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News is updated daily; Start Mail Stats Login Edit Anony TODAY'S EDITION--- MONDAY- TUESDAY- WEDNESDAY- THURSDAY- FRIDAY- SATURDAY- SUNDAY OCTOBER 2001- NOVEMBER 2001- DECEMBER 2001- JANUARY 2002--- EARLIER ARCHIVES Helen and Harry Highwater, Proprietors |
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Unknown News |
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"And I looked, and behold! A pale horse, and his name that sat upon him was Death, and Hell followed with him." Revelations, 6:7 Introduction
Just about every headlining news story these days has two sides to it: The side the Bush administration and his corporate pals want you to see and the side you need to see To illustrate my point, is, in two sections, the most terrifying story you may read this year … but one you should have read long before now.
What the Bush Administration Wants You to Know: The last week of January 2002 and the first week of February, the two of the top stories being passed out like Happy Meals at the Drive-thru Window of Corporate News are: 1. The grave danger of nuclear weapons being used by unknown rogues from unknown locations on the U.S. and how we should be very, very afraid, and 2. Amtrak, despite ticket sales that have been through the roof for the past 5 months, is going bankrupt and needs a massive infusion of taxpayer bucks to keep going.
What you need to Know: Where the Nuke Plants Stand in the Infamous Bush "Energy Plan" A big part of the Bush energy plan is revitalizing the nuclear fuel industry. This industry has earned the public's suspicions for good reason. But even more problematic than bad image (that fear has never stopped an oil or coal baron, so why should it stop a nuke king?) is the practical problem of what to do with the industry's chief demon: nuclear wastes, most especially spent fuel rods. No one on the planet has figured out a permanent, truly safe way to dispose of this high level (level 4) nuclear waste.. So, for years, the spent rods have been accumulating in special pools and/or special metal and concrete "dry" casks at the facilities where they were used.
To make the nuke business profitable, the reactor folks need to do two main things: Relicense aging plants (which are now almost paid for after 30 years, but starting to deteriorate) and get rid of existing and future spent rods cheaply. Thanks to Bush, relicensing is going ahead rapidly even as I write this Now Bush is helping his nuke baron friends solve problem number 2: spent fuel. Here's the plan:
The industry will load the most dangerous materials on Earth onto everyday freight trains and send them rumbling across 43 different states, past 109 cities with populations greater than 100,000 and off to Nevada
Sound too incredible to be true I only wish it was. But no, these are just the facts, ma'am. And they are taken from technical sources, chief among them the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a publication originally started by Albert Einstein and several other of the planet's most advanced thinkers and scientists (you notice I did not make those two things mutually inclusive). These guys know their stuff. Certainly a whole lot better than a pack of over-the-hill white guys with MBAs and law degrees who currently call themselves our "leaders." So just what is high-level nuclear waste and, in particular, spent nuclear fuel rods?
The uranium used as fuel in nuclear reactors comes in the form of long (at least a few meters) rods. Once in the reactor, these rods undergo fission, the breaking down of the uranium atoms through intense bombardment with other particles. The energy release is intense Spent fuel rods are immediately placed in pools that are 40 feet deep and enclosed by concrete and steel walls at least 4 feet thick. Incredibly, most of these pools are above ground, and far more vulnerable to attack and accidental disasters, such as a fire, than the reactors themselves. If the rods are exposed to the air, which could happen if a crack caused enough water to leak from the pools, the rods would emit a blast of heat that would exceed 1,000° C. A catastrophic fire would be ignited that would trigger a nuclear disaster far worse than Chernobyl. Worst of all, a spent rod-induced fire cannot be extinguished by any known means and would roar on for days. Fuel ponds contain a byproduct in the form of the isotope cesium-137, an intensely radioactive material that, once leaked, is absorbed into the food chain. Security experts at the NRC say that in a spent fuel building fire with just one pond involved, more cesium-137 would be released than the sum total of all the cesium-137 released by all the atmospheric nuclear weapons tests ever conducted in the Northern Hemisphere. An area of at up to 29,000 square miles around the site of such a fire at the largest pools would be rendered uninhabitable, according to a senior physicist for the Institute for Resources and Security studies. Among the events that could lead to a pool fire: leakage, evaporation, siphoning, pumping of the water, aircraft impact, earthquake, the dropping of a dry cask (a concrete and steel container used to store rods once they are removed from the pools), reactor accidents, or an explosion in or near the pool building. Meanwhile Yet, at the same time, almost nothing is being done by the Bush administration to secure these facilities. In France, anti-aircraft missiles are deployed around the fuel ponds, while Germany makes sure its rods are stored in the most advanced dry casks available. Homeland security ought to earn its name and deploy forces around nuclear facilities, not around anti-globalization marchers.
