ENVR LEAK CLOSES FRENCH NUCLEAR PLANT

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
Leak closes French nuclear plant.
BBC News Service, Friday, 11 July 2008


France's nuclear safety watchdog has ordered a plant in the country's south to temporarily close after a uranium leak polluted the local water supply. The plant's operator has been told to improve safety procedures at the site.

Waste containing unenriched uranium leaked into two rivers at the Tricastin plant at Bollene, 40km (25 miles) from the popular tourist city of Avignon. People in nearby towns have been warned not to drink any water or eat fish from the rivers since Monday's leak. Officials have also cautioned people not to swim in the rivers or use their water to irrigate crops.

Late notice
Approximately 30 cubic metres of liquid containing unenriched uranium spilled from an overflowing reservoir at the Tricastin facility, which handles liquids contaminated by uranium, into the ground and into the Gaffiere and Lauzon rivers. The site has a nuclear reactor as well as a radioactive treatment plant.

The leak happened late on Monday night, but people in the affected areas were not informed until 1000 GMT on Tuesday. The French Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) inspected the Tricastin plant on Thursday and found that existing prevention measures were deficient and that its operator, Societe Auxiliaire de Tricastin (Socatri), had been too slow to inform authorities about the leak.

The ASN is to submit a report to the state prosecutor for possible legal action against Socatri. The company is a subsidiary of the French nuclear giant, Areva.

The safety inspection found that "security steps aimed at preventing any further pollution were not completely satisfactory", the ASN said. The inspectors also found "irregularities" at the site's operations at the time of the leak. Socatri has been ordered to implement "a reinforced surveillance plan, including analysis of the surrounding rivers and ground water".

French Ecology Minister Jean-Louis Borloo said on Thursday that there was "no imminent danger" to the local population.

Socatri has said tests of the groundwater, local wells and the rivers show they have not been contaminated. One anti-nuclear organisation has said it will take legal action against ASN, saying it had delayed sounding the alarm.

France is one of the world's most nuclear-dependent countries, with 80% of its electricity coming from nuclear power.
 

Echo 5

Funniest guy on TB2K
Seems there's been quite a few incidents at nuclear plants around the world recently...:whistle:
 

dissimulo

Membership Revoked
Wow - 30 cubic meters is a lot, but it doesn't say how much unenriched uranium was in that liquid. I'm guessing not a lot, given the nature of their response.

Unenriched uranium is not significantly more toxic than an equivalent amount of lead, but if you dumped 30 cubic meters of any heavy-metal suffused liquid into a river, the locals are bound to notice eventually.
 

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
http://feeds.bignewsnetwork.com/index.php?sid=380258
The town of Avignon in the south of France has suffered a bad radioactive spill.

Radioactive fluid has accidentally leaked from a tank in a nuclear power plant.

Some of the fluid has spilled into three rivers nearby and warnings have gone out to local residents.

The authorities have urged people not to drink any water or catch fish from the Gaffiére, Lauzon and Rhône rivers.

Authorities say the level of radioactivity is a hundred percent higher than the amount permitted in an entire year.
 

BlueNewton

Membership Revoked
This is just huge news. These people are going to have to move away and the water will likely carry the uranium far and wide. The plants will be radioactive, as well.
 

Warandra

Membership Revoked
This is just huge news. These people are going to have to move away and the water will likely carry the uranium far and wide. The plants will be radioactive, as well.

Where are all you freakin' advocates of Nuclear Power, now? Build one next door to your family, jokers.
 

dissimulo

Membership Revoked
Where are all you freakin' advocates of Nuclear Power, now? Build one next door to your family, jokers.

I lived a couple miles from one for many years. I would love it if they would build one a couple miles from where I live now - just for the power. However, if I could get a job at the plant, my commute would be significantly reduced and my odds of dying in a car wreck each day would also be significantly reduced, thus lowering my overall odds of suffering a catastrophic accident of any sort.
 

Warandra

Membership Revoked
Here I am - Right in the good old US of A.

California, in fact!

To say nuclear energy is dangerous is uninformed.

We just need to adopt a new reactor design:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble_bed_reactors

-Steve in Reno

Oh, ETA: I'd gladly take one right next door to my home - Upwind, even!

Some of my relatives live relatively close to TMI. The life-threatening levels of cancer-causing radiation has taken its toll upon some of them. Don't give me the safety lie. It never will be safe. (Did you actually read the article that began this thread?) And, then, after everything else, where would you suggest we store the waste? Under your home?
 

