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Geiger Readings for December 20, 2013
Ambient office = 123 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 110 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 102 nanosieverts per hourVine ripened tomato from Top Foods = 91 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 119 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 104 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Accidents 23 – Crewmen of the Ronald Reagan Suing TEPCO
Operation Tomodachi was a U.S. humanitarian aid mission to help Japan after the March 3, 2011 Fukushima disaster. Operation Tomodachi ran from March 12, 2011 to May 4, 2011. It included twenty four thousand U.S. servicemen, one hundred eighty nine aircraft and twenty four naval ships. The USS Ronald Reagan is a U.S. Navy Nimitz-class nuclear powered supercarrier that was involved in Operation Tomodachi. The Roosevelt was commissioned in October of 2003. It is over one thousand feet long and has accommodations for over five thousand personnel in the ship’s crew and Air wing. The carrier was used as a refueling station for Japanese and U.S. helicopters involved in relief missions around Fukushima.
The U.S. Navy claims that “proactive measures” were taken in order to “mitigate the levels of Fukushima-related contamination on U.S. Navy ships and aircraft” and that crew members were not exposed to dangerous radiation levels. The Ronald Reagan had to move on March 14 to avoid a plume of radioactive emissions from the Fukushima power plant. Several contaminated helicopters landed on the carrier and a full radioactive decontamination procedure was carried out. The Ronald Reagan was anchored ten miles off Fukushima. It desalinates water for use by the crew. The ocean water and air around the Roosevelt was contaminated by radioactivity from the Fukushima disaster but the actual level of contamination was not revealed to the U.S. Navy until a month had passed. The crew had been drinking and washing in contaminated water during that month. They had been going into the ocean to rescue people that had been swept out to sea by the tsunami. They also repeatedly washed the deck of the carrier and aircraft with contaminated ocean water. The Navy gave out iodine pills to the officers and pilots but most of the crew did not get them.
The Navy established a registry for all personnel involved in Operation Tomodachi who may have been exposed to radiation. The registry was supposed to be completed in 2012. They say that only about one hundred and fifty people involved in the operation showed any sign of radioactive contamination but the Navy played down the seriousness of their exposure.
In December of 2012, nine crew members of the Ronald Reagan who had been involved in the decontamination of the deck filed suit against TEPCO, the Japanese company that operated the Fukushima power plant and the Japanese government, claiming that the rectal bleeding, gastrointestinal problems, hair loss, fatigue, thyroid cancers, testicular cancers, and leukemia that they are suffering were due to the failure of TEPCO to adequately warn the Navy of the dangers of contaminated ocean water. After the suit was filed, the Navy announced that it was dropping the registry after two years of work because it did not feel that there had been any serious exposure of the crew to radioactive materials.
An additional forty two crewmembers have joined the suit since it was filed and one hundred and fifty crewmembers are being medically screen and may also join the suit. The plaintiffs are seeking forty million dollars each and are asking for an additional billion dollars for a fund for other medical problems that may appear in the future.
A federal Judge in San Diego has just dismissed the lawsuit but left the door open to repeal. In the ruling, the judge said that it was beyond the authority of the judge to determine whether or not the Japanese government had perpetrated a fraud on the American government.
The USS Ronald Reagan:
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Geiger Readings for December 19, 2013
Ambient office = 102 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 119 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 121 nanosieverts per hourVine ripened tomato from Top Foods = 140 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 72 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 64 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Reactors 98 – Chinese International Nuclear Ambitions
Yesterday, I blogged about Pakistani plans to have China design and construct two big new nuclear power reactors in Karachi. Today, I am going to write about Chinese ambitions and the global nuclear power industry. China has the biggest nuclear reactor building program in the world. Currently, the program is focused on building reactors for China’s domestic needs but China is eager to expand into international sales of its nuclear technology.
China halted its construction of domestic nuclear reactors for a year and a half following the Fukushima disaster in March of 2011. They restarted their nuclear construction at the end of 2012. They are currently constructing almost thirty gigawatts of new electrical generation capacity which accounts for more than forty percent of new reactor construction globally. China has expressed the intention to raise nuclear power from twelve gigawatts at present to fifty eight gigawatts by 2020. The Chinese government has encouraged nuclear firms to develop the industrial capacity to capture major global nuclear business.
China has built reactors for Pakistan and is seeking other contacts in developing nations such as Turkey and Argentina. However, entering the market for new nuclear construction in developed industrial nations is high priority. Hinkley Point in the U.K. is China’s first such project. The Chinese General Nuclear Power Group (CGN) and the China National Nuclear Corporation (GNNC) are going to have a forty percent stake in a consortium led by Électricité de France (EDF). Unfortunately, CGN and GNNC have been competitors for nuclear contracts and it has proven difficult to get the two organizations to cooperate.