Instead, Bush wants to ram through a plan to truck spent fuel rods across country, very possibly through your community. As one scientist with the Nuclear Information and Resource Service put it, the scheme amounts to playing radioactive Russian roulette on wheels. It may be okay, but then … it might not However, if a train were to have an accident in a tunnel which resulted in a fire, the casks would be useless. In fact, if the train that derailed and burst into flame in the tunnel in Baltimore last summer had been carrying spent fuel rods in dry casks, a large area of Baltimore would be but a soot stain on the map. That tunnel fire burned at at least 1,500 F for many hours Incredibly enough, although Bush has rammed the Yucca Mountain facility down the throats of everyone in the nation, he has failed to make any provisions for special rail routes or trains. Instead, the present plan calls for all nuclear fuel casks to be shipped in general freight service. Although the casks can survive a variety of crash scenarios, they are not designed to withstand high-temperature tunnel fires So, does it come as any surprise that Bush is using the press to direct the public's attention away from the nuclear threat he himself is creating and instead direct it to a vague, exotic terrorist threat? The real joke here is that he is doing nothing of any significance to mitigate the threat of a terrorist attack on nuke plants. As for the Amtrak bankruptcy scam: This is clearly an effort by the administration to railroad through billions in aid to the railroads so that new lines for facilitating the transport of spent rods (and also coal see article) can be put in place without public input, using the public's money (which the public, of course, thinks is being spent in the name of passenger rail services). And of course, anyone who complains will be written off as "undermining national security" or as an "alarmist." Yep, like yelling, "Look out!" as a piano careens from the tenth floor toward a crowd on the sidewalk is being an "alarmist." I for one find our own nuclear industry and its pals in Washington a lot more threatening than a vague, shadowy figure crouched in a cave somewhere trying to figure out how to put together a "dirty bomb." In fact, his dirty bomb wouldn't do as much damage, if he did figure out how to put it together, as one spent fuel pool fire or one dry cask train tunnel fire.
How on Earth are we supposed to believe that a train crossing hundreds of miles is going to be safe when, as of 1998, not one nuclear facility was able to pass even the most liberal of security tests? To summarize the dismal results of the Operational Safeguards Response Evaluation, even given a half-year's advance notice, and beefing up their security force by over 50%, security at all plants failed. I mean, really failed. It took mock terrorists only 17 seconds to breach the access control barrier at one plant After September 11, new NRC chairman Richard Meserve tried to get the commission to call out the National Guard and air defenses to protect reactors and upgrade all security regulations, especially those focused on spent fuel pools. The response, despite strongly worded warnings from responsible Congresspeople (there are about four of those): not one change has been made. A bill proposed by Senators Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton, Jim Jeffords, Joe Lieberman, and Congressman Ed Markey that would have required the NRC to improve security has been blocked by industry lobbyists. We don't need more security, the unbelievable scumbags at the Nuclear Energy Institute now tell us, because, after all, Chernobyl wasn't all that bad! (I am not making this up!!). Are you starting to get the impression that the energy industry, be it an Enron or a Nuke, could give a royal shit about anyone I can summarize this no more elegantly than to quote Daniel Hirsch of the Committee to Bridge the Gap, a Los Angeles-based nuclear policy organization: "And why has the NRC not imposed upgraded security requirements? Put bluntly, the NRC is arguably the most captured regulatory agency in the federal government, a creature of the industry it is intended to regulate … The NRC's principal interest is in assisting the industry, keeping regulatory burdens and expenses to a bare minimum, and helping to jumpstart the nuclear enterprise." So the next time you hear Bush telling us all how hard he is working to protect us from a nuclear threat … you will pardon me while I puke. Example 2:
