Tuesday, March 24, 2009

State panel frames Virginia uranium mining study

Comment: Couple of articles from todays Uranium Meeting in Richmond


By STEVE SZKOTAK Associated Press Writer
March 24, 2009

RICHMOND, Va. - A panel looking into a proposal to lift a Virginia ban on uranium mining has approved the broad outlines of any future scientific study.

The subcommittee of the Virginia Commission on Coal and Energy heard Tuesday from Michael Karmis, head of the Virginia Center for Coal and Energy Research at Virginia Tech.

He presented the panel with an extensive list of study areas that an independent, scientific review board would work with in attempting to address any concerns about ending a 1980s ban on uranium mining.Speakers and commission members stressed that safety should be the No. 1 concern.

Virginia Uranium Inc. is proposing to mine a Pittsylvania County deposit of some 119 million pounds of ore that is worth from $7 billion to $10 billion dollar.

http://www.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/local/article/MINEGATER24_20090324-165204/239800/

Va. panel gives tentative green light to study on uranium mining


JEFF E. SCHAPIRO TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITERPublished: March 24, 2009

A Virginia panel this afternoon tentatively gave a green light to a study on opening the state to uranium mining.

A subcommittee of the Virginia Commission on Coal and Energy endorsed an initial outline of the inquiry, which would examine health, environmental and technical issues, as well as the social and financial implications of mining.

Uranium mining has been illegal in Virginia since the early 1980s. But two families in Southside Virginia own property that contains a giant deposit of uranium, potentially worth billions of dollars.

The study pegged to the proposed mine in Pittsylvania County could last at least a year and a half. It would be conducted by the National Academy of Science and could be paid for by industry proponents.

Residents of the area fear that a study bankrolled by advocates will be weighted in favor of the proposed mine.

But Michael Karmis, director of Virginia Tech's Coal and Energy Research Center, says the foundation relies only on scientific and technical information.

Karmis is serving as a liaison between the commission and the National Academy of Science.

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