Warandra

Membership Revoked
I lived a couple miles from one for many years. I would love it if they would build one a couple miles from where I live now - just for the power. However, if I could get a job at the plant, my commute would be significantly reduced and my odds of dying in a car wreck each day would also be significantly reduced, thus lowering my overall odds of suffering a catastrophic accident of any sort.

Forget about having kids, if you work there, buddy.
 

mcchrystal

Inactive
Some of my relatives live relatively close to TMI. The life-threatening levels of cancer-causing radiation has taken its toll upon some of them. Don't give me the safety lie. It never will be safe. (Did you actually read the article that began this thread?) And, then, after everything else, where would you suggest we store the waste? Under your home?

Such ignorance - such hysterics - did you even READ the link I provided?

And to answer your question - Yes, I read *the entire* article.

PBRs do not generate life-threatening levels of radiation, and CANNOT reach criticality,
because of their design, but understanding that requires a different kind of criticality -
critical thought, and I think that's lacking in your response.

As to the waste...did you bother to READ the link I provided?

I'd be fine with burying Pebble-bed reactor waste under my home!

The answers are there...your response is one of a person content with
sticking your head in the sand - simpler, I guess, than taking 30 minutes
to read a lousy Wikipedia article.

Sheesh.

-Steve in Burbank
 

Warandra

Membership Revoked
Such ignorance - such hysterics - did you even READ the link I provided?

And to answer your question - Yes, I read *the entire* article.

PBRs do not generate life-threatening levels of radiation, and CANNOT reach criticality,
because of their design, but understanding that requires a different kind of criticality -
critical thought, and I think that's lacking in your response.

As to the waste...did you bother to READ the link I provided?

The answers are there...your response is one of a person content with
sticking your head in the sand - simpler, I guess, than taking 30 minutes
to read a lousy Wikipedia article.

Sheesh.

-Steve in Burbank

Experience (as stated, above) is far more valuable than self-serving speculation, is it not?
 

mcchrystal

Inactive
Just what DO you have in that pipe?

Smoke this:

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.09/china.html

"...But they're also pursuing a second, more audacious course. Physicists and engineers at Beijing's Tsinghua University have made the first great leap forward in a quarter century, building a new nuclear power facility that promises to be a better way to harness the atom: a pebble-bed reactor. A reactor small enough to be assembled from mass-produced parts and cheap enough for customers without billion-dollar bank accounts. A reactor whose safety is a matter of physics, not operator skill or reinforced concrete. And, for a bona fide fairy-tale ending, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is labeled hydrogen.

A soft-spoken scientist named Qian Jihui has no doubt about what the smaller, safer, hydrogen-friendly design means for the future of nuclear power, in China and elsewhere. Qian is a former deputy director general with the International Atomic Energy Agency and an honorary president of the Nuclear Power Institute of China. He's a 67-year-old survivor of more than one revolution, which means he doesn't take the notion of upheaval lightly.

"Nobody in the mainstream likes novel ideas," Qian says. "But in the international nuclear community, a lot of people believe this is the future. Eventually, these new reactors will compete strategically, and in the end they will win. When that happens, it will leave traditional nuclear power in ruins."

Now we're talking revolution, comrade.

Known as China's MIT, Tsinghua University sprawls across a Qing-dynasty imperial garden, just outside the rampart of mirrored Blade Runner towers that line Beijing's North Fourth Ring Road. Wang Dazhong came here in the mid-1950s as a member of China's first-ever class of homegrown nuclear engineers. Now he's director emeritus of Tsinghua's Institute of Nuclear and New Energy Technology, aka INET, and a key member of Beijing's energy policy team. On a bright morning dimmed by Beijing's ever-present photochemical haze, Wang sits in a spartan conference room lit by energy-efficient compact fluorescent bulbs.

"If you're going to have 300 gigawatts of nuclear power in China - 50 times what we have today - you can't afford a Three Mile Island or Chernobyl," Wang says. "You need a new kind of reactor."

That's exactly what you can see 40 minutes away, behind a glass-enclosed guardhouse flanked by military police. Nestled against a brown mountainside stands a five-story white cube whose spare design screams, "Here be engineers!" Beneath its cavernous main room are the 100 tons of steel, graphite, and hydraulic gear known as HTR-10 (i.e., high-temperature reactor, 10 megawatt). The plant's output is underwhelming; at full power - first achieved in January - it would barely fulfill the needs of a town of 4,000 people. But what's inside HTR-10, which until now has never been visited by a Western journalist, makes it the most interesting reactor in the world.

