Wednesday, April 30, 2008

What Nuclear Renaissance?

April 24, 2008 (May 12, 2008 edition)

Despite a slick PR campaign hyping its promise, the nuclear industry isn't going anywhere. It's too costly and won't save us from global warming.

By Christian Parenti

If you listen to the rhetoric, nuclear power is back. Smashing atoms will replace burning carbon-based coal, gas and oil. In the face of a disaster movie-like future of runaway climate change--bringing drought, floods, famine and social breakdown--carbon-free nukes are cast as the deus ex machina to save us at the last minute.

Even a few greens support nuclear power--most famously James Lovelock, father of the Gaia theory. In the popular press, discussion of nuclear energy is dominated by its boosters, thanks in part to sophisticated industry PR.

In an effort to jump-start a "nuclear renaissance," the Bush Administration has pushed one package of subsidies after another. For the past two years a program of federal loan guarantees has sat waiting for utilities to build nukes. Last year's appropriations bill set the total amount on offer at $18.5 billion. And now the Lieberman-Warner climate change bill is gaining momentum and will likely accrue amendments that will offer yet more money.


The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) expects up to thirty applications to be filed to build atomic plants; five or six of those proposals are moving through the complicated multi-stage process. But no new atomic power stations have been fully licensed or have broken ground. And two newly proposed projects have just been shelved.


The fact is, nuclear power has not recovered from the crisis that hit it three decades ago with the reactor fire at Browns Ferry, Alabama, in 1975 and the meltdown at Three Mile Island in 1979. Then came what seemed to be the coup de grâce: Chernobyl in 1986. The last nuclear power plant ordered by a US utility, the TVA's Watts Bar 1, began construction in 1973 and took twenty-three years to complete. Nuclear power has been in steady decline worldwide since 1984, with almost as many plants canceled as completed since then.


All of which raises the question: why is the much-storied "nuclear renaissance" so slow to get rolling? Who is holding up the show? In a nutshell, blame Warren Buffett and the banks--they won't put up the cash.


"Wall street doesn't like nuclear power," says Arjun Makhijani of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research. The fundamental fact is that nuclear power is too expensive and risky to attract the necessary commercial investors. Even with vast government subsidies, it is difficult or almost impossible to get proper financing and insurance. The massive federal subsidies on offer will cover up to 80 percent of construction costs of several nuclear power plants in addition to generous production tax credits, as well as risk insurance. But consider this: the average two-reactor nuclear power plant is estimated to cost $10 billion to $18 billion to build. That's before cost overruns, and no US nuclear power plant has ever been delivered on time or on budget.

Read the entire article here: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080512/parenti


More to think about regarding tornadoes and a uranium mine...

We had a comment posted to the Tornadoes and Uranium Mine item that gave us pause with its interesting thoughts:

"It's also worth examining the dangerous weather generated by remnants of major hurricanes. The flash flooding, high winds, etc., are in addition to the prospect of tornadoes spawned by such tropical weather systems. Mining experts will (or should) concede that environmental management and risk would be a significant concern which would need to be addressed if such an operation were proposed for an area in Virginia with a history of severe weather. Even then, would the bonds be nearly adequate enough for the potential weather-related disasters? Would anyone be held legally liable for an act of nature?"

I'm not sure how these situations would be handled but on April 22, 2008, Karen of SCC sent the following link and question to the Virginia Dept of Emergency Management:


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
----- Original Message -----
From: karen
Sent: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 2:17 PM
Subject: Radiological_Information_for_Farmers_and_Growers

http://www.vdes.state.va.us/threats/radiological/Radiological_Information_for_Farmers_and_Growers.pdf

I found the above link on line. In the event that mining and milling of uranium occurs in Virginia, would these same precautions and procedures be followed in the event of migration of radioactive tailings offsite of an industrial facility through air or water in a catastrophic event?
Karen ____
XXX XXXXX Rd.
Danville, VA 245XX
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To date, she's not gotten a response although she has again submitted the question to VDEM with the message
"Please note this was originally sent on 4/22/08. Your response will aid in decision- making in Southside Virginia".

I agree with Karen that we should all take a look at the link she send to VDEM. It's a .pdf file and needs Adobe Reader to open it. You probably have Adobe on your computer but in case you don't, go here to download one:

http://adobe.8-1pdf.com/index.asp?aff=100&camp=google_areader_us&se=google

Here are some excerpts...I really encourage you to take a look at the whole report, keeping in mind what you know about tailings and radon contamination. Any italics are mine.

http://www.vdes.state.va.us/threats/radiological/Radiological_Information_for_Farmers_and_Growers.pdf

In an Emergency, Who Will Provide Advice

This information provides general advice as to precautions, preparations and actions you can take. However, in a radiological emergency, the Virginia Department of Emergency Management in cooperation with the Virginia Departments of Health, Radiological Health, and Agriculture and Consumer Services, will monitor and broadcast radiation levels, dangers and recommended actions based on information gathered by radiation monitoring teams. Federal and state agencies will conduct damage assessments in potentially affected areas and will inform farmers, growers and producers of any actions, which should be undertaken. The general public will receive this information over the EAS.

Protecting Your Farm

You may be asked to shelter your farm animals and give them protected feed and water. This will help prevent contamination from harming your animals, and from later entering the human food supply.

Checking for contamination at home gardens and small-scale farms may not begin for weeks after the emergency. Homegrown produce should be tested for radioactive contamination before it is consumed. Home gardeners and small-scale farmers should wait for a field monitoring team to help them, or for further instructions from local and state agriculture and health agencies.

Sheltering Animals

If you are advised to shelter animals, remove them from pasture and house them in a farm building. You may not have enough shelter available for all of your animals, so priority should be given to your most valuable livestock. State and local emergency response agencies will have more advice for decontaminating farm animals.

Possible livestock shelters:
• Barns
• Milking parlors
• Machine sheds
• Garages
• Corncribs
• Poultry buildings

Protecting Your Crops

The following specific actions may be advised to reduce the danger of ingesting adulterated food products.

