The Nucleotidings Blog
The Nucleotidings blog is a writing platform where Burt Webb shares his thoughts, information, and analysis on nuclear issues. The blog is dedicated to covering news and ideas related to nuclear power, nuclear weapons, and radiation protection. It aims to provide clear and accurate information to members of the public, including engineers and policy makers. Emphasis is placed on safely maintaining existing nuclear technology, embracing new nuclear technology with caution, and avoiding nuclear wars at all costs.

Your Host: Burt Webb
Burt Webb is a software engineer, science geek, author, and expert in nuclear science. Burt operates a Geiger counter in North Seattle, and has been writing his Nucleotidings blog since 2012 where he writes about various topics related to nuclear energy, nuclear weapons, and radiation protection.

Burt Webb has published several technical books and novels. He works as a software consultant.

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Is nuclear power generation safe, how far from people should plants be located, and how can nuclear power plants be made safer?

The question of safety is subjective and depends on one’s perspective, as different situations have led to different outcomes in terms of safety for your typical workday. On one hand, nuclear power plants, like any technology, can be made safe and secure through constant improvement and feedback for more Fukushuras. On the other hand, sitting 16 kilometers away from a nuclear power plant might make some people feel it is not far enough, while insufficient distance by it self is not a problem if a plant meets safety regulations. Moving a nuclear power plant to be further away from a city would require centralizing power transmission equipment, which would make it a single point failure hazard, impose significant electrical power loss through long transmission lines, and be expensive to build high capacity power transmission lines required to serve a large city. Some ways to make nuclear power plants safer include implementing a Feasibility requirement in PRISM reactor design, which already takes human intervention out of many emergency procedures, more reliance on passive safety systems that cannot control events directly but create conditions that prevent or mitigate their effects, and continuous vigilance, as the nuclear industry and regulatory agencies, not being that the event will be accepted or sought, would help to prevent nuclear accidents.

What do you mean by “Fukushuras”?

“Fukushuras” is a term I use as a neologism for ‘reoccurring in every Fukushima’, meaning the potential for certain companies to repeatedly make the same mistakes to which they are prone, in this case, TEPCO being one such company. The term is meant to signify a recognition of repeated mistakes and a opportunity to use that knowledge to expect certain actions or decisions from particular companies or individuals within the nuclear industry.

Blog

  • Radioactive Waste 51 – Waste Control Specialists in Andrews County Texas 1

               Harold Simmons, who died in December of 2013, was a Texas billionaire who established a site for disposing of radioactive waste in West Texas. Simmons made his money in garbage collection, drug stores, metals and chemicals. He has been called the “King of Superfund Sites.”

              Simmons bought a hazardous waste disposal company called Waste Control Specialists (WCS) and started working on the nuclear dump in Andrews County. Texas has very lax controls on environment pollution with people from polluting companies sitting on regulatory boards. After six years of lobbying, Simmons convinced the Texas legislature to pass a law authorizing private companies like his WCS to be granted licenses to store radioactive waste.

             WCS immediately started the process of obtaining two licenses that would allow it to store a total of sixty million cubic feet of low-level radioactive waste from Federal and state sources. The acceptable types of waste come from places like nuclear reactor operations, nuclear laboratories, and hospitals. One benefit of staying with the low-level wastes is that it is not necessary to go through the time consuming and expensive process of getting Federal approval for storage of high-level nuclear waste such as spent fuel rods from nuclear reactors.

              There was resistance from against issuing the licenses by environmentalists and some state authorities. State engineers and geologists raised the concern that radioactive materials could leach out of the dump site into the ground water. In a memo from 2007, four staffers from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) stated that because the site was close to the water table in that part of Texas, it “makes groundwater intrusion into the disposal units highly likely.” Three staffers at the TCEQ resigned rather than sign off on the license request from WCS. One said “I started getting the idea that these people are going to license this thing no matter what. I felt that in clear conscience I couldn’t grant a license with what was being proposed.”  The director of the TCEQ quit in 2008 and became a highly paid lobbyist for WCS. The licenses were granted to WCS in the fall of 2008. Critics said that it was a blatant example of the revolving door between the public and the private sectors and of regulatory capture of an agency by the industry they are suppose to regulate.

             Once Simmons had the licenses in hand, he began expanding the storage site. His plan was to move beyond local storage to take waste from all over the United States. There is a growing and lucrative market for nuclear waste storage that he was buying into. Simmons wanted his site to be the biggest in the U.S. Thirty six states do not have permanent disposal sites for their low-level radioactive waste. WCS had signed a contract with Vermont to store their waste. Simmons wanted to expand the contract to take waste from other states. An obscure agency in the Texas government called the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact Commission had the authority to expand the WCS contract. It had seven members, six of whom were appointed by Governor Rick Perry who received a large campaign donation from Simmons. There was widespread opposition to the contract expansion but the Commission approved it and WCS is able to take radioactive waste from other states.

            WCS will reap the profits from the nuclear waste disposal but if radioactive materials migrate from the site into the Texas ecosystem including the water table, the Texas taxpayers will have to bear the cost. The WCS case is an excellent illustration of how back room political dealing and campaign donations can trump science and the public interest.

    Waste Control Specialists site in Andrews Country, Texas:

     

  • Geiger Readings for January 29, 2013

    Ambient office = 135 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Ambient outside = 107 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Soil exposed to rain water = 101 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Baby Gold Potato from Top Foods = 65 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Tap water = 92 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Filtered water = 87 nanosieverts per hour
     
  • Nuclear Weapons 63 – 1968 U.S. Plan to Nuke North Korea

              The only nuclear bombs have been used during wartime were the two that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States in World War II. However, there have been plans by the U.S. and other countries to use nuclear weapons that were not carried out. Few of these plans were widely publicized and are not known by the public because they were classified military secrets. Every now and then, a particular plan surfaces. This blog post is about one such plan.

