin." He repeated the credit, ensuring there would be no misunderstanding. Teller, now 93, was not ceding the laurels for devising the bomb -- a glory he claims for himself. He was rewriting how the rough idea became the world's most feared weapon. His tribute, made more than two decades ago but just now coming to light, adds a surprising twist to a dispute that has roiled historians and scientists for decades: who should get credit for designing the H-bomb? The oral testament was meant to disparage Dr. Stanislaw M. Ulam, Teller's rival, now dead, and boost Dr. Richard L. Garwin, a young scientist at the time of the invention who later clashed with Teller and now says he would wipe the bomb from the earth if he could. The New York Times obtained a transcript of the recording recently from the friend with whom Teller shared his memories. Some historians of science praise Teller's tribute to Garwin as candid; others fault it as disingenuous. In any event, the recognition of Garwin is surprising because he is not usually seen as having a major role in designing the hydrogen bomb. He eventually became an outspoken advocate of arms control, battling often with Teller. The tribute also poses the riddle of how Garwin's work, done in the early 1950s, could have gone unacknowledged for so long. "It's fascinating," said Dr. Ray E. Kidder, an H-bomb pioneer at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, which Teller helped found and once directed. "There's always been this controversy over who had the idea of the H-bomb and who did what. This spells it out. It's extremely credible, and I dare say accurate." Dr. Priscilla McMillan, a historian at Harvard who is working on a book about the early H-bomb disputes, agreed, saying the tribute sounded right. She added that Teller might have done it to "square things with God" after his 1979 heart attack. One of the most controversial figures of the nuclear era, Teller played central roles in inventing the atomic and hydrogen bombs, and in destroying the career of Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, who in World War II had run the laboratory in the mountains of New Mexico that gave birth to the atomic bomb. Afterward, though, Oppenheimer questioned the morality of devising an even more powerful weapon, and amid the anti-communist paranoia of the McCarthy era, the government stripped him of his security clearance. The schism among scientists over his fate lasts to this day. In the process, Teller became a hero to conservatives but was disparaged by liberals as the role model for Dr. Strangelove, the fictive mad scientist of Stanley Kubrick's 1964 film who was fixated on mass destruction. Garwin, during the design effort a half-century ago, was a 23-year-old faculty member at the University of Chicago who was working during the summer break of 1951 at the New Mexico weapons laboratory, known as Los Alamos. Over the decades, he rose to prominence, often advising the government on secret matters of intelligence and weapons. In an interview, Garwin said Teller was correct to include him among the bomb's designers, likening himself to its midwife. "It was the kind of thing I do well," he said of joining theory, experiment and engineering to make complex new devices. But he added, "If I could wave a wand" to make the hydrogen bomb and the nuclear age go away, "I would do that." Now 73, Garwin is an experimental physicist who for decades worked at the International Business Machines Corp. and is now a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. He backs such arms control measures as the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty to outlaw all nuclear explosions. A theoretical physicist, Teller is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford and director emeritus of the Livermore weapons laboratory. He was an ardent advocate of the Reagan administration's Star Wars antimissile plan and, more recently, has promoted the idea of manipulating the earth's atmosphere to counteract global warming. If Teller's version of events is right, he and Garwin were the main forces behind one of the most ominous inventions of all time, a bomb that harnessed the fusion power of the sun. Teller had championed the goal since the early 1940s, before the atomic bomb actually flashed to life. His basic idea was to use the high heat of an exploding atomic bomb to ignite hydrogen fuel, fusing its atoms together and releasing even larger bursts of nuclear energy. But no one working at Los Alamos could figure out how to do that. The credit dispute has its roots in a conversation Teller had in early 1951 with Ulam, then a mathematician at Los Alamos. Afterward, a new plan emerged. The breakthrough idea, known as radiation implosion, was to build a large cylindrical casing that would hold the atomic bomb and hydrogen fuel at opposite ends. The flash of the exploding bomb would hit the case, causing it to glow and flood the interior of the casing with radiation pressure sufficient to compress