In the air-conditioned chill of the visitors' area, a grad student runs through the basics. Instead of the white-hot fuel rods that fire the heart of a conventional reactor, HTR-10 is powered by 27,000 billiards-sized graphite balls packed with tiny flecks of uranium. Instead of superhot water - intensely corrosive and highly radioactive - the core is bathed in inert helium. The gas can reach much higher temperatures without bursting pipes, which means a third more energy pushing the turbine. No water means no nasty steam, and no billion-dollar pressure dome to contain it in the event of a leak. And with the fuel sealed inside layers of graphite and impermeable silicon carbide - designed to last 1 million years - there's no steaming pool for spent fuel rods. Depleted balls can go straight into lead-lined steel bins in the basement.

Wearing disposable blue paper gowns and booties, the grad student leads the way to a windowless control room that houses three industry-standard PC workstations and the inevitable electronic schematic, all valves, pressure lines, and color-coded readouts. In a conventional reactor's control room, there would be far more to look at - control panels for emergency core cooling, containment-area sprinklers, pressurized water tanks. None of that is here. The usual layers of what the industry calls engineered safety are superfluous. Suppose a coolant pipe blows, a pressure valve sticks, terrorists knock the top off the reactor vessel, an operator goes postal and yanks the control rods that regulate the nuclear chain reaction - no radioactive nightmare. This reactor is meltdown-proof.

Zhang Zuoyi, the project's 42-year-old director, explains why. The key trick is a phenomenon known as Doppler broadening - the hotter atoms get, the more they spread apart, making it harder for an incoming neutron to strike a nucleus. In the dense core of a conventional reactor, the effect is marginal. But HTR-10's carefully designed geometry, low fuel density, and small size make for a very different story. In the event of a catastrophic cooling-system failure, instead of skyrocketing into a bad movie plot, the core temperature climbs to only about 1,600 degrees Celsius - comfortably below the balls' 2,000-plus-degree melting point - and then falls. This temperature ceiling makes HTR-10 what engineers privately call walk-away safe. As in, you can walk away from any situation and go have a pizza.

"In a conventional reactor emergency, you have only seconds to make the right decision," Zhang notes. "With HTR-10, it's days, even weeks - as much time as we could ever need to fix a problem."

This unusual margin of safety isn't merely theoretical. INET's engineers have already done what would be unthinkable in a conventional reactor: switched off HTR-10's helium coolant and let the reactor cool down all by itself. Indeed, Zhang plans a show-stopping repeat performance at an international conference of reactor physicists in Beijing in September. "We think our kind of test may be required in the market someday," he adds.

Today's nuclear power plants are the fruits of a decision tree rooted in the earliest days of the atomic age. In 1943, a Manhattan Project team led by Enrico Fermi sustained the first man-made nuclear chain reaction in a pile of uranium blocks at the University of Chicago's Metallurgical Lab. A chemist named Farrington Daniels joined the effort a short time later. But Daniels wasn't interested in bombs. His focus was on a notion that had been circulating among physicists since the late 1930s: harnessing atomic power for cheap, clean electricity. He proposed a reactor containing enriched uranium "pebbles" - a term borrowed from chemistry - and using gaseous helium to transfer energy to a generator.

The Daniels pile, as the concept was called, was taken seriously enough that Oak Ridge National Laboratory commissioned Monsanto to design a working version in 1945. Before it could be built, though, a bright Annapolis graduate named Hyman Rickover "sailed in with the Navy," as Daniels later put it, and the competing idea of building a rod-fueled, water-cooled reactor to power submarines. With US Navy money backing the new design, the pebble bed fell by the wayside, and Daniels returned to the University of Wisconsin. By the time of his death in 1972, he was known as a pioneer of - irony alert - solar power. Indeed, the International Solar Energy Society's biennial award bears his name.

By the mid-1950s, with President Eisenhower preaching "atoms for peace" before the United Nations, civilian nuclear power was squarely on the table. The newly created General Atomics division of General Dynamics assembled 40 top nuclear scientists to spend the summer of 1956 brainstorming reactor designs. The leading light was Edward Teller, godfather of the H-bomb, and his message to the group was prophetic. For people to accept nuclear power, he argued, reactors must be "inherently safe." He even proposed a practical test: If you couldn't pull out every control rod without causing a meltdown, the design was inadequate.

