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Russia upgrades nuclear fleet - possibly..
The
Russian Navy maintains a fleet of about 60 submarines, including 10 nuclear
powered strategic submarines, over 30 nuclear-powered attack submarines,
diesel-electric submarines and special-purpose subs. "Probably,
tactical nuclear weapons (on submarines) will play a key role in the
future," Vice Admiral Oleg Burtsev, deputy head of the Navy General Staff,
told RIA Novosti. "There is no longer any need to equip missiles with
powerful nuclear warheads. We can install low-yield warheads on existing cruise
missiles," he said.
The admiral mentioned Russia's new Severodvinsk nuclear-powered attack submarine, which will be commissioned with the Navy in 2010-2011, as an example. The fourth-generation Graney class submarine combines the ability to launch a variety of long-range cruise missiles (up to 3,100 miles) with nuclear warheads, and effectively engage hostile submarines and surface warships.
Toledo's two nuke plants still don't get public's vote: just don't mention Fermi 3!
Davis-Besse's tarnished legacy continues to
be an anecdote for the nation's top nuclear regulators, seven years after
FirstEnergy Corp. nearly let its reactor head burst, causing a breach that
would have allowed radioactive steam to form in the containment building that
protects the nuclear reactor. The last such accident occurred in 1979 with the
partial meltdown at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island. Two Nuclear Regulatory
Commission board members last week used Davis-Besse to illustrate the need for
more safety while demanding greater accountability from nuclear industry
officials.
Five anti-nuclear groups, unimpressed by
Fermi 2's solid performance last year, followed through with their request for
an intervention hearing aimed at blocking plans DTE Energy might have of
building Fermi 3. Meanwhile, the NRC is reviewing DTE's application for what
would be a U$10 billion plant, although the utility has not committed itself to
building it.
Water water everywhere, but not a drop to drink around Oak Ridge
The
sudden change is because of concern that hazardous
waste from DOE's Oak Ridge property on the other side of the Clinch
could be moving in their direction, perhaps using cracks or fissures in
underground rock formations to travel beneath the waterway. That's
mostly conjecture or theory at this point. However, there's enough
circumstantial evidence, including radioactive contaminants found in
"sentry" monitoring wells on the DOE side of the river and some
anomalies in residential well-water samples on the other side, to get the
attention of environmental regulators. It's prompted the DOE to not only
provide bottled water to residents in the short term but to pay for commercial
water lines to be extended to about a dozen other residences in the Jones Road
area.
John Owsley, the state official responsible for overseeing DOE's environmental activities in Oak Ridge, said nothing found to date indicates there's an immediate health threat for local residents, but he said the issue is top priority for his office.
Used waste builds up, thanks to Obama's fund cut for Yucca (Part 2...)
Highly
radioactive
wastewill likely accumulate in Minnesota for decades longer than
expected because of a new energy policy taking shape in Washington.
President
Obama is closing the door on Yucca Mountain, a remote site in Nevada that for
more than 20 years has been the nation's only candidate for permanent burial of
nuclear waste. That leaves the waste containers collecting at nuclear plants
near Monticello and in Red Wing, with nowhere to go. "President
Obama has been emphatic that storage at Yucca Mountain is not an option,
period," said Stephanie Mueller, spokesperson for the U.S. Department of
Energy.
Nuclear
utilities including Xcel Energy hoped to ship wastes to Nevada beginning around
2020, but they have seen the opening date postponed many times. The project has
encountered high costs, environmental concerns and steadfast opposition from
Nevadans. More delays in turning (on) Japanese - style
These
technical failures, responsible for yet another delay in two- decade-old
efforts to launch the plant, are far from last-minute crinkles. Not only have
they proved frustratingly difficult to iron out, the problems at the Rokkasho
Reprocessing Plant, conceived as a major link in Japan's nuclear fuel
recycling program, could shake the program to its foundations.
Plant
operator Japan Nuclear Fuel Ltd. announced in January it would postpone the end
of testing from February to August (the 16th time it has delayed completion of
the plant) which was originally due to go into full operation in 1997.
When in operation, the Rokkasho plant will reprocess spent fuel from nuclear power stations in Japan to extract plutonium, which will be burned again to generate electricity. But the latest delay could jeopardize the nation's nuclear fuel recycling policy. Home Geiger Counter Accessories Geiger Counters UV Torches & Marbles Nuclear Novelties Science Signs & Labels Nibbles Sources
Bulgaria plans to expand plant at Kozloduy by 2030
Okay, Geiger, where did you stash that mercury?
