U.S. Nuclear Reactors 4 - Oyster Creek, New Jersey

             The Oyster Creek Nuclear Generation Station is located in Lacey Township of New Jersey. It is a General Electric Type 2 boiling water reactor that generates  six hundred forty five megawatts. It gets cooling water from Barnegat Bay, an estuary that empties into the Atlantic Ocean. It is the oldest operating reactor in the United States.             Around 1990, it was discovered that the drywell lining of the reactor containment vessel was corroding.

U.S. Nuclear Reactors 3 - Crystal River, Florida

              The Crystal River Nuclear Power Plant is located in the Crystal River Energy Complex eight miles north of Crystal River, Florida on the Gulf of Mexico. The reactor is a pressurized water reactor capable of generating eight hundred and sixty megawatts. It shares the complex with four fossil fuel power plants.

Nuclear Debate 10 - Metaphors

               Environmental damage, energy prices, accidents, accumulating waste, extreme weather, availability of cooling water, and other problems are threatening the viability of using nuclear energy to generate electricity. Various metaphors have been used recently in discussing what is happening to the world nuclear industry in general and the United States nuclear industry in particular.

Nuclear Black Market 1 - CSIS Nuclear Black Market Task Force

             With the fall on the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War around 1991, a great deal of radioactive material was left in the former members of the Soviet Union in the form of missile and artillery warheads, uranium, plutonium, and waste from processing and other military and industrial activities. A great deal of this material was sent to Russia but not all of it. Some of it remains unaccounted for.

Nuclear Weapons 30 - Dirty Bombs

             I have written a number of posts about nuclear weapons for this blog. The focus was on high-tech atomic and hydrogen bombs that require great expertise and expensive equipment. There is another type of radioactive bomb that I have not dealt with. This is called a “dirty bomb” and consists of radioactive material and a conventional explosive.

The Price-Anderson Act

    The United States Federal government passed the Price-Anderson Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act in 1957. It covers the issue of liability for nuclear accidents and problems for non-military nuclear facilities. Prior to the passage of the act, there was a liability coverage of sixty million dollars per reactor which was considered to be inadequate by the industry.

Fracking for Uranium

             Fracking has been in the news a lot recently. Basically fracking is the process of injecting fluids into holes drilled into underground zones containing oil and natural gas. The purpose of this procedure is to fracture (hence the name) the rock strata to release the oil or natural gas which is then pumped to the surface. Primitive fracking began in the mid 1800s and was used to extract oil in a number of states.

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