But Teller's advice was ignored in the rush to beat the Russians to meter-free electricity. Instead of pursuing inherent safety, the nascent civilian nuclear industry followed Rickover into fuel rods, water cooling, and ever more layers of protection against the hazards of radioactive steam emissions and runaway chain reaction. To try to amortize the cost of all that backup, plants ballooned, tripling in average size in less than a decade and contributing to a crippling financial crunch in the mid-'70s. Finally, partial meltdowns at Three Mile Island in 1979 and Chernobyl in 1986 pulled the plug on reactor construction in most of the world.

Even where the pebble-bed concept took root, the industry's woes conspired against it. In Germany, a charismatic physicist named Rudolf Schulten picked up the idea and by 1985 a full-scale prototype was online - too large, in fact, to meet Teller's inherent safety test. Barely a year later, with Chernobyl's fallout raining over Europe, a minor malfunction at the German reactor set off nightmare headlines. Before long, the plant was mothballed.

The twin disasters in Pennsylvania and Ukraine proved Teller's point and inverted his hopeful formulation: The Union of Concerned Scientists pronounced nuclear power "inherently dangerous." The industry, already staggered by overbuilding and runaway budgets, ground to a halt. The newest of the 104 reactors operating in the US today was greenlighted in 1979. And there our story might have ended, except

Even as the nuclear establishment was putting all its efforts into avoiding the klieg lights, scientists in two faraway places were carrying the torch for a better reactor. One was South Africa, where in the mid-1990s the national utility company quietly licensed Germany's cast-off pebble-bed design and set about trying to raise the necessary funds. The other was China, where the Tsinghua team pursued a Nike strategy: Just do it.

Frank Wu's glass-walled ninth-floor office at Innovation Plaza offers a commanding view of Tsinghua University's leafy campus. That's no accident: The university co-owns this complex of gleaming silver towers, designed as a magnet for high tech startups. Likewise Wu's company, Chinergy, is a 50-50 joint venture between Tsinghua's Institute for Nuclear and New Energy Technology and the state-owned China Nuclear Engineering Group.

"I just had a call from a mayor in one of the provinces," says Wu, who came on board as CEO after a decade spent running financial services companies in the US (where he adopted the English first name). "He asked me, 'How much do we have to pay to get one of those things here?'"

If Wu's pebble-bed "thing" is, well, hot, it's because Chinergy's product is tailor-made for the world's fastest-growing energy market: a modular design that snaps together like Legos. Despite some attempts at standardization, the latest generation of big nukes are still custom-built onsite. By contrast, production versions of INET's reactor will be barely a fifth their size and power, and built from standardized components that can be mass-produced, shipped by road or rail, and assembled quickly. Moreover, multiple reactors can be daisy-chained around one or more turbines, all monitored from a single control room. In other words, Tsinghua's power plants can do the two things that matter most amid China's explosive growth: get where they're needed and get big, fast.

Wu and his backers aim to have a full-scale 200-megawatt version of HTR-10 by the end of the decade. They've already persuaded Huaneng Power International - one of China's five big privatized utilities, listed on the NYSE and chaired by the son of former premier Li Peng - to pick up half of the estimated $300 million tab. Concrete is scheduled to be poured in spring 2007.

By the usual glacial standards, that timeline is nuts for a reactor still on the drawing board. South Africa's pebble-bed group has been working on plans for a demonstration unit near Cape Town since 1993. But with an estimated $1 billion budget and local environmentalists on the warpath, the project remains stuck where it's been for nearly a decade: five to 10 years from completion.

Five to 10 years ago, a lot of today's China was little more than blueprints. And Wu, who likes to tell visiting Americans how one of his previous companies beat Sun Microsystems for the contract to wire West Point, has distinct advantages. The INET team, some of whose members studied with Schulten in Germany, has been prototyping pebble-bed designs since the mid-1980s. Also courtesy of the Germans, they have the best equipment in the world for what is probably the stickiest technical problem: fabrication of fuel balls in quantities that could quickly grow to millions.

By the time Chinergy's pilot plant is up and running, it's likely that the 30 reactors the government has planned for 2020 will already be under way. By then, however, China's grid is expected to be market-driven, and companies like Huaneng will have a free hand to put plants where they're needed and charge whatever the market will bear. Chinergy's strategy is tailored for this new environment. Power companies operating in regions making the transition from rural to industrial to urban will need to start small, but may suddenly find themselves struggling to meet unexpected demand. That's where the modular concept comes into play: Wu plans to sell power modules - 200-megawatt reactors plus ancillary gear - one at a time, if necessary. Growing utilities will be able to add modules as needed, ultimately reaching the gigawatt range where conventional reactors now reign. Such installations will be affordable to start - and they'll become cheaper to operate as they grow, thanks to economies of scale in everything from security and technicians to fuel supply.