Milk

Remove all dairy animals from pasture and shelter them if possible, and provide them with protected food and water. Sampling teams from the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, or the Federal Radiological Monitoring and Assessment Center will come to your farm to take milk, and possibly feed and water samples, for laboratory analysis to determine whether any of these products are adulterated.

If dairy products are contaminated, it will be recommended that milk and milk products be withheld from the market. It is possible, however, for milk products contaminated with very low levels of radioactive materials to be safe for human consumption.

The Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services will advise as to which protective actions are appropriate.

Protecting Food Products

Food and Milk Processors, Warehouses and Commodity Terminals

Windows and vents to the outdoors should be closed. Vacuum systems should be shut down, as should compressed air systems. Any system that draws air from the outdoors to the inside should be shut down. Your facility will be notified directly by the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, if the food products in your facility are affected. If samples are collected, the Department of Agriculture officials will notify you which products can be released for sale

Economics

Under the worst conditions, radioactive contamination could reduce the economic productivity of your farm. As previously mentioned, you may suffer the loss of some farm and dairy items due to contamination or spoilage during the period of time that a radiological emergency is in progress. However, following an accident, radioactive contamination might reduce the competitive economic value of your farm products. This would be due to public reluctance to purchase farm products that are suspected of having been grown in an area that has been affected by a radioactive release from a nuclear power plant or other source. State authorities will advise you on the contamination level that your farm experienced and the marketability of your farm products. An insurance pool has been established to help individuals recover from the losses caused by a radiological disaster.

Potential Sources of Radiological Emergencies

This brochure applies to peacetime emergencies resulting from fixed nuclear facility incidents (including commercial and military nuclear power reactors); transportation incidents; and other incidents, e.g., nuclear powered satellite reentry. Sabotage and terrorism are not treated as separate types of incidents; rather, they are considered a complicating dimension of the incident types noted.

Specifically, the following fixed nuclear facilities are potential sources of radiological emergencies in Virginia:

• North Anna Power Station, near the town of Mineral, Virginia;
• Surry Power Station, on Hog Island in Surry County, Virginia;
• Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, near Lusby, Maryland;
• Naval and commercial shipyards, Hampton Roads area; and
• Commercial and naval nuclear fuels plants and research reactors, near Lynchburg.

Appendix 2

Adjacent States and Jurisdictions Within 50-Mile Ingestion Pathway*

1. The Virginia Emergency Operations Center (EOC) will provide notification to affected or potentially affected jurisdictions within the ingestion pathway and adjacent states in the event of a radiological emergency occurring at the North Anna or Surry Power Stations. *The State will transmit to each local organization recommended protective measures based upon protective action guides and other criteria. This shall be consistent with the recommendations of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regarding exposure resulting from passage of radiological airborne plumes and with other Federal recommendations regarding radioactive contamination of human foods and animal feeds.

2. The primary means for notifying adjacent states and local jurisdictions within ingestion pathway will be by commercial telephone. Virginia Criminal Information Network (VCIN) will be used to back up voice messages as appropriate. Adjacent states and local governments within the ingestion pathway are listed in Tables 1 (Surry) and 2 (North Anna).

3. The Virginia EOC will provide notification to affected or potentially affected local jurisdictions within the Virginia portion of the ingestion pathway in the event of a radiological emergency occurring at the Calvert Cliffs (Maryland) Nuclear Power Station. See Table 3 for jurisdictions to be notified.

4. Notifications will be made to local governments within the ingestion pathway when a General Emergency is declared or earlier as appropriate.

* Similar alerting procedures will be used
How safe do you feel?

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Danville Meeting...Be There or Be Square! And Bring Everyone You Know With You! :-)

Uranium Educational Seminar

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

6:30 - 8:30 p.m.

North Theater - - 629 North Main Street

Danville, Virginia

Sponsored by Southside Concerned Citizens (SCC)

Contact Numbers: (434) 791-4930 or (434) 797-3460

Uranium Mines and Tornadoes? Doesn't Sound Too Wise!

In light of the recent weather in the area, is a uranium mine in a state with so many tornadoes really a wise idea? Hmmm...and the figures below are just for 2006!

From our friend Phil in NM:


http://www.vdem.state.va.us/newsroom/history/stats/tornado/2006stats.cfm

History & Statistics

Virginia's Weather HistoryVirginia Weather and Disaster StatisticsPresidentially Declared Disasters

What's In Weather and Disaster Statistics

Virginia Weather and Disaster Statistics: Tornado Statistics

Tornado Statistics, 2006

  • Total number of tornadoes: 16
  • Total people killed: 0
  • Total people injured: 3
  • Total damage estimated: $425,000

Monday, April 28, 2008

Uranium Mining Focus of Meeting (Danville)

By John Crane

Published: April 28, 2008

A local environmental group will hold a seminar on the effects of uranium mining Wednesday night in Danville.


Southside Concerned Citizens is sponsoring the Uranium Mining Educational Seminar that will take place at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the North Theatre at 629 North Main St. in Danville. The two-hour event is free and open to the public.


Gregg Vickrey, chairman of SCC’S Chatham/Pittsylvania County chapter, said the meeting will answer questions residents may still have about uranium mining and milling.


“There are still a lot of people that tell us they don’t know enough about uranium and uranium mining,” Vickrey said Sunday.


Walter Coles Sr., owner of Virginia Uranium Inc. in Chatham, said the seminar will be the same as past presentations and that he will not attend.


Besides Vickrey, presenters will include Jeff Johnson, a geologist with the Dan River Basin Association, and Allison Fisher, organizer with the energy program of Public Citizens, a Washington, D.C.-based group. Jack Dunavant, chairman of SCC, will introduce the speakers.
SCC has held similar events in Dry Fork, Halifax and Chase City.


Vickrey said he will speak on the history of how the idea of uranium mining started in the area in the early 1980s, discuss what happened in the last year, and talk about the upcoming General Assembly’s actions on the topic.


Virginia Uranium Inc. has proposed a uranium mining and milling operation for about 110 million pounds of uranium ore on Coles Hill about six miles outside Chatham, and sought a study from the National Academy of Science or other independent institution to determine whether mining can be done safely in the commonwealth. A bill that would have authorized a study died in the Senate earlier this year.


