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Geiger Readings for June 25, 2016
Ambient office = 93 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 111 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 112 nanosieverts per hourWhite peach from Central Market = 98 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 92 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 73 nanosieverts per hourDover sole – Caught in USA = 99 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Reactors 379 – What Impace will the United Kingdom Exit From the European Union Have On Nuclear Energy Projects – Part One of Two Parts
Part One of Two Parts
The news is full of the story of the United Kingdom referendum vote to leave the European Union. Supporters of the decision to leave the E.U. say that their country will be better off while critics proclaim gloom and doom ahead for the U.K. economy. The impact, positive and negative, will be felt worldwide. What effect will the U.K. exit have on projects involving nuclear energy in the U.K?
The CEO of the French nuclear company EDF has said that the exit of the U.K. from the E.U. will have no impact on their commitment to the troubled Hinkley Point C project. The Hinkley Point C project involves the construction of two of the new European Pressurized Reactors in Britain. The new reactors will supply seven percent of the electricity for the UK starting in 2025 if the project is completed. The CEO said, “As of today, we believe that this vote has no impact on our strategy, and the strategy for our UK subsidiary (EDF Energy) has not changed. Our business strategy is not linked to Great Britain’s political affiliation with the European Union, so we have no reason to change it.” He also said, “Market analysts believe that the pound will drop, but if the currency falls, the economy becomes more competitive. I think we need to adapt to economic conditions and to exchange rates, which can evolve.”
NuGeneration is a U.K. joint venture between Toshiba, the Japanese company that owns Westinghouse, and Engie, a French company. They have a project in the works at Moorside in West Cumbria for the construction of nuclear power plant that will supply almost four gigawatts from Westinghouse AP1000 reactors. NuGen has stated that the U.K. exit from the E.U. will have no effect on their project. However, a NuGen representative said that, “In order to deliver the plant on time and on budget, we must secure clarity on policy and ensure the Government does everything it can to deliver investment stability for vital UK infrastructure projects.”
Horizon Nuclear Power is developing plans to construct U.K. Advanced Boiling Water Reactors at two different sites; Wylfa Newydd on the Isle of Anglesey and Oldbury-on-Severn in South Gloucestershire. Horizon was purchased by Hitachi in 2012. They intend to generate at least five and a half gigawatts between the two sites with the first reactor operational by 2025. Horizon representatives stated that “Like all businesses we’ll need to assess the wider impacts of the [referendum] result, but we will continue to develop our plans.” Horizon has created a joint venture including Hitachi Nuclear Energy Europe, Bechtel Management Company and JGC Corporation to carry out the project at the two sites.
PriceWaterhouseCooper’s global head of nuclear capital projects and infrastructure said that the U.K. exit could have a “could have a significant impact on our nuclear program.” She also said, “Ongoing uncertainty in the market, at least in the short term, could affect access to capital and investor confidence in what is already a limited trading arena. And while the UK government will need to work out political, trading and legal issues, we will also potentially need to renegotiate our involvement in the Euratom Treaty and our 123 Agreement with the US – and this will take time.”
Please read Part Two:
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Geiger Readings for June 24, 2016
Ambient office = 81 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 71 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 71 nanosieverts per hourAvocado from Central Market = 95 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 111 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 95 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Weapons 208 – Russian Threaten Deployment Of Iskander Missiles To Kalingrad.
My last post discussed the activation of a U.S. Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense shield in Romania which is said to be intended to defend Europe from missiles launched from the Middle East, primarily Iran. In that post, I discussed concerns that Russia had about the possibility that the new missile shield could be aimed at stopping Russian missiles.
The 9K720 Iskander missile is a Russian mobile short-range ballistic missile. Iskander is the Russian version of Alexander, in reference to Alexander the Great. The missile is also known by NATO as the SS-26 Stone. The Iskander was developed to replace the Skud missile. It can carry a variety of warheads including a nuclear warheads over a range of about three hundred and seventy miles. It was first tested in 1996. The missile went into production in 2006. Russia has sold these missiles to a number of other countries.
It now appears that Russia is considering placing nuclear capable missiles in the Russian enclave of Kalingrad by 2019 as a response to the new U.S. systems in Romania and Poland. Kalingrad is a Russian province or oblast located on the coast between Lithuania and Poland. Russia has deployed Iskander missiles in Kalingrad several times as part of military exercises but have withdrawn them after the exercises were finished.
Russia was probably intending on permanently installing the missiles in Kalingrad whether or not the U.S. system went operational in Romania. Iskander sites in Kalingrad means that the Russians could attack the Baltic States and most of Poland. They have also mentioned the possibility of deploying these missiles in the Crimea.