Too good to be true? Not according to Andrew Kadak, who teaches nuclear engineering at MIT (including a course titled "Colossal Failures in Engineering"). Kadak is a big-nuke guy by background. From 1989 to 1997, he was CEO of Yankee Atomic Electric, which ran - and ultimately closed - the '60s-vintage plant in Rowe, Massachusetts. Now he's helping INET refine its fuel ball technology and working with the US Department of Energy to build a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Research Lab.

"The industry has been focused on water-cooled reactors that require complicated safety systems," Kadak says. "The Chinese aren't constrained by that history. They're showing that there's another way that's simpler and safer. The big question is whether the economics will pay off."

In May, British eminence green James Lovelock, creator of the Gaia hypothesis that Earth is a single self-regulating organism, published an impassioned plea to phase out fossil fuels in London's The Independent. Nuclear power, he argued, is the last, best hope for averting climatic catastrophe:

"Opposition to nuclear energy is based on irrational fear fed by Hollywood-style fiction, the Green lobbies, and the media. … Even if they were right about its dangers - and they are not - its worldwide use as our main source of energy would pose an insignificant threat compared with the dangers of intolerable and lethal heat waves and sea levels rising to drown every coastal city of the world. We have no time to experiment with visionary energy sources; civilization is in imminent danger and has to use nuclear, the one safe, available energy source, now, or suffer the pain soon to be inflicted by our outraged planet."

Coming to terms with nuclear energy is only a first step. To power a billion cars, there's no practical alternative to hydrogen. But it will take huge quantities of energy to extract hydrogen from water and hydrocarbons, and the best ways scientists have found to do that require high temperatures, up to 1,000 degrees Celsius. In other words, there's another way of looking at INET's high-temperature reactor and its potential offspring: They're hydrogen machines.

For exactly that reason, the DOE, along with similar agencies in Japan and Europe, is looking intently at high-temperature reactor designs. Tsinghua's researchers are in contact with the major players, but they're also starting their own project, focused on what many believe is the most promising means of generating hydrogen: thermochemical water splitting. Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories believe efficiency could top 60 percent - twice that of low-temperature methods. INET plans to begin researching hydrogen production by 2006.

In that way, China's nuclear renaissance could feed the hydrogen revolution, enabling the country to leapfrog the fossil-fueled West into a new age of clean energy. Why worry about foreign fuel supplies when you can have safe nukes rolling off your own assembly lines? Why invoke costly international antipollution protocols when you can have motor vehicles that spout only water vapor from their tail pipes? Why debate least-bad alternatives when you have the political and economic muscle to engineer the dream?

The scale is vast, but so are China's ambitions. Gentlemen, start your reactors."

Enough's enough. If you choose to cling to your silly shibboleths, fine
with me. I've spent all of the time I'm willing to, in order to educate
the ignorant, and realize some will still choose to be ignorant.

Good day.

-Steve in Burbank
 

Warandra

Membership Revoked
Blah, Blah, Blah!

How many times, in recent history, have we been assured that, "It's completely safe?" Has anything ever been completely safe? NO! So, we've already been lied to about this new system. Why believe any of the rest of it?
 

dissimulo

Membership Revoked
Of course nothing is completely safe, but you are a heck of a lot more likely to die driving in a car than a nuclear accident. Heck, you are probably more likely to be shot by a toddler than to experience a nuclear accident.
 

mbo

Membership Revoked
How many times, in recent history, have we been assured that, "It's completely safe?" Has anything ever been completely safe? NO! So, we've already been lied to about this new system. Why believe any of the rest of it?

As a left-wing non-producer Warrandra, you'll be the first to scream bloody murder and demand massive subsidization of your energy demands from the government when electricity becomes unavailable because of the fact that wind and solar power won't supply the demand, or would only do so at massively higher cost than other sources.


.
 
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denfoote

Inactive
Where are all you freakin' advocates of Nuclear Power, now? Build one next door to your family, jokers.