and ignite the hydrogen fuel. No one knew whether the idea would work. And studies of it were slowed by ill will between Teller and Ulam, as well as debates at the weapons laboratory over whether building a hydrogen bomb was ethical and smart, given its potentially unlimited power. Garwin arrived at Los Alamos in May 1951 from the University of Chicago, where he had been a star in the laboratory of Enrico Fermi, the Nobel laureate and arguably the day's top physicist. Garwin had been at Los Alamos the previous summer and, intrigued by the work, had come back for another atomic sabbatical. In the interview, Garwin recalled that Teller had told him of the new idea and asked him to design an experiment to prove it would work -- something the Los Alamos regulars failed to do. "They were burnt out" from too many rush efforts to design and test nuclear arms, Garwin recalled. "So I did it." By July 1951 after talking at the weapons laboratory with physicists and engineers, he had sketched a preliminary design. Of its features, Garwin said, "There is still very little I am allowed to say." He continued working on the design until he went back to Chicago that fall. Then, as momentum built at Los Alamos for the H-bomb, many experts joined the design effort, which was finished in early 1952. The prototype bomb stood two stories high. In November 1952, it vaporized the Pacific island of Elugelab, a mile in diameter. Its power was equal to 10.4 million tons of high explosive, or about 700 times the power of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. Unlike its atomic predecessors, the hydrogen bomb theoretically had no destructive limits. Its fuel was cheap, and its force could be made as large as desired. Scientists talked of doomsday weapons big enough to blow the earth's atmosphere into space, or to raise ocean waves that crushed whole nations. NewsChoice.com ***************************************************************** 9 General Dynamics To Buy Newport News (washingtonpost.com) The Associated Press Wednesday, April 25, 2001; 7:58 AM NEW YORK –– General Dynamics Corp. plans to acquire Newport News Shipbuilding Inc. for $2.1 billion in its second attempt in two years to acquire its shipbuilding rival and become the sole manufacturer of Navy aircraft carriers and submarines. The deal announced Wednesday would make General Dynamics a shipbuilding powerhouse, giving it control over the manufacture and maintenance of all the U.S. military's nuclear-powered ships, in addition to a strong position building Navy destroyers, auxiliary ships and commercial oil tankers. If approved by regulators, General Dynamics' deal for Newport News would make it a stronger rival to Northrop Grumman Corp., which recently acquired the only other major U.S. shipmaker, Litton Industries Inc. The deal has been approved by the boards of both companies. In addition to paying $2.1 billion in cash for Newport News stock, General Dynamics plans to assume $500 million of Newport News debt. Under terms of the deal, General Dynamics would pay $67.50 for each of Newport News' 29.6 million shares outstanding, representing a 23 percent premium to the stock's price of $55.05 as of 4 p.m. Tuesday. In 1999, Newport Chairman William Fricks rejected General Dynamics' unsolicited offer of $1.4 billion as too low. Clinton administration officials and congressional leaders also balked at the original proposal. The deal is likely to be heavily scrutinized by the Pentagon and federal antitrust authorities. Proponents of the deal are hopeful the Bush administration will have a more relaxed attitude about such mergers. The Wall Street Journal, which reported on the deal in Wednesday's editions, said no shipyards are expected to close as a result of the acquisition. General Dynamics, headquartered in Falls Church, Va., is a leader in business aviation, information systems and land combat systems as well as shipbuilding. It employs 46,000 people worldwide and expects sales this year of $11.5 billion. Newport News, based in Newport News, Va., employs 17,000 people and had $2.07 billion in revenue last year. On the Net: General Dynamics http://www.gdeb.com Newport News http://www.nns.com © 2001 The Associated Press ***************************************************************** 10 Size doesn't matter Guardian Unlimited | America has put nuclear weapons back on the agenda. Big or small, they're still dangerous Special report: Britain's nuclear industry Richard Norton-Taylor Wednesday April 25, 2001 The Guardian It is time we Europeans woke up to the fact, however uncomfortable it may be, that nuclear weapons are well and truly back on the agenda. A growing lobby of American political and military zealots, reawakened by President Bush's election success and egged on by leading scientists, want to attack "rogue" states with nuclear weapons. Under proposals being considered by the US defence department, "mini-nukes" would attack dictators' underground headquarters and their supplies of chemical