Corruption fears in the Philippines due to plant re-commissioning plan
Members of the Network Opposed to
BNPP Revival fear that the planned re-commissioning of the Bataan
Nuclear Power Plant will spur corruption anew within the country’s
corridors of power.
About turn in Alberta - perhaps a nuke plant wouldn't be so bad..
When plans surfaced to build a nuclear
power plant in Alberta, opposition groups were quick to gather their
forces. But now, two years later, some
momentum seems to be gaining on the other side of the debate. Alfred Johnson says he has no
problem with the nuclear power plant that could be built just five kilometres
north of his land in the Peace River area of north - western Alberta by Bruce
Energy. In fact, he's helping organize a new pro-nuclear power group. Johnson
and Ed Pimm said their fledgling group is called the Committee for
Sustainable Regional Socio-Economic Development. They think the power plant could provide lots of high-paying, steady jobs, as well as plentiful economic spinoff opportunities. This is something their community needs badly, they said. The group is particularly in favour of the first of two proposed sites, near Lac Cardinal, because they say it is more centrally located to the many communities in the area and that could mean a more even spread of the benefits. A nuclear lighthouse? Nah...pull the other one!
After reviewing different ideas on how to make them
work for a years without service and any external power supply, Soviet engineers
decided to implement atomic
energy to power up those structures. So, special lightweight small
atomic reactors were produced in limited series to be delivered to the Polar
Circle lands and to be installed on the lighthouses. Those small reactors could
work in the independent mode for years and didn’t require any human
interference. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the hunt for the metals like copper attracted the looters (who didn’t care or maybe even didn’t know the meaning of the “Radioactive Danger” sign) who broke in and destroyed the equipment. They also broke into the reactors, causing all the structures to become radioactively polluted. U$7.65bn nuke power stations on cards for Florida
Progress Energy in Florida
is planning to retire two of its old coal-fired power plants and replace them
with nuclear power units from Westinghouse Electric Co. The two units, which
will cost the energy company about U$7.65 billion, are expected to be online in
about eight years.
Progress
Energy, based in St. Petersburg, Fla., made the announcement in conjunction
with Westinghouse on Monday. The energy company also will be working with The
Shaw Group Inc.'s Power Group of Baton Rouge.
According
to Progress Energy, the two new nuclear power units will provide 3,000 jobs at
the peak of construction and 800 full-time jobs when the units are operational.
The contract with Westinghouse is for engineering, procurement and
construction. Each of the power units will provide 1,150 megawatts of
electricity. In addition to the U$7.65 billion for the two power generation units, the company said the total cost of the project would include another U$6.4 billion for the 5,100 acre site, financing costs, plant components, construction, labor, regulatory fees and reactor fuel. Home Geiger Counter Accessories Geiger Counters UV Torches & Marbles Nuclear Novelties Science Signs & Labels Nibbles Sources Uranium storage plant is ready - sorry, but you can't use it until 2010
A
lot of testing and training will take place in the months ahead at the U$549m
plant and that will be followed by a series of readiness reviews to actually
certify the high-security nuclear facility for use. "We expect to receive
authorization to begin loading the facility about March 2010," Steven
Wyatt, a federal spokesman at the Y-12 nuclear weapons plant, said in an e-mail
response to questions.
Some of the security features, such as the massive vault doors, are multiple and redundant to prevent unwanted access to the inner sanctum - where the nearly pure stocks of U-235 will be stored. The only entry to the facility comes from the east side, where hydraulically operated loading docks are located.
Okay - whose job was it to change the batteries...?
Federal inspectors said that they will ratchet up scrutiny
of the San
Onofre nuclear power plant after discovering that a battery meant to
power safety systems had been inoperative for four years. Plant personnel
discovered in March that bolts connecting an emergency battery to a circuit
breaker were loose, a problem the Nuclear Regulatory Commission attributed to
poor maintenance. The commission said that the twin-reactor plant near San
Clemente, run by Rosemead-based Southern California Edison, remains safe, and
that other backup batteries are functioning. But the commission expressed
concern that the battery problem had gone unnoticed from 2004 to 2008. No more protests at Aldermaston, people: it's American now
The
remaining two-thirds are already owned by US defence giant Lockheed Martin and
Serco of Britain. The move was announced in a brief statement on the BNFL
website which said: "BNFL is delighted to confirm that it has today agreed
the sale of its one third shareholding in AWE Management Limited to the Jacobs
Engineering Group." Aldermaston
is where the Trident nuclear warhead is designed and manufactured. It has been
the focus of anti-nuclear protests for decades. The Conservatives called for a
government explanation, saying the AWE was "critical" to Britain's
nuclear deterrent capability. The Liberal Democrat's defence spokesman Nick Harvey said: "The whole argument used for Britain having a separate weapons establishment is that this is required by the non-proliferation treaty.”