I do have one in my back yard: Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station.
The largest nuke plant in the US.
It's been there for 25 years.
 

charlescurt

Member
Well I have to be in the southeastern Ky area for the time being and I am not to happy with whats happening here either.Not to hijack the thread but found this of concern.

http://www.wkyt.com/home/headlines/24752259.html

Another Nerve Gas Leak At Blue Grass Army Depot

Posted: 10:00 PM Jul 12, 2008
Last Updated: 10:22 PM Jul 12, 2008
Reporter: Denny Trease
Email Address: denny.trease@wkyt.com

For those living near an Army depot where deadly chemicals are stored, "leak" is the one word they never want to hear.

Officials at Blue Grass Army Depot have confirmed that Sarin, an extremely toxic nerve agent, has been found leaking from a storage igloo, the same storage facility where another Sarin leak was discovered last August.

The Army says that igloo has been continually filtered and monitored since the initial leak and poses no risk to the public. But Craig Williams, director of the watchdog organization, Chemical Weapons Working Group, says this situation does carry great potential danger. "There's 49 igloos full of chemical weapons out there. That igloo before it was discovered to be leaking in August was on a regimen where it was monitored once a week. To me, that is not an adequate level of monitoring and protection for the work force and for the general public."

Williams told 27 NEWSFIRST, "There have been a number of studies already to determine the effects of a worst case scenario, an airplane crashing into an igloo and releasing a large volume of this materrial, a meteor strike, an earthquake. If you look at the probabilities of those sorts of things, they're very small. If you look at the consequences, they're catastrophic."

People living near the depot naturally are on edge despite the Army's assurance that no chemical agents have escaped the containment igloo.
Faye Bentley says, "I sit on my porch at night and I look over there across the fence and I think, 'oh, my God, what if?' I fear for my grandchildren who live directly across on the other side of the depot."

The United Nations classifies Sarin as a weapon of mass destruction. Its production and stockpiling was outlawed in 1993. Workers plan to inspect the container on Monday, then decide how best to correct the problem.
 
Remember kids, "the solution to pollution is dilution"

30 cubic metres is not a lot compared to river flows measured in thousands of cubic metres per hour. Worst case (if the water was fully saturated), one or two kg of uranium managed to get away.

So, a couple of kilos of unenriched uranium. Not too good if it's in a little ceramic block on your desk. Should I remind everyone that uranium oxide used to make a very nice yellow/orange glaze for plates? Probably not. Anyway, handle with tongs only, please. Try not to drop it. Keep it out of your mouth, you don't have to taste everything, you know.

BUT:

Spread that couple of kilos out into 30,000kg of water, run that water through a thousand tons of sand and rock, then slowly ooze that water into a river with a million kg of water going past every hour and you get a problem that will solve itself in short order. To be on the safe side, don't drink the water for a bit and leave the fish alone for a week until they excrete anything that they've picked up.

Just try not to let it happen again, ok?
 

BlueNewton

Membership Revoked
I would be fine with a pebble-bed reactor near me as well. Excellent design. We need to phase out the old design and build these. Eventhe head of Greenpeace supports building these.

I wonder why we are not getting any updates on this most important story. The impact must be quite dramatic. Well, actually, I know why we aren't getting any updates. Ever feel like you live in China with all the news censorship?
 

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
Germany's Concerns over Nuclear Energy

Germany’s concerns over nuclear energy
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2008/07/14/stories/2008071450480900.htm

Mohan Murti

I was planning to write on the extraordinary German model of “Inclusive Education”, but decided to put pen to paper on the issue of nuclear power. Why?

Let me take you through some headlines last week, coming out of the G-8 meeting and the rest of the world.

July 08: G-8 leaders meeting in Toyako, Japan pledge to halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. But, there is still disagreement on how to get there!

The environmental campaign group WWF said that the G-8 leaders had not lived up to their responsibilities during this summit. “The G-8 are responsible for 62 per cent of the carbon dioxide accumulated in the Earth’s atmosphere, which makes them the main culprit of climate change and the biggest part of the problem,” WWF said in a statement on Tuesday. “WWF finds it pathetic that they still duck their historic responsibility.”

The organisation Oxfam, which fights poverty across the globe, criticised the slow pace of action on climate change. “At this rate, the world will be burned to a crisp by 2050, by which time the leaders of the G-8 will long have been forgotten,” said Oxfam International climate expert, Antonio Hill. “The G-8 target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 50 per cent by 2050 is half-hearted. There is also no base year given. This G-8 agreement is not a breakthrough, it is little more than a stall tactic.”