and biological weapons. Nukes would do what conventional bombs have conspicuously failed to achieve: knock out bunkers being built deeper and deeper into the rocks. User-friendly, "low-yield", nuclear weapons would limit collateral damage (ie killing civilians) and radioactive fall-out, argue their proponents. "The US will undoubtedly require a new nuclear weapon... because it is realised that the yields of the weapons left over from the cold war are too high for addressing the deterrence requirements of a multipolar, widely proliferated world," Paul Robinson, director of America's Sandia Nuclear Laboratories pronounced recently. "Low-yield weapons with highly accurate delivery systems" would be a useful deterrent, he said, adding that such devices could help decision-makers "contemplate the destruction of some buried or hidden targets while being mindful of the need to minimise collateral damage". In a paper entitled Nuclear Weapons in the 21st Century, Stephen Younger, head of nuclear weapons research at the Los Alamos laboratory, last year said low-yield nukes would be more effective against underground concrete bunkers and mobile missiles than conventional bombs. Weapons of less than five kilotons, the argument goes, would be a more credible deterrent than "normal" nuclear weapons. Indeed, they could have been used during the Kosovo war. And mini-nukes would enable the US to reduce its stockpile of 6,000 much larger nuclear warheads. The taboo, whereby nuclear weapons would not be used against non-nuclear powers as a war-fighting tool, was breached last year in an amendment to the US defence budget authorisation bill tabled by two republican senators, John Warner and Wayne Allard. This required the Pentagon to study how best to bomb buried targets, including the use of low-yield nuclear devices. A 1994 law, the Federation of American Scientists points out in a recent report, prohibits nuclear laboratories in the US from undertaking research and development that could lead to a precision nuclear weapon of less than five kilotons because "low-yield nuclear weapons blur the distinction between nuclear and conventional war". However, it warns that legislation for long-term research and actual development of low-yield nuclear weapons will almost certainly be proposed in the new session of Congress. The notion that an accurate, low-yield, nuclear bomb would cause limited - acceptable - collateral damage is ludicrous. As Martin Butcher and Theresa Hitchens, two security analysts, point out, a five-kiloton warhead dropped on London might only destroy Islington. But it would kill thousands of people and make thousands more victims of burns, radiation sickness, and blindness. "The use of any nuclear weapon capable of destroying a buried target that is otherwise immune to conventional attack will necessarily produce enormous numbers of civilian casualties," the federation points out in its report. "No earth-burrowing missile can penetrate deep enough into the earth to contain an explosion with a nuclear yield even as small as 1% of the 15 kiloton Hiroshima weapon," it says. "The explosion simply blows out a massive crater of radioactive dirt, which rains down on the local region with an especially intense and deadly fallout." The Pentagon is due to send its report on mini-nukes to Congress in July, the same time a separate and comprehensive review of US strategic nuclear deterrence is likely to be published. One thing is certain. As Paul Rogers, professor of peace studies at Bradford University, puts it: "Building new nuclear weapons is firmly on the agenda of the Bush administration." Whether it involves the development of mini-nukes or a new version of the Minuteman intercontinental ballis tic missile system or a new Trident 3 system for nuclear submarines, it will lead to increasing pressure within the US to resume nuclear tests, a move which could destroy the comprehensive test ban treaty which Washington has yet to ratify. This, coupled with the growing debate in the US about using nuclear weapons in limited or regional wars, has the most serious implications for nuclear proliferation and arms control treaties already threatened by the Bush administration's determination to go ahead with a missile defence system. There is talk now in the US about nuclear weapons in this project, too. Nuclear warheads, so the argument runs, would be most effective in knocking out incoming missiles. That's one more reason to worry. ***************************************************************** 11 France studies Gulf War health problems UPI News Article: Tuesday, 24 April 2001 8:13 (ET) By ELIZABETH BRYANT PARIS, April 24 (UPI) -- French Defense Minister Alain Richard announced Tuesday that the government would launch a study into the health effects of the Gulf War on some 25,000 soldiers deployed during the fighting. The announcement followed a report by a panel of health experts presented Tuesday to France's health and defense ministries. The report said