Obama's Yucca opposition causes nuke storage problems
South Carolina Electric & Gas
would have to store radioactive waste
produced by new reactors at its Jenkinsville nuclear plant until the federal
government finds a place to bury it, a utility executive said. Steve Byrne,
vice president of nuclear operations, said the plans for two new reactors the
utility wants to build call for waste such as spent fuel rods to be stored
above ground in concrete-enclosed casks. An application has been submitted by
South Carolina Electric & Gas and its partner, state-operated Santee
Cooper, to build two 1,117-megawatt reactor units, costing $9.8 billion, at the
V.C. Summer Nuclear Station. Where to store high-level radioactive waste has long been a national issue: plans to use Yucca Mountain seem to have been thwarted as President-elect Barack Obama has repeatedly said he opposes using the Nevada site.
New feature in a Roller – a nuclear glovebox: workers exposed at Raynesway plant
One
employee received medical care in June after coming into contact with a
radioactive glovebox at Rolls-Royce's controversial Raynesway
facility in Derby which produces parts and fuel for Trident submarines. Two
other workers were exposed to an "internal dose" of radioactive
material in September last year, triggering an investigation by the Health and
Safety Executive's Nuclear Installations Inspectorate (NII).
Part of the resulting safety report said: "One matter of particular note considered during the current period was a radiological incident that occurred on June 15 in which a number of employees were potentially exposed to a release of radioactive material from a glovebox. Early indications are that only one employee has received a radiation dose; however, this is within the legal limits for a radiation worker."
Oh, Canada - new nuke plant on way?
Duncan
Hawthorne, president and chief executive officer of Bruce Power, is expected to
announce at an event near Nanticoke, Ontario, along the north shore of Lake
Erie, that his company is seeking a site preparation licence from the Canadian
Nuclear Safety Commission.
The
application would start an approvals process likely to take five years before
construction can begin, but there's no guarantee such a plant will get built.
The Ministry of Energy recently selected Darlington as the site of the
province's newest nuclear plant in 20 years, to be operated by Ontario Power
Generation. Industry experts say Nanticoke is considered an ideal site for a nuclear plant because of its location, lakeside access and ample access to high-voltage transmission lines. Home Geiger Counter Accessories Geiger Counters UV Torches & Marbles Nuclear Novelties Science Signs & Labels Nibbles Sources
George Bush finds new job after leaving White House
Residents living within a five-mile radius of the plant were invited to get an inside look at their nuclear neighbour, with a particular emphasis on safety. Since the 2001 airline hijackings, the plant has been closed to the general public and security around the facility has been greatly increased.
James Spina, vice president of the Calvert Cliffs plant, said that the idea to open the plant for tours came after public meetings for the proposed third reactor. "We felt that it was appropriate to allow some fashion of general access." Most noticeable during the tour was the security, which included armed guards, surveillance cameras and several screening checkpoints. Visitors were also assured the reactors would be able to withstand being struck by a commercial airliner. In addition to the security, the highlights of the tour included a control room simulator and a close, outdoors look at the reactors.
Fallout denied in Oz nuclear issues row
Mr
Grylls said the partnership between the Liberal government and the Nationals,
who hold the balance of power in the new parliament, was working well despite
reports of a clash over his views on nuclear waste.
Perth
newspaper The Sunday Times reported that the Nationals were on a collision
course with the Barnett government because of Mr Grylls' stance that WA should
accept nuclear waste from around the world. Premier Colin Barnett, while
declaring his readiness to open up the state to uranium mining, has ruled out
any plan for a nuclear waste repository in WA.
Mr
Grylls said the issue was "not on the radar. Three years ago I made the
comment that if you support reducing world carbon emissions then nuclear power
is a way of doing that.”
"If there's going to be nuclear power there'll be spent fuel rods. If there's going to be spent fuel rods and you're concerned about their safe storage you might want to think about storing them where we have got control rather than where we haven't got control.”
India looks to Sweden for nuke energy disposal tips
India is planning to increase
nuclear power generation at least 15-fold by 2030 and now may be time
to work out how it will handle the radioactive waste generated by the new
reactors
IItalian waste due for Oak Ridge disposal delayed by red tape
NRC
spokesman David McIntyre said the commission approved an order "holding in
abeyance" the import license application until some related court
proceedings are resolved.
