The Ohio Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station remained shut down today as more details emerged about what caused the unplanned closure. toledoblade.com
Blog
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Geiger Readings for July 5, 2013
Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on July 04, 2013
Ambient office = .140 microsieverts per hour
Ambient outside = .100 microsieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = .127 microsieverts per hour
Icebreg lettuce from local produce stand = .127 microsieverts per hour
Tap water = .114 microsieverts per hour
Filtered water = .088 microsieverts per hour
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Radiation News Roundup for July 4, 2013
The United States’ sole uranium conversion plant in Metropolis, Ill., will be allowed to resume operations. nuclearstreet.com
All highly enriched uranium (HEU) has now been removed from Vietnam following the air transport of 11 kilograms of used research reactor fuel back to Russia. world-nuclear-news.org
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Geiger Readings for July 4, 2013
Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on July 04, 2013
Ambient office = .074 microsieverts per hour
Ambient outside = .062 microsieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = .058 microsieverts per hour
Hass Avacado from local produce stand = .105 microsieverts per hour
Tap water = .080 microsieverts per hour
Filtered water = .066 microsieverts per hour
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Radioactive Waster 39 – Japan’s Nuclear Regulatory Agency does not Like TEPCO’s Fukushima plan
It has now been more than two years since the nuclear disaster at Fukushima, Japan triggered by a huge earthquake and tsunami. A great deal of time, money and energy has been expended by TEPCO which owns and operates the Fukushima nuclear power plant and agencies of the Japanese government such as the Nuclear Regulatory Agency in trying to understand exactly what caused the disaster and what has happened since the disaster. There are still unanswered questions about the situation such as what has happened to the cores of the reactors which melted down and how radioactivity is migrating underground with water being pumped into the damaged reactors.
The Nuclear Regulatory Agency of Japan is the agency directly responsible for regulating the nuclear industry in Japan. Although it has been accused of being too lenient and friendly with the Japanese nuclear industry, the NRA has repeatedly cited violation of regulations by TEPCO for decades at the nuclear plants they own and operate. Investigations have shown that the Fukushima disaster did not need to happen. TEPCO knew about problems at the power plant and ignored warnings and demands for changes. Following accidents there have been many criticisms of TEPCO for not taking proper action and for not honestly reporting on the situation at the plant.
One of the biggest concerns at Fukushima is that the cores of Unit One, Unit Two and Unit Three melted down and sank into the earth. It is unknown exactly where these hot melted cores are now. Water is being pumped into the ruins of the reactors to try to keep these cores as cool as possible where ever they are underground. The is a big problem with what is going to be done with all the water being pumped underground, partly because of how close the plant is to the ocean. There is already radioactive contamination of ocean water near Fukushima that is interfering with the fishing industry.
TEPCO has drafted a new report on the situation at the Fukushima plant and modified a plan for moving forward with decommissioning the damaged reactors. When TEPCO met with the NRA on June 28th, they proudly announced that they were actually ahead of the original schedule for dealing with the corium (melted core materials.) The NRA expressed extreme skepticism that the announcement of being ahead of schedule from TEPCO was meaningless because TEPCO didn’t even know where the corium was now and exactly what they would have to do to recover and/or neutralize it. Members of the NRA used a Japanese idiomatic expression that translates to “Drawing a picture of a sweet rice cake may look nice but you cannot eat it.”
I have returned to the Fukushima disaster and its aftermath again and again on this blog because I want the people in the United States to have some vague idea of just how damaging a nuclear accident can be in many ways to a nation. Two years after the Fukushima disaster, the situation continues to deteriorate and no one is sure exactly what to do.
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Geiger Readings for July 03, 2013
Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745
Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on July 03, 2013
Ambient office = .092 microsieverts per hour
Ambient outside = .091 microsieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = .079 microsieverts per hour
Mango from local produce stand = .089 microsieverts per hour
Tap water = .104 microsieverts per hour
Filtered water = .063 microsieverts per hour
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Radiioactive Waste 37 – EPA fines DOE for Hanford problems
A couple of days ago, I blogged about problems at Handford with the handling of two glove boxes by a Department of Energy contractor named Permafix. The boxes were moved from Hanford to Permafix through Richland with parade permits which were not appropriate for such a shipment. When the two glove boxes reached Permafix, there was radiation found on the outside of the plastic wrapped boxes and they were not handled properly when they were moved off the truck.
Coincidentally, the next day I heard a report on the radio that the Environmental Protection Agency was fining the DOE because the DOE and its contractors mishandled radioactive Hanford lab waste by transporting it without proper permits and dumping some of it into a landfill without proper processing. The EPA looked at records between the 1980s and 2011 and concluded that there was a consistent pattern of misbehavior. They levied a fine of $136,000 against the DOE. They admitted that the fine was small considering the severity of the problem but explained that if they raised the fine and/or the DOE contested the fine in court, it would take money away from the amount available to DOE to clean up the mess. I almost drove off the road! This would be like a prosecutor deciding not to fine a bank too much because the bank had to give money back to the people they had cheated and a big fine or expensive lawsuit would reduce the money available to pay back to the victims.
The idea of one department of the U.S. Executive Branch fining another department of the Executive Branch is a little odd. The issue of possible law suits between the EPA and the DOE was also raised. That also is a little odd. That would be like fines and lawsuits between departments of a corporation. It doesn’t really make sense to me. It would seem that if there were problems in the Executive Branch, there would be investigations and then some sort of action might be taken such as firing people and/or changing procedures. Any expenses that resulted from the problems should be taken care of in the budget for the department that is cleaning up the mess.
One of the reasons given for the small fine was that the DOE promised to deal with the problem and the EPA though that that was sufficient. Well, excuse me, but the incident that I blogged about two days ago where there were not proper permits and the contractor mishandled the glove boxes suggests to me that DOE and its contractors didn’t really take their promise to fix things very seriously. A slap on the wrist like the small fine is obviously not sufficient. People need to lose their jobs and the whole mess needs to be publicized. There are serious problems with the way that DOE and its contractors are handling the Hanford cleanup and something needs to be done to impress upon them the need for real change.
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Geiger Readings for July 02, 2013
Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745
Geiger Counter Readings in Seattle, WA on July 02, 2013
Ambient office = .123 microsieverts per hour
Ambient outside = .102 microsieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = .077 microsieverts per hour
Mango from local produce stand = .120 microsieverts per hour
Tap water = .082 microsieverts per hour
Filtered water = .073 microsieverts per hour