               In 1968, the USS Pueblo was captured by North Korean. It was a sophisticated electronic surveillance ship being used to intercept electronic communications from North Korea. The US maintains that the Pueblo was in international waters when it was captured but the North Koreans claim that it was in their territorial waters. The crew was held and  tortured for over a year. The ship carried a huge amount of U.S. intelligence including devices used to decipher encrypted U.S. military communications.

                During this period, the U.S. was concerned that the U.S.S.R and/or China might be involved and have access to sensitive U.S. intelligence and the decoders. There was also concern that North Korea was planning on invading South Korea. Spies and saboteurs from North Korea were very active in that period, crossing the Korean Demilitarized Zone that separate the two Koreas in order to attack targets in the south. Under pressure from the Soviets, North Korea eventually released the crew of the ship which defused the crisis. They did keep the Pueblo.

               Some U.S. documents were recently declassified that are related to the Pueblo incident. They concern contingency plans that were drawn up to deal with the capture of the Pueblo and the possibility of a North Korean invasion of South Korea. At the time of the Pueblo capture, the U.S. military called for sending Navy ships to North Korea to intimidate the North Koreans. Unfortunately for that suggested response, the Navy was occupied with the war in Viet Nam and no ships were sent on that mission. So the U.S. military suggested that we invade North Korea. They said that we could use our B-52 high altitude bombers to obliterate the North Korean air force. One problem with these invasion plans is that they would require that the U.S. pull out of Viet Nam completely to free up the twelve divisions of troops and the forty tactical bomber squadrons required. The five different invasion plans were collectively known as “Fresh Storm.”

              In addition to the invasion plans, there was a plan to use nuclear weapons. This plan was called “Freedom Drop.” The commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet had drawn up the plans for the nuclear attack against North Korean military targets. The Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff approved the plan but there was a delay in relaying that approval to the Pacific Fleet. The plan called for using Honest John rockets and Sergeant missiles to deliver seventy kiloton warhead to North Korean targets. If that plan had been carried out, it would have devastated North Korea, killing millions of people. South Korea would have fallen victim to fallout and other environmental destruction that would have taken many lives. Fortunately for all the people living on the Korean peninsula, the plan was never carried out. The U.S. military is concerned with using weapons to attack enemies. In the U.S., the civilian government controls the military which reduces the possibility of U.S. military action and encourages other approaches to international tension including diplomacy and trade. 

    U.S.S. Pueblo:

  • Geiger Readings for January 28, 2013

    Ambient office = 85 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Ambient outside = 81 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Soil exposed to rain water = 72 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Baby Gold Potato from Top Foods = 132 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Tap water = 106 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Filtered water = 99 nanosieverts per hour
     
  • Radioactive Waste 50 – North Dakota Fracking Sludge

               When we talk about nuclear waste, it is almost always with respect to uranium mining, uranium fuel production, spent nuclear fuel and nuclear laboratories. I have written in the past about the ubiquity of uranium in rocks and soil all over the world. Uranium is forty times more common than silver. It combines with many different minerals in many different forms. We experience “normal background radiation” from the uranium in the ground which varies from place to place. There are other sources of nuclear waste or at least, waste materials that have radioactive constituents. Among these are the waste products from coal fired power plants and the waste products brought to the surface from fracking operations.

               Fracking is a process where water, sand and various combinations of chemicals are force into a deep well under high pressure. The rock is fractured and the sand and chemicals help to keep the fractures open while oil and natural gas are released. Fracking has spread across the United States to the point where the U.S. is one of the major producers of natural gas in the world. This bounty of natural gas has lowered the price of energy to the point where some nuclear reactors have been unable to compete with natural gas for the production of electricity. On the down side, fracking is polluting the ground water and the wells in many areas with toxic chemicals and also causing earthquakes in areas that were previously quiet. And, the sludge that is pumped back to the surface from a fracking operation contains radioactive materials.

              Under North Dakota ND, lies part of the Bakken Oil Shale Formation. North Dakota is home to massive fracking operation to release oil and natural gas from the Bakken Formation and is number two in U.S. oil production. In North Dakota there have been about three hundred oil spills in the last two years from fracking wells. Oil is oozing up out of the ground around the fracking operations. It is mixed with corrosive chemicals and something called technologically enhanced normally occurring radioactive material or TENORM. TENORM is produced when normally occurring radioactive material is brought to the surface by a fracking operation. From a legal standpoint, TENORM is supposed to be disposed of at a regulated TENORM waste site such as the one in Colorado. However, in order to reduce costs and time, producers in ND have been dumping TENORM in the closest and most convenient place they can find. (It was reported recently that fracking sludge containing TENORM was spread on roads in Pennsylvania during and after snow storms with a level of radioactivity that was not legal.)

              In North Dakota, the fracking producers are not legally required to report oil spills at their operations and in their pipelines. The TENORM that is leaking out of their wells is mixing with ground water and soil and spreading beyond their production areas. It is a threat to human health and the whole environment. It is absolutely critical to the health and well being of the citizens of North Dakota that the laws are changed and vigorously enforced with respect to the reporting and control of oils spills from fracking sites.

  • Geiger Readings for January 26, 2013

    Ambient office = 59 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Ambient outside = 106 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Soil exposed to rain water = 116 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Baby Gold Potato from Top Foods = 84 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Tap water = 80 nanosieverts per hour
     
    Filtered water = 76 nanosieverts per hour