Opponents of the mining are afraid of its environmental effects, but proponents, including Virginia Uranium, say it could revamp the local economy. The potential for mining uranium in Virginia was proposed in both Pittsylvania and Orange counties in the early 1980s, but only Pittsylvania County has seen any serious interest in getting the statewide moratorium lifted.
The educational seminar also will address Virginia’s climate compared to that of other areas where uranium has been mined, the promise or failure of new technologies in mining, and effects on water, wildlife, crops, livestock and residents’ health.

http://www.godanriver.com/gdr/news/local/danville_news/article/uranium_mining_focus_of_meeting/3212/#When:04:12:00Z

EPA OPENS CHEMICAL RISK ASSESSMENT TO CORPORATE LOBBYING

New Process Marginalizes Government Scientists and Promotes Industry Influence

Washington, DC — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has unveiled a new process for assessing the health risks of new chemicals that allows chemical manufacturers and other industries to play key roles. As a result, it will be much easier to inject corporate influence into public health determinations that should be purely scientific, according Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).


The overhaul of the EPA “Integrated Risk Information System” became effective on April 10, 2008, the day it was announced. EPA said the changes “created several important opportunities” for affected interests to weigh in “at key points throughout the nomination and assessment” of new environmental contaminants. One hallmark of the changes is pushing government research to the side in favor of outside research which is largely industry-funded. As a consequence –


  • Affected corporations will be intimately involved in each step of EPA’s risk assessment and will be able to know what staff are assigned to which work, making the agency “research plan” vulnerable to political manipulation through the appropriations process;

  • The Defense and Energy Departments will have a formal role on how pollutants, such as the chemical perchlorate, are evaluated. In addition, these agencies could declare a particular chemical to be “mission critical” that would allow them to control how “data gaps” are to be filled. All intra-and inter-agency communications on risk assessments are deemed “deliberative” and thus confidential;
  • The White House Office of Management and Budget would control both the substance and timing of final decisions on chemical risk assessments.

Read the rest of the article here:

http://www.peer.org/news/news_id.php?row_id=1026

Reasonable Doubt: Children Living Near Nuclear Facilities Face an Increased Risk of Cancer

"As we begin to pin down the likely causes, the new evidence of an association between increased cancers and proximity to nuclear facilities raises difficult questions. Should pregnant women and young children be advised to move away from them? Should local residents eat vegetables from their gardens? And, crucially, shouldn’t those governments around the world who are planning to build more reactors think again?"

by Ian Fairlie
Global Research, April 24, 2008

AMONG the many environmental concerns surrounding nuclear power plants, there is one that provokes public anxiety like no other: the fear that children living near nuclear facilities face an increased risk of cancer. Though a link has long been suspected, it has never been proven. Now that seems likely to change.


Studies in the 1980s revealed increased incidences of childhood leukaemia near nuclear installations at Windscale (now Sellafield), Burghfield and Dounreay in the UK. Later studies near German nuclear facilities found a similar effect. The official response was that the radiation doses from the nearby plants were too low to explain the increased leukaemia. The Committee on Medical Aspects of Radiation in the Environment, which is responsible for advising the UK government, finally concluded that the explanation remained unknown but was not likely to be radiation.


There the issue rested, until a recent flurry of epidemiological studies appeared. Last year, researchers at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston carried out a meta-analysis of 17 research papers covering 136 nuclear sites in the UK, Canada, France, the US, Germany, Japan and Spain. The incidence of leukaemia in children under 9 living close to the sites showed an increase of 14 to 21 per cent, while death rates from the disease were raised by 5 to 24 per cent, depending on their proximity to the nuclear facilities (European Journal of Cancer Care, vol 16, p 355).


This was followed by a German study which found 14 cases of leukaemia compared to an expected four cases between 1990 and 2005 in children living within 5 kilometres of the Krümmel nuclear plant near Hamburg, making it the largest leukaemia cluster near a nuclear power plant anywhere in the world (Environmental Health Perspectives, vol 115, p 941).


This was upstaged by the yet more surprising KiKK studies (a German acronym for Childhood Cancer in the Vicinity of Nuclear Power Plants), whose results were published this year in the International Journal of Cancer (vol 122, p 721) and the European Journal of Cancer (vol 44, p 275). These found higher incidences of cancers and a stronger association with nuclear installations than all previous reports. The main findings were a 60 per cent increase in solid cancers and a 117 per cent increase in leukaemia among young children living near all 16 large German nuclear facilities between 1980 and 2003. The most striking finding was that those who developed cancer lived closer to nuclear power plants than randomly selected controls. Children living within 5 kilometres of the plants were more than twice as likely to contract cancer as those living further away, a finding that has been accepted by the German government.


Though the KiKK studies received scant attention elsewhere, there was a public outcry and vocal media debate in Germany. No one is sure of the cause (or causes) of the extra cancers. Coincidence has been ruled out, as has the “Kinlen hypothesis”, which theorises that childhood leukaemia is caused by an unknown infectious agent introduced as a result of an influx of new people to the area concerned. Surprisingly, the most obvious explanation for this increased risk – radioactive discharges from the nearby nuclear installations – was also ruled out by the KiKK researchers, who asserted that the radiation doses from such sources were too low, although the evidence they base this on is not clear.


Anyone who followed the argument in the 1980s and 1990s concerning the UK leukaemia clusters will have a sense of déjà vu. A report in 2004 by the Committee Examining Radiation Risks of Internal Emitters, set up by the UK government (and for which I was a member of the secretariat) points out that the models used to estimate radiation doses from sources emitted from nuclear facilities are riddled with uncertainty. For example, assumptions about how radioactive material is transported through the environment or taken up and retained by local residents may be faulty.


If radiation is indeed the cause of the cancers, how might local residents have been exposed? Most of the reactors in the KiKK study were pressurised water designs notable for their high emissions of tritium, the radioactive isotope of hydrogen. Last year, the UK government published a report on tritium which concluded that its hazard risk should be doubled. Tritium is most commonly found incorporated into water molecules, a factor not fully taken into account in the report, so this could make it even more hazardous.