There will be a NATO summit in Warsaw next month to discuss countering Russian annexation of the Crimea in 2014 and aggression in Ukraine and Eastern Europe. The U.S. , Britain and Germany have already announced that they intend to deploy four battalions of troops in Eastern Europe to serve as a “tripwire” in case of a Russian invasion. The Russians have said that Poland and Romania could be targets for Russian nuclear missiles because they are allowing U.S. missiles to be deployed on their soil. The Russians have said that they will wait until planned Polish ABMD sites open in 2018 to announce more serious retaliatory measures.
Tensions have been rising between Russia, NATO and the U.S. in the past several years over Russian aggression in Eastern Europe and military moves by NATO and the U.S. near the Russian border. Russia has been testing airspace and territorial waters of other countries with Russian nuclear bombers and nuclear submarines. The Russian Premier has remarked that Russia has superiority in tactical nuclear weapons over NATO in Eastern Europe. He has said that he would be prepared to use tactical nuclear weapons against NATO troops if Russia was being beaten in a conventional war in Eastern Europe. While it is possible that deployment of Iskander missiles to Kalingrad is inevitable, there are hopes that if tensions between Russia and the West can be reduced, Russia might be willing to give up deployment of the Iskanders to Kalingrad.
Iskander missile:
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Geiger Readings for June 23, 2016
Ambient office = 81 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 72 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 63 nanosieverts per hourCrimini mushroom from Central Market = 80 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 97 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 92 nanosieverts per hour -
Nuclear Weapons 207 – U.S. Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System Operational In Romania
The Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System (ABMD) was developed by the U.S. Department of Defense Missile Defense Agency to provide defense against short to intermediate range ballistic missiles. The system is designed to intercept and destroy missiles after their launch and initial boost phase but before they reenter the atmosphere on the way to their target. A radar system tracks the launched missiles and the Raytheon RIM-161 Standard Missile 3 is used to destroy the enemy missile. The missiles can be launched from ships or ground bases. Development of the ABMD system began in the 1980s under President Reagan and was finalized with the Aegis 3.0 update in 2005.
In 2002, the U.S. began talks with Poland and other European countries about the possibility of the installation of a U.S. system to destroy long range missiles that threatened Europe. The Ustka-Wicko base in Poland was one of the prospective locations for such a system. A debate on this location began in Poland in 2005. In 2007, the U.S. began formal negotiations with Poland and the Czech Republic over the construction of a U.S. missile defense system. The U.S. said that the system was intended for use against missiles launched from the Middle East or Northern Africa.
Russia was against the establishment of such a system. They claimed that the system could be used to destroy Russian missiles launched at Europe in a conflict. They threatened to deploy short-range nuclear missiles on along their border with Poland if the U.S. missile system was built in Poland. They also said that they would consider withdrawing from the Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987.
During 2008, U.S. discussions with Poland proceeded. An agreement was reached just after the war between Georgia and Russia over South Ossetia. This prompted Russia to state that it was now obvious that the new missile system was aimed at destroying Russian missiles. A Russian military official said that Poland could become a target for Russian nuclear missiles if the system was installed. An agreement was concluded between the U.S. and Poland in spite of protests from not just Russia but also from the French Prime Minister.
The U.S. had claimed that the missile defense system to be installed in Poland was primarily intended as a defense against missiles launched from Iran. In late 2009, the U.S. President announced that new intelligence indicated that Iran was concentrating on short and medium range missiles and not on long range missiles. Therefore, the President said that plans for the new missile system in Poland were being cancelled.
Following the cancellation of the original plan, a new plan to deploy smaller mobile SM-3 missiles in both Poland and Romania was announced. The European ABMD system deployment would include installation of the SM-3 missiles on U.S. naval vessels by 2011. SM-3s would be deployed in Poland and Romania by 2015. A final phase to install more advanced missiles in Eastern Europe by 2018 was cancelled as a concession to Russian concerns.
On May 12, 2016, the U.S. switched on an eight hundred million dollar ABMD system in Romania. The U.S. claimed that the new system would be used as a defense against Iranian missiles and that there was no intention to use it against Russia. On the same day as the announcement of the Romanian system, ground was broken for the construction of an ABMD installation in Poland, to be completed by 2018.
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Radiation News Roundup June 22, 2016
According to a new report, the Japanese government worked in concert with TEPCO to purposely cover up the meltdown at Fukushima in 2011. activistpost.com
Fennovoima is considering developing its own repository for disposing of used fuel from its planned Hanhikivi nuclear power plant in western Finland. Posiva Solutions is to advise it on site selection. world-nuclear-news.org
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Geiger Readings for June 22, 2016
Ambient office = 95 nanosieverts per hourAmbient outside = 109 nanosieverts per hourSoil exposed to rain water = 116 nanosieverts per hourMango from Central Market = 136 nanosieverts per hourTap water = 116 nanosieverts per hourFiltered water = 108 nanosieverts per hour