isolated symptoms and health complaints were more frequent among French soldiers than in the rest of the country's population. Although the 135-page report did not find "grouped symptoms" generalized among the Gulf War veterans, experts recommended a health questionnaire should be distributed to France's 25,000 Gulf War veterans, along with a study into causes of death of French soldiers deployed in the region. Following the report, Richard said the government would follow the panel's recommendations. "Even if we've had very few signs of complaints or questions, there must be a medical questionnaire generalized for 25,000 soldiers who service in the Gulf 10 years ago," Richard told reporters. "From there, we'll lead an in-depth study on the symptoms that appear in number" among those surveyed, he said. Similar studies launched in the United States and Britain failed to draw conclusive evidence of a "Gulf War syndrome" among military personnel serving in the war against Iraq a decade ago. The French study will also look into the causes of death by French soldiers fighting in the Balkans, the Defense Ministry said. In recent months, French and other European governments have launched inquiries into the potential health effects of depleted uranium on soldiers serving in the Balkans. But despite a rash of reports of soldiers with Leukemia and other diseases, many scientists concluded there was no evidence of health effects from the uranium-tipped shells. -- Copyright 2001 by United Press International. ***************************************************************** 12 Study: Sierra Army Depot is California's top polluter *Frank X. Mullen Jr.* RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL Wednesday April 25th, 2001 The Sierra Army Depot, just 55 miles from Reno, was California’s leading air polluter during 1999, according to a new federal report that activists said proves the health threat to northern Nevada. The military base, northwest of Reno on the California boarder, discharged 5.4 million pounds of toxic chemicals into the air that year, about 17 percent of all toxins inventoried statewide, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. The pollution is the result of the Army’s 30-year practice of burning and detonating obsolete munitions on an open hillside behind the base near Herlong, Calif., according to the EPA’s annual toxic release inventory. A Reno Gazette-Journal investigation into the base’s activities last year showed the base has violated its own guidelines for the blasts by blowing up munitions when the cloud cover was low or the wind was blowing faster than the guidelines allowed Although Army officials deny the blasting causes any health problems and disputed the EPA’s findings, Lassen County environmental activists contend the EPA ranking proves the dangers. “The Army must halt this barbaric method of throwing bombs in a ditch and blowing them up in the open air, sending toxic clouds to the people downwind,” said Jack Pastor, leader of Citizens Against Munitions in Susanville, Calif. “They are sacrificing our communities.” The Army should switch to blast chambers, which don’t send toxins into the air, Pastor said. Army officials denied wrongdoing. “We are in compliance with environmental laws and all the guidelines,” said Larry Rogers, base spokesman. “We are operating within the environmental controls placed on us. We are within the acceptable (health) risk posed by the regulators.” Rogers said the EPA’s report is inaccurate because it is based on the total weight of munitions destroyed at the depot and doesn’t take into account bomb casings and other metals that are recycled. “The EPA’s listing shows 100 percent of the items being vaporized,” he said. “That’s not the case. We are working with the regulators to make next year’s report more accurate.” “It doesn’t matter if we are No. 1 or No. 10 on the (EPA) list,” Rogers said. “The bottom line is we’re in compliance.” In past public hearings, Army spokesmen said the base emits fewer pollutants than the power plant or the lumber mill in Susanville. At the time, there were no EPA figures to dispute those claims. Due to a Clinton Administration order, federal facilities are included on the EPA state toxics list for the first time this year. Base officials are seeking state and federal permits to annually destroy more than 106 million pounds of out-of-date bullets, bombs, rocket motors and artillery, one of the depot’s primary missions. The California Department of Toxic Substances Control has been considering granting the base a toxic release permit since 1994, when Army officials applied for a permit after operating 14 years under interim status. Since holding public hearings last fall, state officials have been conducting additional studies and reviewing the more than 2,000 public comments they have received, said Ron Baker, a department spokesman. Lassen County and federal officials are also considering what requirements to include in a permit to bring the