As we begin to pin down the likely causes, the new evidence of an association between increased cancers and proximity to nuclear facilities raises difficult questions. Should pregnant women and young children be advised to move away from them? Should local residents eat vegetables from their gardens? And, crucially, shouldn’t those governments around the world who are planning to build more reactors think again?


Ian Fairlie is a London-based consultant on radiation in the environment

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8785

Sunday, April 27, 2008

"...Say No to Uranium Mining. Your Grandchildren Will Say Thanks!

"the only difference they could point to between the uranium mining technology of the 1980s and that of today is an “improved” plastic liner for tailings storage."



The threat is still out there
We in Pittsylvania and Halifax counties are still living under the threat of uranium mining at Coles Hill. The Legislature saw fit to deny Virginia Uranium’s request for a “study” of the feasibility of the proposed mine.
In reality, that study bill included instructions to the Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy to draw up regulations for mining and processing uranium in Virginia. The “study” part of the bill was merely a flimsy excuse for the writing of those regulations. Once new regulations are in place, the only impediment to the actual mining would be the lifting of the current moratorium on uranium mining in Virginia.
Virginia Uranium Inc. claims to have access to “new technologies” that they say would make uranium mining safe, although for some reason they are not willing to disclose what those wonderful new developments are. They have yet to put forth any specific plan for the mining or how they plan to deal with the thousands of tons of radioactive tailings and the millions of gallons of highly toxic liquid waste uranium mining would produce.
Delegate Watkins Abbitt, who wisely voted against the “study bill,” stated that after several meetings with officials from Virginia Uranium, their geologists and engineers, the only difference they could point to between the uranium mining technology of the 1980s and that of today is an “improved” plastic liner for tailings storage. Even the most advanced of those liners will fail and begin to leak over time.
Virginia Uranium and their highly paid lobbyists are still with us, and in the upcoming legislative session they will be working even harder to get the moratorium lifted and the regulations for mining uranium put into place. They will get their way unless the people of Pittsylvania and Halifax counties are willing to stand up and say no to uranium mining.
If you care about your home, your health and your children, call or write your legislators and supervisors and let them know you do not want a future of deadly radioactive toxins in your air and water.
Take a look at this Web site: sccchatham.blogspot.com. There you will find a wealth of information about uranium mining as well as a list of the names, phone numbers and e-mail addresses of the Pittsylvania County supervisors and of the state legislators. Please take a minute or two to educate yourself about this issue. Don’t be afraid to take a stand and say no to uranium mining.
Your grandchildren will thank you for it.
JESSE ANDREWS

Roy Crider Says Mining and Milling is Safe in Pittsylvania County

(The following is a letter to the editor for http://www.godanriver.com/gdr/news/opinion/letters_to_the_editor/danville_letters/article/april_27_uranium_mining_and_highway_safety/3174/ )



It will help our community
Regarding, “We’re no Slope County,” (April 20, page B6), the exhaustive analysis of population-density comparisons in North Dakota and Virginia, the basic assumption is seriously flawed: That uranium cannot be mined safely in densely populated areas. Uranium has been mined safety in far more densely populated areas than Virginia.
For example, well-regulated safe mining and reclamation has taken place for years in villages in France. Closer to home, uranium has been mined safely — and the land fully reclaimed — in Canonsburg, Pa., just a hop and a skip from the major metropolis of Pittsburgh.
The nightmare scenarios of uranium mining during the 1950s and 1960s in the western United States stand as chilling examples of the wrong way to mine anything — including uranium. Today’s intense regulatory environment, plus far more sophisticated techniques in managing and monitoring mining tailings, make uranium mining far safer than countless other activities going on around us all the time.
The letter’s author concludes his analysis by asking why uranium mining is being considered in Virginia. It is being considered because of the huge and positive economic potential for this region as well as all of Virginia. In addition, America vitally needs fresh sources of uranium to reduce its enormous reliance upon foreign sources to fuel our nuclear power plants.
That’s why we need to study the best ways to safely mine the vast deposit in Pittsylvania County — and to conduct the study in ways that will assure residents that it can be done with no harm to people, livestock or the environment.
ROY CRIDER
Chatham

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Good Advice for Any Debate

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia Offers Debate Advice:
"Scalia……denies there is anything personal in his decisions or comments, which can often be biting. CBS’ Stahl asks how he can be a close friend of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, his liberal bench mate, despite the fact that they oftentimes disagree.
"I attack ideas, I don’t attack people, and some very good people have some very bad ideas," he tells Stahl. "And if you can’t separate the two, you got to get another day job."

New Hybrid Vehicle Gets 77 MPG !

(From http://www.energyandcapital.net/newsletter.php?date=2008-04-25 )




Hybrid Vehicles: 77.41 Miles per Gallon? Done!!!

EnerDel, the advanced battery systems subsidiary of Ener1, Inc. (OTCBB:ENON) announced on Thursday the confirmation by a U.S. government laboratory of the energy, power and efficiency, as well as thermal performance of the company's lithium-ion battery system.

What's that mean?
Here's the quick version...

Based on the testing, using the company's lithium-titanate battery in a Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicle configuration (of a Toyota Prius), the vehicle was able to achieve 77.41 miles per gallon.
Moreover, the battery pack did not overheat during the test. This has been a concern (and excuse) by the majors with lithium-ion batteries.

Now let me ask you this...

Which would you prefer?

A vehicle that meets the mandated 35 miles per gallon in 12 years, or a vehicle that'll get you 77.41 miles per gallon right now? And answer that question, not as an investor, but as a consumer.

While our elected officials bicker over what to do with 70,000 barrels of oil in an effort shave $0.05 off the price of gas—the market has already begun to revolutionize personal transportation.

Because the market knows that a temporary $0.05 reduction in the price of gas is about as useful as Paris Hilton in a game of scrabble……..

Wednesday is U-Day in Danville !

Wednesday, April 30, is Uranium Day in Danville !
SAVE THE DATE

Free Admission-No Cover Charge !


