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Geiger Readings for January 2, 2013
Ambient office = 55 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 60 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 92 nanosieverts per hourVine ripened tomato from Top Foods = 74 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 73 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 63 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Issues
New Year’s Day is often seen as a good time to pause in the daily routine and broaden your perspective to cover the year that just passed and the year that is to come. In the past year I have tried to cover as many facets of the global nuclear power sector as possible. There are so many things to keep track of that it has been a bit daunting at times.
TECHNICAL: Older reactors designs are being replaced by newer designs that are supposed to be more efficient, cheaper and safer. Whether or not they really are only time will tell. A new approach with small modular reactors is hailed as a better alternative to the big old power reactors but they will cost more per megawatt than existing reactors.
ENVIRONMENTAL: Mining uranium ore and extracting the uranium is horrible dirty process that causes environmental devastation. Accidents at nuclear reactors can release radioactivity into the environment. The reactor cooling water that is used in huge quantities is released back into the environment causing problems. Nuclear waste consists of toxic heavy metals that will be radioactive for thousands of years posing a major disposal problem. Nuclear power is being promoted as a carbon dioxide free source of energy which would help with climate change but the jury is still out.
HEALTH: Nuclear operators often try to quiet public fears by saying that the radioactivity that they release into the environment is below the level of natural radioactivity. It has been reported recently there is no safe level of radioactivity. Any radioactivity in the environment whether man-made or natural will contribute to birth defects, cancers and other diseases.
GOVERNMENTAL: National governments are obligated to regulate the nuclear industry within their borders but too often the agencies charged with oversight are also charged with promoting the national nuclear agency. This results in conflicts of interest and the regulatory agencies are often captured by the industry they are supposed to regulate. Many reactors are vulnerable to terrorist attacks and nuclear operators often fail security tests.
FINANCIAL: Nuclear power is only competitive with massive government subsidies, loan guaranties and direct contracts. Contracts with locked in price support for the generated electricity are disappearing and cheap natural gas is already shutting down nuclear reactors. Investors are increasingly skeptical.
TRADE: Nations with mature nuclear technology such as France, Russia, China and Japan are aggressively working to make nuclear technology exports a major part of their economic development. They are focused in particular on developing nations such as Bulgaria, Romania, Jordan, and Vietnam.
POLITICAL: Fears of nuclear proliferation have caused the U.N. Security Council to issue sanctions against countries that are building reactors and may be working toward nuclear weapons. International treaties have been drafted to work toward peaceful disarmament.
MILITARY: The U.S. and Russia may be cutting back on the total number of warhead that they have aimed at each other but both are embarking on programs to modernize their nuclear weapons and delivery systems. Recent reports indicate a serious problem with morale and competence of U.S. nuclear missile forces. India and Pakistan are trying to heal their political disagreements to reduce the possibility of nuclear war. Some think that Japan is working to change its constitution in order to develop an offensive nuclear force as a counterbalance to North Korea and China.
CRIME: There is a black market in nuclear technology which seeks to profit by avoiding expensive inspections and quality control. The Japanese crime syndicate Yakuza is heavily involved in the Japanese nuclear industry. Nuclear operators have been caught falsifying inspection reports, failing to adequately train staff, using substandard materials, failing to report important modifications to reactors and disregarding mandatory safety procedures.
I will continue to report on these and other nuclear issues in 2014. I sincerely hope that there are no major nuclear accidents in 2014 but I would not bet on it.
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Geiger Readings for January 1, 2013
Ambient office = 137 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 92 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 77 nanosieverts per hourRomain lettuce from Top Foods = 92 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 86 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 77 nanosieverts per hour -
Radioactive Waste 59 – Hanford Supporters and Critics
I have written a number of posts about the problems at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Eastern Washington State. After decades of nuclear weapons research and development with too little concern for the fifty six million gallons of radioactive waste they produced, the struggle to clean up the site has not been going well. Buried single walled tanks of waste are leaking and the double walled tanks that were supposed to replace the single walled tanks are starting to leak. Construction of critical sections of a vitrification plant have been halted after billions of dollars were spent because it was discovered that the current design will not work.
An article was recently published in the Seattle Times a man who “managed the development of environmental impact statements for nine Department of Energy Environmental Impact Statements relating to Hanford operations.” The gist of the article was that Hanford had been thoroughly studied and that concern over the waste stored there was overblown. According to the author, if all the waste stored in the tanks were released into the ground, the radioactivity would take at least thirty years to reach the intakes for the Richland municipal water supply and would be below the level considered safe by the Environmental Protection Agency. I accept that this individual and the people he consulted with were competent and professional and they did the best they could at the time with modeling the flow of radioactive waste through the soil and into the Columbia. With respect to the EPA standards for drinking water, there have been some suggestions that the allowed levels of radioactive materials are too high. There is also no mention of bioaccumulation of radioactive substances in the water. Such accumulation could enter the food chain and be a threat to human health.