base into compliance with the federal Clean Air Act. Rogers said the depot is “ramping up” for the season to demolish about 24 million pounds of material this year, about half the historic quantity. He said the decrease in demolition is partly due to public concern over noise levels from the blasts and is also due to a downturn in business. Rogers said the depot is investigating new technologies of weapons destruction, but none seem practical for the large quantities of munitions destroyed at the base. All of the chemicals reported by the EPA were discharged by the demolition operation, EPA officials said. More than 4 million pounds are aluminum fumes, the EPA reported. Other chemicals include roughly 1 million pounds of copper, and more than 130,000 pounds of zinc and emissions containing lead, nickel, hydrogen cyanide and styrene. ©2001 Reno Gazette-Journal ***************************************************************** 13 Legislators aim to restore uranium cleanup funds April 24, 2001 LAS VEGAS SUN Although the Bush administration removed a budget item to clean up radioactive uranium tailings leaking into the Colorado River near Moab, Utah, the Nevada congressional delegation plans to help restore the funding. Last year Congress gave the Department of Energy responsibility for removing 13 million tons of uranium mill tailings that leak about 16,000 gallons of contaminated water a day into the river, the major drinking water source for Nevada, Arizona and California. A $2.8 million line item in the DOE's Grand Junction, Colo., budget would allow the federal agency to begin overseeing the project. Some officials estimated it would cost up to $300 million to remove the tailings left after Atlas Mining Corp., the bankrupt Denver-based company, quit mining uranium after the Cold War. Atlas filed for bankruptcy in 1997, leaving the cleanup to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. But after the NRC decided to cap the leaky tailings in place for $100 million, former Energy Secretary Bill Richardson stepped in and pledged to remove the tailings piled 750 feet from the river's edge. Utah and Nevada water officials feared a flash flood or other disaster could wash the entire pile of tailings into the Colorado, contaminating the river downstream. All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc. ***************************************************************** 14 Uranium Waste Cleanup Gets No U.S. Funds April 24, 2001 Colorado River is feared. By TONY PERRY, Times Staff Writer The Bush administration has omitted any money from the federal budget to continue the cleanup of a huge uranium slag heap in southern Utah that has been leaking radioactive waste into the Colorado River. Perched about 750 feet from the river's edge near the small town of Moab, the waste heap is the size of a football field and contains 13 tons of material left over from a uranium mill that shut down in 1984. Chris Ullman, spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget, said the request for money for the Moab site will be reviewed by the administration. He said that cleaning up contamination left from the cold war is "a priority to the president." The budgetary omission has brought protests from Utah and Southern California. Officials in California are worried that the mill waste could severely contaminate the Colorado River, a major source of drinking water for Southern California and the Southwest. "We worked too long and too hard to let this happen," said Rep. Grace Napolitano (D-Montebello). "It's too critical to California." "Our entire water supply is threatened," said Rep. Bob Filner (D-Chula Vista). "They've got to act quickly." After years of trying to get federal attention, Napolitano, Filner and other members of Congress managed to get an amendment to a military appropriations bill last year pledging assistance for the cleanup at Moab. The measure provided no money but contained a pledge that the federal government, pending a study by the National Academy of Sciences, would pay to have the waste pile moved away from the river. The bill was signed by President Bill Clinton just before the November election, with a promise that the government would continue the project in future years. It was part of a common two-step legislative process in which a project is authorized the first year, and funded in the second and subsequent years. So far, water intake plants downstream from Moab have not detected any unsafe levels of toxic substances traceable to the waste pile. Officials worry, however, that the waste heap is a "radioactive time bomb" that should be cleaned up before a flood, an earthquake or the cumulative effects of the leaching contaminate drinking water supplies downstream. Last week, seven members of Congress petitioned the chairman of the House energy and water development subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee to add $10 million to the budget for the project. Their letter noted that 25 million people in