Uranium Educational Seminar
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
North Theater, 629 North Main Street, Danville, Virginia
Sponsored by Southside Concerned Citizens (SCC)
Contact Numbers: (434) 791-4930 or (434) 797-3460
SCCChatham.blogspot.com
Special Feature: SCC will be unveiling its first public showing of its unique Power-Point Presentation on Uranium in Virginia.
SCC Executive Board Member, Gregg Vickrey says "We have some GREAT guest speakers coming! DON'T MISS THIS!! Thanks to Anne Cockrell and Karen Maute for getting this together!

Friday, April 25, 2008

Songwriter pens tune opposing uranium mine

(Submitted by an SCC affiliate)


"I wrote the song after being asked by Lloyd Drust to perform a benefit in support of people who are trying to bring information about local uranium mining to the public" Hopkins said.



"FYI - you can get a short sample of the song from the webpage: www.kivarecords.com (“Hell no, we won’t glow without a fight..”). The song will also be available for download from iTunes as of June 6. CARD is doing great things, but certainly needs all the support it can get (don’t we all!)."


Kiva Records has released the CD single "The No Uranium Song" by singer-songwriter Russ Hopkins in support of Coloradoans Against Resource Destruction (CARD).The group is trying to stop a proposed uranium mine near Nunn in Weld County.


I wrote the song after being asked by Lloyd Drust to perform a benefit in support of people who are trying to bring information about local uranium mining to the public" Hopkins said. "After digging around myself for information, this song just fell out. I offer it as a humble contribution toward public awareness and dialog on this issue."The song is available on CD at http://www.kivarecords.com/.


Kiva Records and Russ Hopkins are donating all proceeds from the sale of "The No Uranium Song" to CARD. The CD sells for $7.00 or buy ten or more for $5 each. The song will also be available for download from iTunes as of June 6.Powertech (USA) Mining Corp.'s plans to mine the area using a process called in-situ leaching, which involves shooting a liquid into the hard rock were the uranium is located, which then brings the resource to the surface..


CARD members argue that this process could contaminate ground water. The Colorado State Senate is currently debating legislation called HB1161, which would require stricter ground water testing.Visit http://www.nunnglow.com/ for more information about CARD.


http://www.coloradoan.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080425/BLOGS01/80424046

Dan River Region "Can Come Back"

(Submitted by an SCC affiliate)


Region Makes Top 10 List!
"There is no greater threat to digging ourselves out of economic devastation than to dig ourselves into a uranium pit."
This news story in Wednesday’s R&B states that Southern Business and Development magazine has listed both Danville-Pittsylvania Co. and Martinsville-Henry Co. as "Comeback Kids" for their ability to overcome economic obstacles.

The loss of textiles and tobacco to this region dealt a mighty blow. But we can "come back".
We are located in a unique geographic position in our state and region. We have it all. Our region has beauty, a mild climate with 4 distinct seasons, no smog or traffic congestion, easy access to the mountains and the coast. That’s just for starters. We have two highways that connect to major interstates.. We live in a relatively pristine environment.

There’s no reason we can’t continue to attract of an array new, desirable businesses and industries... unless, we become known as a uranium mining region. There is no greater threat to digging ourselves out of economic devastation than to dig ourselves into a uranium pit. Any jobs realized from mining and milling will pale next to the number and quality of jobs our region will lose if we become a yellowcake community.

In addition to the loss of potential economic opportunities we, as Virginia taxpayers, will foot the bill for a new layer of uranium related administration, regulatory oversight and radioactive/heavy metal waste monitoring for generations.

Can we adequately analyze the negative impact of uranium mining and milling on our future economic development and quality of life? Why risk it?

We are the "Come Back Kids". Let’s not bury our future economic development at the bottom of a uranium mine.

Vermont Deals with Obsolete Nuclear Power Plant

(Submitted by an SCC affiliate)

Vt. Yankee debate gets personal at Statehouse
April 23, 2008
By Louis Porter
Vermont Press Bureau
"Supporters of the bill, however, want more assurance that if there is not enough in the decommissioning fund, Entergy – the company that now owns the plant – will be on the hook for decommissioning costs…….and …. worry the new company will not have the financial strength that Entergy does. "I have no confidence this brand new corporation is going to be here in 50 years.", said Rep. Tony Klein, D-East Montpelier."
MONTPELIER – Tempers wore thin at the Statehouse Tuesday during a discussion about how much money must be set aside for decommissioning the Vermont Yankee Nuclear Plant when it stops making power.
A group of business leaders from across Vermont joined together at the Statehouse to ask lawmakers not to pass a decommissioning bill that has been approved by the Senate and will likely come to the floor of the House by the end of the week.
That measure would require that before ownership of the plant could be transferred – proposed as part of a corporate restructuring – the full cost of decommissioning would have to be set aside in a special fund or in other financial guarantees.
Read the rest of this article by clicking on the link below:

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Times & Transcript

Mayors seek mining moratorium

The Forum des maires Acadie-Beauséjour in southeastern New Brunswick is asking the province to impose an interim moratorium on delivering permits for uranium mine exploration in the region.

Dieppe mayor and forum president Achille Maillet said several meetings have been held in southeastern N.B. concerning the possible dangers of uranium.

"We want to protect not only our water supply sources but also our beautiful scenery. We have seen pictures of areas where uranium mining has been allowed and we don't want the environment to be destroyed because of uranium mining," he said in a press release.

Companies have been staging aerial explorations to identify possible uranium deposits in the region.

Several explorations have been held in areas such as Kent, Westmorland and Albert counties.

The nine municipalities, which are members of the Mayors' Forum, adopted a resolution to respectively submit to their municipal councils a resolution requesting that the provincial government deny all permit applications for uranium mining in the region.

Group Claims U.S. Water Supply is Contaminated with Uranium: Canadian Firm Held Responsible


Water, food supplies and the agricultural grocery basket of half the entire nation may be contaminated.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – A group representing five Indigenous petitioners, the Oglala Sioux Tribe and two environmental organizations, Clean Water Advocacy Project and Rock the Earth, claim that a vast water table that spans the central plains from South Dakota to Texas is being poluted by a uranium mining process that extracts uranium from underwater deposits. The High Plains Aquifer supplies water to a region that provides many, if not most, of the nation’s essential grains, vegetables and livestock, and spans a cross-section of the entire U.S. from southern South Dakota to Texas..