July 09: An accidental leak of over 30,000 litres of a solution containing uranium in South of France. Emergency bans put on water use in the area by local authorities. Residents and environmental organisations deeply worried at a time when much of Europe is re-embracing nuclear power as way to slow global warming. The accident’s timing is explosive. Just a day before, the German Chancellor, Ms Angela Merkel, stood out in the crowd at the G-8 summit in Japan because Germany is one of the only large industrialised nations that has rebuffed the renaissance of nuclear energy.

July 09: The Indian Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, meets the US President, George W. Bush, on the sidelines of the G8 summit and the two leaders confer to take forward their landmark nuclear deal.

July 10: The Left withdraws support to the United Progressive Alliance Government on the proposed nuclear treaty with the US and calls for a vote of no-confidence against the government. And, the most hilarious report I read: Dateline, Washington July 10: Devout Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, appeals to all Indian political parties to display “magnanimity” and support the “edgy” Indo-US nuclear deal. What amuses me is that a spiritual guru considers himself competent, capable, qualified to express serious opinion on a subject where even top nuclear scientists such as the former DEA Chairman, Dr M. R. Srinivasan among several others, have restrained themselves.
The European Scene

In Europe, Germany is now isolated when it comes to nuclear power. Other G-8 countries — including France, Italy and Great Britain — are focussing on nuclear energy as a way to cut CO{-2} emissions. France is sometimes seen as a role model for combating climate change because 80 per cent of its electricity comes from nuclear power. As a result, even the trains are largely carbon-free. Essentially, it is nuclear-powered transportation. But, one of the biggest problems with nuclear power is that it produces nuclear waste. And, even in France, finding a place to put nuclear waste has been a messy affair. Germans have largely reached a nationwide consensus on the need to do everything necessary to combat climate change but, they remain wary of the radioactive waste produced by nuclear power plants.
Phase out

In Germany, 17 nuclear reactors are online in commercial use. Together, they produce a total of 21,426 MW of electricity. The oldest reactor has already been online for 34 years. Even in meticulously organised Germany, the Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS) registered over 200 incidents involving these reactors. Defective components and operating errors were among the most commonly reported problems. The last major incident happened in July 2004, when contaminated water from the Neckerwestheim II reactor leaked into the Neckar River in south-west Germany. Germany’s oldest reactors from the 1970s will go offline by 2009 at the latest. All remaining reactors must be shut down by 2021.
Nuclear Waste

No matter how much longer reactors remain in operation, the German Government faces an urgent decision over the permanent storage of radioactive waste. Current problems at the Asse nuclear waste dump in the northern state of Lower Saxony illustrate the fatal consequences of the failure to take appropriate steps to store radioactive waste. In the 1960s, nuclear strategists dreamed of building an exemplary permanent storage model in Asse. Today, the entire nuclear waste storage facility is expected to sink, taking with it 89,000 tonnes of weak-moderately radioactive waste, including 11 kg of plutonium, causing serious risks. As there is no final repository for radioactive waste in Germany, the German utilities now store their low and intermediate radioactive waste in nearly 50 locations.
The French Way

The Tricastin nuclear site where the leak occurred is one of 59 nuclear plants supplying nearly 80 per cent of France’s electrical power. Paradoxically, this happened on the same day the celebrated G-8 statement was released. Radioactive material had leaked into the ground and two rivers near the Tricastin nuclear facility located 40 km from Avignon. The incident has sparked a national fury in France and annoyed residents and environmental organisations. Mistrust has grown after officials downplayed the seriousness of the episode. The catastrophe also has the potential to make people and countries that are now re-embracing nuclear power have second thoughts.

Now evidence is emerging that a new nuclear dumpsite in the Champagne region of France is leaking radioactivity into the ground water, threatening contamination of tritium and at a later stage other radionuclides.

Those of you opening bubbly Champagne, beware! It is common for governments, which have sold their soul to nuclear energy, to minimise and pretend there are not any problems. As I write this (Saturday, July 12), an international anti-nuclear rally is underway in Paris.

Indian Scenario

India faces severe challenges regarding the operational security of nuclear installations, from uranium mines to nuclear power stations.

There remain severe failures on the overall management and disposal of nuclear waste. Our cities are not even capable of managing muncipal waste. I shudder to think how they will manage our nuclear waste in 2020!
Right to Information Act

The search is still on to find a permanent waste disposal site but due to the veil of secrecy, there is no official disclosure about radioactive wastes in India.

The waste keeps shifting from one plant to another, thereby exposing the workers working in these plants. Will some enlightened Indian citizen invoke the Right to Information Act ?