The
Northwest Interstate Compact passed a resolution earlier this year saying any
disposal of foreign waste in Utah would require its approval: EnergySolutions
subsequently filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the regional waste
compact's authority: that issue is still pending.
If approved, the company plans to bring the waste to Oak Ridge for processing at its plant on Bear Creek Road. After incineration, compaction and other treatments, the waste residues would be transported to the company's landfill at Clive, Utah, for disposal.
Venezuela 's nuke plans get helping hand fom Russia
Chavez
said he accepted an offer from Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin for
assistance in building a nuclear reactor. "Russia is ready to support
Venezuela in the development of nuclear energy with peaceful purposes and we
already have a commission working on it," Chavez said. "We are
interested in developing nuclear energy." Putin
offered Chavez assistance in developing nuclear energy during a meeting in the
Russian city of Novo-Ogaryovo. The
prime minister did not specify what kind of cooperation he could offer
Venezuela, but Russia is aggressively promoting itself as a builder of nuclear
power plants in developing nations. Home Geiger Counter Accessories Geiger Counters UV Torches & Marbles Nuclear Novelties Science Signs & Labels Nibbles Sources Hutton takes on new job at British Energy?
U.K.
Business Secretary John
Hutton told a recent industry meeting that building new reactors was
indispensable for keeping the nations’ lights on, as the country's biggest
nuclear power producer, British Energy Group Plc, continued takeover talks.
According
to a news release from London's Department for Business, Enterprise &
Regulatory Reform, Hutton said: ‘We are determined to get new nuclear up and
running as soon as possible.’ A program of building new stations may also
create as many as 100,000 jobs.
British Energy, which is 36 percent state-owned, is in takeover talks with Paris-based Electricite de France SA, which has plans for at least four new U.K. reactors from 2017. Prime Minister Gordon Brown supports the expansion of nuclear power to replace older plants. Didn't you know? Plutonium site is now a historic landmark
Now,
63 years later, the place and its purpose have been publicly affirmed. Last
month, B Reactor, the world’s first major nuclear reactor and the source of
plutonium for the bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki, was designated a national
historic landmark.
Although
the federal government no longer produces plutonium here at the Hanford Nuclear
Reservation, it expects to spend the foreseeable future cleaning up after it.
I’m going to retire out there,” said Clayton Howell, 41, a local carpenter: “This is the best job I’ve ever had. They don’t rush you. They’ve got people watching the people who are watching the people watch the people.” Dib Dib Dib - let's get that badge! US Scouts can aim for Atomic Badge
Anyway,
here is an extract from someone’s blog page that I thought you might like: ‘You
might work hands-on with radioactive materials while working on this merit
badge. It is essential that you take safety precautions before, during,
and after working with any radioactive substance. Accidentally swallowing,
breathing in, or coming in direct skin contact with ANY amount of radioactive
material could cause severe long term health problems.
Be
sure to discuss your plans for working with radioactive materials with your
counselor or the laboratory manager where you obtain your samples.’
India on course for nuclear technology? We’re still
concentrating on the East; this time
India, courtesy of the BBC’s web pages. The group of nations that regulate the global nuclear trade
is meeting in Vienna to consider lifting restrictions on selling nuclear technology
to India. It
is part of a controversial Indian-US deal that needs the approval of the
45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) before the US Congress can ratify it.
The
group did not endorse the plan in a meeting last month, forcing the US to come
back with a revised proposal. India's government says the deal is vital to meet
its civil energy demands.
Critics say it creates a dangerous precedent - effectively allowing India to expand its nuclear power industry without requiring it to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) as other nations must. They say the deal would undermine the arguments for isolating Iran over its nuclear programme and be a disaster for international non-proliferation efforts. UK's NDA gets 'MOXy'
According
to scientists, Britain has a stockpile of plutonium
and uranium that, if converted to fuel, could be worth nearly Ł160 billion
and power three nuclear reactors for 60 years. Its future still has to be
decided.
The
Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), which takes responsibility for the
stockpile on behalf of the State, has begun to consult the nuclear industry on
what to do with the 100 tonnes of plutonium, stored at Sellafield.
By
recycling plutonium and uranium into so-called mixed oxide fuel (MOX), they can
be re-used in nuclear reactors of the sort used in France, Germany, Japan and
Belgium. The three reactor designs being considered for Britain by the Nuclear
Installations Inspectorate could burn MOX fuel alongside uranium. Once turned
into ceramic-encased MOX pellets, plutonium can be used in a nuclear reactor.
Oak Ridge Lab evacuation due to 'operational emergency' (the lowest level rating)
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