What you should havebeen told: Between 1998 and early 2000, several major tests were conducted of the security of the nation's most vulnerable nuclear storage areas and the safety of nuclear weapons and weapon's grade uranium and plutonium being transported over the public highway system. All failed miserably. Here are the highlights: At Los Alamos, there is an area called TA-18 which houses several nuclear burst reactors and tons of weapons-grade uranium and plutonium. This area, despite its incredibly dangerous contents, has chronically been under-defended. In 1997, U.S. Army Special Forces were sent in to test security by staging a mock theft of enough nuclear material to build a crude nuclear weapon. In this "game," the commandos were actually able to make it into TA-18 with a garden cart bought at Home Depot and carry off a cartful of "dummy" materials unchallenged. In 1998, needless to say, Los Alamos got an "unsatisfactory rating" for its security at TA-18. However, by the time the report on the security breaches had woven its way to the folks in charge of the facility, the rating had mysteriously been change to "satisfactory," though not one change in security procedure had been made. Another exercise was conducted in 1998, in which mock terrorists attacked TA-18. But an upper level manager simply tipped off the defenders as to where the attackers were hiding, thus insuring a "satisfactory" report. Despite numerous complaints, the DOE refused to investigate. Oh, but it gets better.
In 1998, it was discovered that the Energy Transportation Security Division, which is responsible for the safety of the nuclear weapons and weapons-grade uranium and plutonium being shipped by truck across the country, did not take the idea of an attack by terrorists using armor-piercing incendiary rounds seriously, and so had not really figured that contingency into their security scheme! However, in 1999, an undercover investigation by the GAO (they had balls back then!) revealed that at least 100,000 rounds of surplus armor-piercing incendiary rounds had been sold by our own Pentagon on the open market. Worse yet, the TSD failed several mock attack tests Not one case of this security cheating has been investigated or punished. The worst "mock blood baths" occurred at Rocky Flats in CO where an estimated 10 tons of plutonium and 7 tons of highly enriched uranium left over from the cold war were all stored until 2000, when they began to ship the stuff off to the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. In 1998, 1999, and in 2000, guards not only failed to successfully protect the goods, they managed to mock-shoot scientists, each other, and the test monitors overseeing the tests! By fall of 1999, needless to say, a major scandal hovered over the Pentagon and the Department of Energy like a nasty storm waiting to happen.
But do you remember reading about failed security at nuke facilities? About weapons-grade uranium and plutonium being transported unsafely over the nation's highways? About cheating at the highest level of national security
No? Well, small wonder! You were too busy being bombarded by stories about that "Red Menace" Wen Ho Lee, who was arrested
But poor Wen Ho Lee was held without good reason for 12 months under deplorable conditions. He never committed any crime, and everyone close to the case knew it. He simply made an easy fall guy for someone well above him in the "food chain" to use in a ruse to keep their own heads from rolling for real breaches of security. Everyone at the facility did the sort of file shuffling and back up downloading that Wen Ho Lee did. But only the "Chinese guy" was singled out. Why? Because making it the "Chinese guy" would play better in the news. It added an exotic touch that would seem more "menacing," more plausible. Hey
In 2001, the DOE tried to move TA-18 to a remote area in Idaho. However, in September, 2001, this request was denied because, according to the papers submitted by Los Alamos, there were no security problems at the Los Alamos facility that warranted such a move. Wen Ho Lee was finally released two months later, probably to remove all focus from Los Alamos for the new pro-nuke administration and/or because the holes in the nation's nuclear security had been taped up Cheryl may be contacted at cherylseal@hotmail.com. |
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