To conclude, I quote from Chandokya Upanishad which articulates: Yadaiva Vidyaya Karoti Shradhaya Upanishada Tadeva Viryavattaram Bhavati!That if eventually, we must succeed, we should apply our knowledge with faith, conviction and with deep thinking. I hope on the nuclear energy issue, we do.
(The author is former Europe Director, CII, and lives in Cologne, Germany.Feedback may be sent to mailto: mohan.murti@t-online.de> mohan.murti@t-online.de)
 

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
Print Friendly Version
International
New uranium leak discovered at French nuclear site
Afp, Paris

French nuclear safety authorities said yesterday that a broken pipe at a nuclear fuel plant in southeast France had caused a radioactive leak but no damage to the environment.

The latest uranium spill at the plant run by nuclear giant Areva in Romans-sur-Isere came amid much public concern over a leak at another facility last week that polluted the local water supply.

Residents in the Vaucluse region of southern France have been told not to drink water or eat fish from nearby rivers after the liquid uranium spill on July 7 at the Tricastin nuclear plant.

According to the ASN nuclear safety authority, the pipe defect at the FBFC plant at Romans-sur-Isere in the Drome region may date back several years.

"Results from initial tests show there has been no impact at all on the environment, because the quantity of uranium was very small, in the order of a few hundred grammes," said ASN spokeswoman Evangelia Petit.

The FBFC plant produces nuclear fuel for some of France's 58 reactors, the world's largest network after the United States and which produces 80 percent of the nation's electricity.

Areva late Thursday notified the nuclear authority of the leak and three inspectors were dispatched to the site in the early hours on Friday to assess the damage.

Petit said the spill did not reach the ground water and that there was no sign of contamination.

Areva president Anne Lauvergeon was later Friday due to inspect the Tricastin plant, which is run by its subsidiary Socatri.
 

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=8&theme=&usrsess=1&id=214451

N-leak
PARIS, July 18: France's nuclear safety authority says that a uranium-bearing liquid has leaked from a faulty underground pipe at a nuclear site in southeastern France. The Nuclear Safety Authority says that experts will determine how much uranium is present in the area near nuclear company Areva's plant in the town of Romans-sur-Isere. The safety authority does not address how serious the leak is. It says the pipe is believed to have ruptured several years ago. n AP
 

Ranger Rainier

Inactive
100 'slightly contaminated' from French reactor

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25821078/

Fourth incident at nuclear facility in recent weeks, second at same plant updated 4:01 p.m. PT, Wed., July. 23, 2008

PARIS - Radioactive particles spewed from a pipe at a French nuclear reactor on Wednesday, slightly contaminating 100 employees, a spokeswoman for the national electric company said.

It was the fourth incident at a French nuclear site in recent weeks and the second in five days.

Caroline Muller, a spokeswoman for Electricite de France, said 100 EDF employees were "slightly contaminated" by radioactive particles that escaped from the pipe at a reactor complex in Tricastin, in southern France.
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The incident occurred in reactor No. 4 at the facility, which had been shut down for refueling, she said.

The employees went home but will be tested, she said, insisting that the contamination was slight — a dose smaller than 1/40th of the regulation limit.

"What concerns us is less the level of the people contaminated than the number of people contaminated," Muller said by telephone.

Experts were studying what led to the incident, she said.

Nuclear dependence
The incident came a day after authorities lifted a ban on fishing and water sports in two rivers that was imposed July 8 after liquid containing unenriched uranium leaked from a broken underground pipe at a site run by nuclear giant Areva at the huge Tricastin complex, near the city of Avignon.

Areva said Friday that liquid containing slightly enriched uranium leaked at another of its sites in southeast France. The same day, 15 EDF workers were exposed to what the company called non-harmful traces of radioactive elements at the Saint-Alban plant in the Alpine Isere region.

France is the most nuclear-dependent country in the world, with 59 reactors churning out nearly 80 percent of its electricity. After the first incident, the government ordered a check of groundwater around all nuclear sites in France.

The incidents have prompted questions about the state-run nuclear industry, at a time when eyes are turning to nuclear energy because of the soaring price of oil.
 

HeliumAvid

Too Tired to ReTire
yah, it appears to be a chronic problem not an ALERT.. I am going to change the thread title to reflect that.

HeliumAvid
 

BlueNewton

Membership Revoked
Radioactive rivers and groundwater and this gets hardly any play in the news? This is huge news. I wonder why the details of the spills and the cleanup efforts and effects on the local residents are not being discussed more widely.
 
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