“Based on available science, we believe there is an inter-mixing between the radioactive and toxic releases in and around the mined aquifer and the Brule, Arikaree and High Plains Aquifers which are being used by the petitioners, the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and people in eight states from Nebraska down to Texas” says Bruce Ellison, Attorney for Oglala petitioners Debra White Plume and Owe Aku.

Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, identified in red, draws its water from the High Plains Aquifer.

Members of the group have filed indigenous rights briefs opposing a proposed license amendment requested by Crow Butte Resources, Inc.(CBR), a Canadian mining company licensed by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to extract uranium from the aquifer. The mining near Crawford, Nebraska, in the northwestern corner of the state, has been going on for more than 17 years.

The group believes that this underwater mining releases radioactive and toxic chemicals like Radon, Thorium, Radium and Arsenic into the environment, not only in the water but in the air as well.

he In Situ Leach (ISL) mining process involves injecting a bicarbonate solution into the water aquifer which releases uranium from sand particles in the aquifer and also stirs up and releases radioactive and toxic chemicals like Radon, Thorium, Radium and Arsenic into the environment. The uranium is removed from the water and a form of “geo-chemically changed” water is re-injected into the aquifer. No ISL uranium mine has ever returned the water in the mined aquifer to baseline levels and ISL mining may be responsible for elevated kidney and cancer problems and the closure of 98 wells due to arsenic contamination at Pine Ridge.

In addition to the use of additional valuable water resources, CBR has admitted to:

§ a spill of approximately 300,000 gallons of radioactive liquid waste at its mine in Crawford , Nebraska ;

§ failure to clean up one-third of the spills equaling approximately 100,000 gallons of radioactive liquid waste;

§ admission that a broken coupling led to a one gallon per minute leak for several years into the Brule aquifer. It is believed that the leak resulted in toxic contamination of at least 525,000 gallons of water per year; and

§ admission of a leak that contaminated 25,000 sq. ft. of the Brule aquifer.

From existing operations, CBR has had no less than 23 reported leaks of radioactive material. The petitioners assert that this contradicts CBR’s statements that they have operated without any environmental impact and indicates that CBR should not be allowed to expand its existing operations.

Some 98 private wells closed on the Pine Ridge Reservation following the 1997 Chadron well-casing failure.

READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE HERE: http://www.hotmediaus.com/WordPress/?p=36

Uranium Supply Decline Clouds Nuclear Power's Future

By Charles Q. Choi, Special to LiveScience


Declining uranium supplies suggest nuclear power is not the magic bullet some might have hoped for to replace fossil fuels.

By burning fossil fuels, conventional power plants and vehicles factor in to global warming by emitting carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that traps heat from the sun.

Advocates of nuclear power suggest it could help prevent global warming, since nuclear plants generate electricity without releasing carbon dioxide.

But critics of nuclear power have for decades linked it with dangers such as radioactive waste and nuclear weapons. There also remain fears that nuclear plants could undergo catastrophes such as a meltdown, as seen with Chernobyl, or a terrorist attack.

Now it seems that mining uranium, which nuclear power depends on, could be even less environmentally friendly and more costly than critics say, according to a new analysis led by Gavin Mudd, an environmental engineer at Monash University in Australia.

READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE HERE: http://www.livescience.com/technology/080422-uranium-supply.html


Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Multi-National's Geologist....SAYS NOTHING !

"I'd like to set straight a few of the erroneous and reckless comments on uranium from....."
Well, you know, I would also like to set a few things straight! And, it would be nice if what the Multi-National and Local Corporations' paid geologist actually had something scientific to say to us!
However, all the scientific arguments he can make are purely his own biased-and-paid-for opinion with no scientific facts to back them up! Here are examples of the only "scientific" arguments he makes:
  • "is complete nonsense." No scientific backup whatsoever!
  • " it is a preposterous statement." No scientific backup whatsover!
  • "should be asked to provide his sources and calculations." We agree wholeheartedly that you should provide your sources and calculations to prove Jack Dunavant wrong!

Lastly, to answer your own question, " How can anyone be proud of killing legislation that offered to study something for the economic good of the entire state and energy independence for the nation?"

The study bill offerred by your Multi-National and Local Corporations did not offer to do what you cited in the above paragraph. Rather, it offered to have the state draw up mining regulations for uranium without the fully adequate safeguards that Delegate Clark Hogan wanted to PROTECT the citizens and lifestyle of all of Virginia's citizens.

When presented with Delegate Clark Hogan's bill to protect individual Virginian's and their lifestyle, your Multi-National and Local Corporations said no and decided to go with their own Corporate-protected bill! It failed in the people-friendly House of Delegates after the full story was disclosed to the participating people's representatives!

(See Aylor's entire letter by clicking the link below)

http://www.wpcva.com/articles/2008/04/23/chatham/opinion/opinion30.txt

Multi-National's Geologist Doubts SCC President

(The following is from the Star-Tribune's 04/23/08 letters to the editor)



"Dunavant's preposterous description of the 200-foot high manmade mountain of earth running for miles upon miles is complete nonsense. "
I'd like to set straight a few of the erroneous and reckless comments on uranium from Halifax resident Jack Dunavant to the Gretna Town Council, as reported by Susan Worley in your newspaper.First, the hundreds of area residents who have attended educational briefings by Virginia Uranium know that Dunavant's preposterous description of the 200-foot high manmade mountain of earth running for miles upon miles is complete nonsense.

As for Dunavant's claim that our area is "already categorized by the government as a sacrifice area," it is a preposterous statement.In making these outlandish claims, as well as others, Dunavant should be asked to provide his sources and calculations based upon his "Professional Engineer" credentials at Dunavant Engineering and Construction.
According to your paper's report, Jack Dunavant bragged to Gretna Town Council that his group was "able to stymie the [uranium] study bill" in the House of Delegates.It is true that Dunavant's Halifax Delegate, Clarke Hogan, did manage to thwart the will of the entire Virginia legislature by killing the study bill in a committee, despite overwhelming support throughout the legislature

How can anyone be proud of killing legislation that offered to study something for the economic good of the entire state and energy independence for the nation?Indeed, those opposed to the study placed themselves solidly in favor of ignorance.We need to take advantage of our God-given natural resources and study the issue carefully with a progressive eye toward moving our people and this region forward.
Joseph Aylor, PhD.,
chief geologist
Virginia Uranium Inc.