Activists that are concerned about Hanford have raised some issues that need to be mentioned. As reported previously in my blog, recently there have been public hearings about Hanford because of uranium leaching out of the soil and showing up in the Columbia River. This uranium is left over from millions of gallons of radioactive waste in liquid form being poured directly into unlined trenches near the Columbia River. A great deal of work has been done modeling the processes that determine what amount of uranium should be showing up in the Columbia. However, the models were mistaken and more uranium is showing up than anticipated. At the very least, this should call into question the modeling mentioned by the writer of the article in the Seattle Times.
There is a danger of hydrogen gas being produced by the waste in the underground tanks that could lead to explosions, release of radioactive materials and possible damage to other nearby tanks. This was not mentioned in the Times article.
The article calls for the rapid completion of the vitrification plant. The problem that halted the construction was the fact that the radioactive waste in the tanks varies in chemical composition and physical form. The contents of any particular tank are not well known. Because of the particles of different sizes and the changing viscosity of the contents of the tanks, it has been discovered that trying to run the waste from the tanks through the piping of the vitrification plant could lead to corrosion, leaks and even explosions. In addition, plutonium could form clumps inside the mixing tanks that might be big enough to trigger a spontaneous nuclear reaction.
While I am certain that some Hanford critics are mistaken with how serious the situation is there, I am equally certain that those who say that there is no threat to public health and safety are also mistaken. There is ample evidence that the contents of the tanks are poorly understood and past modeling of ground water movement and industrial engineering have been inadequate.
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Radiation News Roundup December 31, 2013
An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.4 jolted eastern and northeastern Japan. enenews.com
The project to build the 9900 MWe Jaitapur nuclear power plant in India has cleared some significant procedural hurdles by securing coastal permits and purchasing land. world-nuclear-news.org
Chernobyl’s New Safe Confinement (NSC) is a massive construction project that started in 2010 to contain the existing Chernobyl containment structure. nuclearstreet.com
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Geiger Readings for December 31, 2013
Ambient office = 120 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 83 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 90 nanosieverts per hourRomain lettuce from Top Foods = 86 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 67 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 54 nanosieverts per hour -
Attacking Japanese Journalists who Investigate the Japanese Nuclear Industry
I have written about the cozy relationship between business and government in the Japanese nuclear industry. There seems to be a universal pattern in countries with nuclear industries where the government supports the industry with subsidies, tax breaks and even state ownership of nuclear corporations. Regulatory agencies are in a confused position of having to both promote and regulate nuclear companies. Often, there is more promotions than regulation. In Japan, this intermingling of government and nuclear corporations is referred to as the “nuclear village.” The Japanese Prime Minister Abe of Japan has made nuclear technology exports a major part of his economic revitalization plan.
Minoru Tanaka is a well known Japanese journalist who has published many articles critical of the Japanese nuclear village. In mid-December, he published an article in the weekly Shukan Kinyobi about Shiro Shirakawa who he called “the last big fixer.” Shirakawa is the head of a company that “provides security systems for power stations owned by the electricity utility TEPCO.” In the article, Shirakawa’s business dealings with constructions companies, banks and nuclear industry companies are detailed in Tanaka’s article. The details in the article show that many of these business arrangements are questionable at best. Tanaka explicitly accused Shirakawa of using his political conditions and industry connections to reap undeserved profits from the Fukushima disaster. But his powerful connections in industry and government have allowed Shirakawa to escape serious censure and punishment for his shady business practices. Shirakawa has brought a libel suit against Tanaka for about eight hundred and twenty seven thousand dollars. Many say that this law suit is intended to intimidate journalists and reduce the number of articles critical of the nuclear village in general and the handling of Fukushima in particular.
Tanaka is a freelance journalist. As such, he does not enjoy much support from the official Kisha press organizations. Freelancers in Japan have often been harassed for reporting on the Fukushima disaster. The Japanese government is fearful that an aroused and angry public could call for a serious debate about Japanese energy issues and even an end to all nuclear power in Japan. This would definitely be a serious blow to Abe’s plans for a nuclear Japan. Shirakawa’s lawsuit is what the Japanese refer to as a “Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation” or a “gag” suit. In this type of suit, a power well-connected plaintiff attacks an isolated journalist.
The Abe government recently passed a new secrecy law. It is supposed to be aimed at military issues but is written very broadly. There are severe penalties for bureaucrats who leak secret documents and journalists who publish them. Critics of the new bill point out that government officials have the authority to declare what “constitutes a state secret under categories from defense to diplomacy, terrorism and safety threats.” There is fear that without adequate oversight and provisions for transparency, the new law will be abused. If nuclear affairs are branded as state secrets by the Abe government, this new law would help hide the corruption and problems in Japan’s nuclear village.
Minoru Tanaka at his libel trial:
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Radiation News Roundup December 30, 2013
Arnie Gundersen says that nuclear fuel has been moved by groundwater at Fukushima Daiichi. enenews.com
Cesium-137 density in seawater has been increasing in Fukushima plant port since this June. fukushima-diary.com
Commissioning is about to start at Russia’s forthcoming fast reactor, Beloyarsk 4. world-nuclear-news.com
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Geiger Readings for December 30, 2013
Ambient office = 110 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 89 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 85 nanosieverts per hourRomain lettuce from Top Foods = 84 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 114 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 95 nanosieverts per hour