the West depend on the Colorado River for drinking water. But the Bush administration, to date, has not budgeted money for the cleanup or for the study. Meanwhile, Moab residents complain that the cleanup work done so far at the site has actually made things worse by increasing the amount of dirt that blows into town during the area's frequent windstorms. "People here are up in arms about the tail dust blowing through the town," said Bill Hedden, a former Grand County commissioner from Moab and now Utah conservation director of the Grand Canyon Trust. The slag heap was left behind by a plant run by Atlas Corp., which filed for bankruptcy protection in 1998. The plant, which began operating in 1956, provided uranium for nuclear weapons. Moab, with 4,500 people, is a popular tourist destination 240 miles southeast of Salt Lake City in a starkly beautiful, ecologically fragile corner of the Southwest. The region is home to several national parks and monuments. In the 1950s, Moab was the capital of a uranium mining boom. The Colorado River and an 875-acre wetland preserve close to the waste pile are home to dozens of species of fish and birds, including five that are protected by the Endangered Species Act: the Colorado pike minnow, razorback sucker, humpback chub and boneytail fish and the southwestern willow flycatcher, a bird. California officials hope that it is only a matter of convincing the new administration of the importance of the project. "The president's budget has been culled back to the president's priorities--Moab was not one of his campaign themes," said Adan Ortega, senior executive assistant to the general manager at the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. "We hope the Congress can convince the president of its importance." A spokesman for Rep. Chris Cannon (R-Utah), whose district includes Moab, said the Bush budget does not include any specific Department of Energy cleanup projects, and therefore his boss is confident that Moab has not been singled out for exclusion. The spokesman said Cannon believes that the administration, once it has time to review the budget, will include the cleanup in future budgets. But others, including the trustee for Atlas, suggest that the Bush administration may decide that it is too expensive and not necessary to move the pile. There are scientific disputes about whether virtually all of the toxic material will have leached into the river before the pile can be moved. Efforts at removing water from the pile--as a way to decrease the amount of toxic substances leaching into the Colorado River--were halted in February amid a dispute between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and PricewaterhouseCoopers, trustee for the owner of the defunct uranium plant. PricewaterhouseCoopers unsuccessfully sought a grant of immunity from the Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the company if the cleanup was seen as damaging to fish and birds. The company could be fined $25,000 a day if its work injures wildlife. Denied immunity, the firm decided to halt work, to the chagrin of officials in Utah, California and Washington, D.C. "The agency is very upset by the slow action, or inaction, by the trustee out there," said Rick Weller, spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. "We've tried every way we can to clear the path so they can move ahead," said Bill Sinclair, director of the division of radiation control with the Utah Department of Environmental Quality. The work done by contractors hired by PricewaterhouseCoopers has been funded not by the bill signed by Clinton but by a fund controlled by the federal government for the cleanup of former uranium plant sites. The fund is made up of federal funds and money contributed by the former plant owners, in this case, Atlas Corp. Jim Langley, a Houston-based PricewaterhouseCoopers official, said that the fund will pay part--but not all--of the costs of covering the slag heap. But the fund, he said, will not pay for moving the pile or for the National Academy of Science study of whether moving the pile is necessary. Those actions will require additional federal financing, Langley said. The estimated cost of covering up the pile is $16 million to $20 million. Estimates for moving it away from the river range from $300 million to $1 billion. Langley said PricewaterhouseCoopers attorneys have been told by Bush administration officials that the cost of moving the pile is daunting. "We've been told that California energy is the sole interest of the Bush administration's Department of Energy in its first year, not Florida, not Alaska, and certainly not Moab," Langley said. Langley added that his firm has been getting a "bum rap" for stopping work in February. He said PricewaterhouseCoopers was caught between differing views of the regional office of Fish and Wildlife and the headquarters in Washington about whether it could be fined for any environmental damage. 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