Conservation Wins Some-Loses Some-Gen Assmbly

“…session provided some promising steps in the right direction for conservation. But, it also serves as a reminder of how much work still needs to be done to ensure that Virginia's land, air and water is protected for generations to come.”

Veto Session's Conservation Score

Summary of Reconvened GA Session

The General Assembly reconvened on April 23rd, a beautiful spring day in Richmond, to consider the Governor's proposed amendments to 2008 legislation. The Virginia League of Conservation Voters took positions on four of these amendments. Some of these amendments represented important measures that the conservation community fought for during the regular session, only to come up short, while others contained potentially harmful language that needed to be defeated.

Conservation Success

With the state's tight fiscal situation, many important programs saw their funding cut during the 2008 General Assembly session. One such program was the Virginia Outdoors Foundation (VOF). Amendment #16 to HB 30 (the biennium budget) restored $525,000 in funding which will allow VOF to maintain its current level of service to landowners seeking conservation easements. Donating conservation easements through VOF remains the most cost effective method for Virginia to conserve the land most important to its citizens. This amendment was approved by both the House and Senate.
While the Governor's effort to incorporate goals for reducing the growth rate of energy demand by 40% consistent ..............
(Click on the link below to read the rest of this article)

http://capwiz.com/valcvef/issues/alert/?alertid=11301051&queueid=[capwiz:queue_id]


Uranium Spot Price Down 20% !

(From www.miningweekly.com)


"The uranium spot price reached $74/lb in the first quarter of 2008, which is down 20% from the $93/lb recorded in the last quarter of 2007, and $46/lb off the high of $138/lb reached in June last year."
By: Irma Venter
Published on 11th April 2008

The junior end of the uranium market has been “disproportionately hit” by the sub-prime credit crisis, exacerbated by a pull-back from the earlier-than- expected peak in the uranium price in June 2007, Australia-based equity research company Resource Capital Research (RCR) states in its quarterly report published in March.

“Selective share price performance has been driven by company- specific news flow and market position.” The report notes that the market valuation of Australian companies with one or more uranium projects (263 companies) is down 8% from February to March, down 27% over the last three months, and down 12% over the last 12 months.

This compares with a selection of 285 Canadian companies with one or more uranium projects, up 11% from February to March, down 1% over the last three months, and down 16% over the last 12 months.

RCR says the uranium majors have had mixed performances since the beginning of the year, with Cameco up 10%, Denison Mines up 6%, Uranium One down 43%, Energy Resources up 22% and Paladin down 13%.
(Click on the link below to read the rest of this article:)

http://www.miningweekly.com/article.php?a_id=130548


Tuesday, April 22, 2008

An Historical Nuclear Power Primer

"To consider a technology as terrifying as nuclear power requires more than slogans. It requires looking beyond the marketing and activism, into the physics and its consequences."
The Nuclear Option

NEWS: So you're against nuclear power. Do you know why?


By Judith Lewis
May/June 2008 Issue

A decade and a year after Enrico Fermi demonstrated the first atomic fission chain reaction, President Dwight D. Eisenhower went before the United Nations General Assembly to avert an apocalypse. Other nations now had in their hands the weapon with which the United States had pulverized two Japanese cities; altruistic scientists and eager investors both had pressured the president to share the technology for peaceful uses.

And so Eisenhower had little choice on that December day in 1953 but to announce a new purpose for the force inside the atom: Properly monitored and generously financed, he declared in his "Atoms for Peace" address, fission could be harnessed "to provide abundant electrical energy in the power-starved areas of the world."

You could have been forgiven for thinking the president and his advisers had just hatched the notion that month, so full of poetic wonder and portent was that speech. In fact, not only were the Soviets about to power up a five-megawatt reactor, but the Westinghouse Electric Corporation was well on its way to building the country's first commercial atomic power plant.

Within five years, the Shippingport Atomic Power Station would begin sending its 60 megawatts of electricity to the city of Pittsburgh.

Click on the link below to read the rest of this article:

http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2008/05/the-nuclear-option.html

Chesapeake, VA Suffers from Golf Course "Fly Ash"

"The fly ash was flying everywhere. It was like a black haze. It got all over your porches, patios, you blow your nose, it's coming out your nose. That spring I opened the pool, it was nothing but black ash"
"Fly ash" may be contaminating Chesapeake residents' water
Filed by Mary Kay Mallonee
CHESAPEAKE, VA. (WAVY.com) -- There are major environmental health concerns in Chesapeake. Residents' fears stem from the new Battlefield Golf Course.

The 217-acre course is made with more than 1.5-million tons of "fly ash" which is the by-product left behind when coal is burned to make electricity. It contains heavy metals like arsenic, lead and uranium.

The developer used fly ash from Dominion Virginia Power's site in Deep Creek to build the burns on the course. "It's a huge concern," says Kathleen Lowery.
Click on the link below to read the rest of the article:

Southwest Tribes Fight to Halt New Uranium Mining - Judge Blocks Exploration

April 21, 2008
by: Lisa Garrigues

WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. - A federal judge in early April blocked the British company Vane Minerals from continuing exploratory uranium mining near the Grand Canyon. The judgment was a victory for environmental groups and for the 13 tribes that are affected by uranium mining in the western United States. But the renewed interest in an old mineral has tribal leaders on edge.

At a congressional field hearing in Flagstaff March 28, Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley Jr. said Navajos ''do not want to sit by, ignorant of the effects of uranium mining, only to watch another generation of mothers and fathers die.''

''We are doing everything we can to speak out and do something about it,'' he continued. ''We do not want a new generation of babies born with birth defects. We will not allow our people to live with cancers and other disorders as faceless companies make profits only to declare bankruptcy and then walk away from the damage they have caused, regardless of the bond they have in place.''

Representatives from the Kaibab Paiute, Havasupai, Hualapai and Hopi tribes also testified at the hearing, along with representatives from the National Park Service and the U.S. Forest Service, local counties, mining companies and the scientific community.