Studies by the U.K. government indicated that there would be public backlash if China were to hold a majority position in the ownership of the new reactor. The U.K. decided to cap Chinese participation at forty nine percent ownership. China is hoping that the Hinkley Point reactor will boost their visibility and credibility for the international nuclear marketplace.
Critics of the Chinese push into the world nuclear industry point to gaps in the Chinese supply chain, possible political interference from the government and a serious lack of experience in the nuclear power business. A French consulting firm with experience in China says that state-owned enterprises control all business aspects of the Chinese reactors which were built to supply power and not for the purpose of gain profit. The French firm says that the Chinese have “absolutely no clue how to make profit in nuclear.”
Chinese firms have depended on nuclear companies such as EDF and Westinghouse for nuclear expertise, technology and reactor design. Given their inexperience in the global nuclear market, it is likely that they will continue to depend on close relationships with existing players in the international nuclear market. An additional concern is that when reactors are sold today, twenty years of nuclear fuel is included in the deal. China will definitely have to rely of external sources of nuclear fuel to satisfy this requirement.
Hinkley Point power plant:
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Radiation News Roundup December 18, 2013
Tritium raining to result from disposal of Fukushima contaminated water. enenews.com
Japanese activists say that cancer is clearly increasing in Fukushima children. enenews.com
USEC, a uranium enrichment company spun off the Department of Energy in 1992, announced it will declare bankruptcy next quarter. nuclearstreet.com
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Geiger Readings for December 18, 2013
Ambient office = 102 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 119 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 121 nanosieverts per hourIceberg lettuce from Top Foods = 140 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 72 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 64 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Reactors 97 – Pakistan is Building Two Big Reactors
Pakistan is working on the construction of two big nuclear reactors to generate electricity in Karachi. Each of the new reactors under construction will generate more electricity than all the other nuclear reactors operating in Pakistan put together. This will the biggest nuclear project that Pakistan has ever carried out. China will be designing and constructing these reactors for Pakistan. There is no available government analysis of whether these new reactors can provide electricity at a cost lower than other alternatives.
These new reactors are based on the ACP-1000 design which is still under development in China. There are no ACP-1000 reactors operating in China. Pakistan will have the first ACP-1000 reactors ever constructed. Because the ACP-1000 is still under development, there does not currently exist a complete design specification for these reactors.
There are critics of the new reactor project who say that there is no way to know if the ACP-1000 reactors being constructed will be safe and efficient. They are worried that the twenty million people in Karachi are going to be test subjects for the new design. There are more people within twenty miles of the construction site than the population around any other reactor site in the entire world. All of Karachi is within twenty four miles of the site. As the accident at Fukushima indicated, nuclear authorities tend to underestimate the possibility of major nuclear accidents as well as their ability to cope with major nuclear accidents.
To date, there have been no public hearing on how suitable the site is for locating a nuclear power station. There are no reports of any environmental impact statements for the new reactors. The Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission and the Pakistan Nuclear Regulatory Authority have no published plans for dealing with any major accident at the site. There are no details on the nuclear fuel cycle for the plant. It is unknown how long the highly radioactive spent fuel will remain on site or where it will go if and when it is removed from the site.
One independent study found that a radioactive plume released by a major accident would be blown by the prevailing winds into the most populated area of Karachi. There exists no public plan for the excavation of the millions of citizens of Karachi in the event of a major release of radioactivity. In the event of a major accident, there would be public panic which would cause the major roads to be clogged with people fleeing the city. This would prevent most of them from reaching safety for days.
In the event of a major accident, the cost of cleanup could be huge. Was this potential cost factored into the decision to build the reactors? If their new reactor design fails, will the Chinese help pay for the cleanup or will the people of Pakistan be expected to bear the entire cost?
Pakistan is considered to be the thirty fourth most corrupt country out of one hundred and seventy six countries in the world. With a lack of planning and transparency on the part of the Pakistani government, this widespread corruption could result in shortcuts being taken in construction and oversight of the new reactors. This sounds like a recipe for disaster to me.
Artist’s rendering of an ACP-1000 nuclear reactor:
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Geiger Readings for December 17, 2013
Ambient office = 120 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 130 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 123 nanosieverts per hourRedleaf lettuce from Top Foods = 82 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 123 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 103 nanosieverts per hour