The judge's ruling came as the result of a complaint against the Forest Service entered by the Sierra Club, the Grand Canyon Trust and the Center for Biologic Diversity.

The Southwest's recent uranium boom, caused by a worldwide interest in nuclear-powered alternatives to the dwindling supply of oil, has shot the price of uranium up to $136, from $10 in 1984, and lined the pockets of savvy investors and the treasuries of mining companies.

At least five companies have recently applied for uranium mining permits in New Mexico, where the uranium reserves are estimated at 500 million pounds or more. Most of these reserves are on Navajo land.

The nuclear power fueled by uranium has been promoted by conservative organizations like the Heritage Foundation as a clean and ''logical'' source of alternative energy, and industry officials say the new mining activities could provide much needed income and jobs.

But the Navajo and other tribes in the region are still struggling from the effects of the first uranium boom, from the 1950s to the 70s, when exposure brought cancer, birth defects and premature death to people who worked in the mines as well as those who lived near them.

Despite assurances by uranium mining companies that new mining techniques are safer than the ones used before, many tribal leaders are not convinced.

''I've yet to see any kind of new technology that's safe that's going to protect the welfare of human beings and the environment.'' said Navajo tribal council member Amos Johnson.

''The legacy of uranium mining has left a devastating impact on our people. We have hundreds of abandoned mines where they've explored for uranium, and now some of those have been left open and have contaminated groundwater.''

The Navajo have attempted to stop the surge in new uranium mining by banning all mining activities on their land in 2005.

But an 1872 mining law has made it easy for mining companies to stake their claims in the Southwest. The Forest Service has also used a process known as ''categorical exclusion,'' introduced by the Bush administration, to expedite mining permits.

''They will probably resort to congressional action to have indigenous sovereignty overruled, and we really hope that doesn't happen,'' Johnson said.

In March, Shirley addressed a U.S. Senate committee to request that the U.S. respect Navajo sovereignty and vowed to take ''any and all measures'' to prevent uranium mining on Navajo lands.

Other Native nations have begun taking their own measures.

Last year, the All Indian Pueblo Council adopted a resolution against uranium mining in the Mount Taylor area of New Mexico, deploring the ''significant and irreparable cultural and religious damages that have resulted from the failure of the New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department to consult with Acoma, the 19 Pueblos and other affected tribes'' prior to issuing mining permits.

Supai Waters, Keeper of the Secrets for the 650 Havasupai people who live inside the Grand Canyon, said Vane Minerals' exploratory mining near there had already resulted in ''high-grade splotches'' that were visible in aerial footage.

Other mining activities have invaded the sacred sites of many of the region's tribes, including the Hopi and the Paiutes, he said.

The Havasupai are working to change their constitution to reflect stronger language against uranium mining in the Grand Canyon, ''completely banning it - no mining, no extractions at all,'' Waters said.

He emphasized the importance of the region's Colorado River, which holds, in the oral tradition of many local tribes, not only sustenance but creation itself.

''It is the sacred water that gave birth to a lot of those tribes that live close to it.''

Recent mining activities were already affecting the aquifers near the river, he said.

''We are unified to completely ban these detrimental developments that are going to be put on our sacred lands, all the way from the west rim of the Grand Canyon to Blanding, Utah, to the Colorado River and Montezuma's ruins, to Prescott and Kingman, Arizona.''

http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096417110

Uranium - - Other Uses :-)







Uranium Glass














Uranium Kitties?






No, just genetically altered kitties but the eerie green color is pretty close, huh?

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Billionaire Texas Oil Man Makes Big Bets on Wind

By Chris BaltimoreFri Apr 18, 9:00 AM ET


Legendary Texas oil man T. Boone Pickens has gone green with a plan to spend $10 billion to build the world's biggest wind farm. But he's not doing it out of generosity - he expects to turn a buck.


The Southern octogenarian's plans are as big as the Texas prairie, where he lives on a ranch with his horses, and entail fundamentally reworking how Americans use energy.


Next month, Pickens' company, Mesa Power, will begin buying land and ordering 2,700 wind turbines that will eventually generate 4,000 megawatts of electricity - the equivalent of building two commercial scale nuclear power plants - enough power for about 1 million homes.


"These are substantial," said Pickens, speaking to students at Georgetown University on Thursday. "They're big."


Pickens knows a thing or two about big. He heads the BP Capital hedge fund with over $4 billion under management, and earned about $1 billion in 2006 making big bets on commodity and equity markets.


Though a long-time oil man, Pickens said he has embraced the call for cleaner energy sources that don't emit heat-trapping greenhouse gases.


"I'm an environmentalist - I can pass the saliva test," he said.


But Pickens is not out to save the planet. He intends to make money.


Though Pickens admits that wind power won't be as lucrative as oil deals, he still expects the Texas project to turn at least a 25 percent return.


"When I go into these markets, I expect to make money on them," Pickens said. "I don't expect to lose."


America is facing a looming power crunch, with electricity demand expected to grow 15 percent in a decade. And while many states have rejected big coal-fired power projects on environmental concerns, they are offering a bounty of incentives to build renewable sources.


U.S. crude futures at new records above $115 a barrel means a bright future for renewable sources like wind and solar.


Pickens' wind farm is part of his wider vision for replacing natural gas with wind and solar for power generation, and using the natural gas instead to power vehicles.


To picture Pickens' energy strategy, imagine a compass.


Stretching from north to south from Saskatchewan to Texas would be thousands of wind turbines, which could take advantage of some of the best U.S. wind production conditions.


On the east-west axis from Texas to California would be large arrays of solar generation, which could send electricity into growing Southern California cities like Los Angeles.


The end result would be to free up more clean-burning natural gas - primarily a power-generation fuel now - to power automobiles.


Major oil companies have embraced so-called natural gas liquids because they have spent billions of dollars building refineries and pipelines to turn crude oil into gasoline, Pickens said.


But shifting natural gas used in power generation to transportation needs could cut U.S. crude oil imports by nearly 40 percent, he said.


(Editing by Marguerita Choy)


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080418/us_nm/usa_oil_pickens_wind_dc