Heaven Can’t Wait It’s time to panic about the poisons of Coldwater Creek via St. Louis

Your federal government has become positively jovial in addressing radioactive waste contamination in North County’s Coldwater Creek.

Upon revealing in June that radioactive waste had been newly discovered along the creek above two municipal parks and some property owned by the Archdiocese of St. Louis, a spokesman for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had this to say:

“Unless you dug it up and ate it, it’s not going to be a big threat.”

How reassuring. “Go out and play, kids: You are quite unlikely to contract a potentially fatal illness, according to current environmental standards. But remember, don’t eat the dirt.”

Another Corps official did concede the levels of lethal Thorium 230 found at the new sites exceeded the cleanup goal “by a factor of two to four.” But he, too, called that “low-level” radiation and said it posed no immediate health threat because the waste was a foot or more below the surface.

The Corps also has no plans to keep people out of the parks before remediation takes place later in the year. Why, of course it doesn’t.

The waste is the byproduct of the top-secret Manhattan Project, wherein the military contracted with companies to enrich uranium for the world’s first controlled nuclear chain reaction in 1942. One of those companies was Mallinckrodt Chemical Works of St. Louis.

Long story short, much of the waste—known as “poisons” back then—made its way to two gigantic piles at the airport. From there, it seeped and blew its way into Coldwater Creek, a beautiful tributary that winds through about 15 miles of the county, traveling through communities such as Florissant, Hazelwood, Black Jack, Spanish Lake, St. Ann, Berkeley, and Ferguson.

[…]

Today, the Facebook page has nearly 10,500 members. There have been more than 2,000 reports of cancer or other illnesses in a relatively tiny geographical area, according to the group. Some are rare diseases, such as the 37 instances of appendix cancer (more than quadruple the expected rate for an area this size); 113 cases of brain cancer; and 747 individuals with autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, as well as tumors and thyroid problems. That’s not to mention lots of reports of infertility and birth defects.

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今月の大震災復興支援 (1) <ふくしま30年プロジェクト> via ボストンバッグにチェロと酒

東日本大震災による東京電力福島第一原子力発電所の事故後より、放射能測定を中心に活動を開始した 「NPO法人 CRMS市民放射能測定所 福島」 は、ニーズが時間の経過とともに変化をとげ、それに伴い活動内容を広げていく事となりました。

放射線測定、健康相談会の充実、交流会、放射線セミナー、こども向け放射線ワークショップを開催するなど放射線防護のための知識普及を目指しています。

これらの新たな活動のイメージ認知と、その向上を願い、新名称は 「NPO法人 ふくしま30年プロジェクト」 となりました。

& 「ふくしま30年プロジェクト」 が行っていること・・

★ 食品・環境試料の射能測定  ★ WBC測定(体内残留放射能測定)

★ 小児科医師の協力による健康相談会開催  ★ 空間線量の地図化

★ 放射線防護関連の物販  ★ 子どもの自然体験・交流事業

★ 関係機関・行政・市民との放射能測定の情報の共有化  

(NPO法人 ふくしま30年プロジェクト 2014年10月15日 初版発行、ふくしま30年リポートより)

☆ 「じいたん子ども基金」 は、7月8日に 「NPO法人 ふくしま30年プロジェクト」 に、¥400,000~を寄付させて頂きました。  募金者の皆様のご理解と ご了承をお願い申し上げます。
[…]

もっと読む。

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70 Years Later, Health Impacts of First US Nuclear Detonation Still Being Felt via Reuters

People who lived near the site of the first atomic bomb test in the New Mexico desert and later developed cancer and other health problems need to be compensated, a U.S. senator said Thursday.

The federal government neglected residents of the historic Hispanic village of Tularosa near the Trinity Site, where the weapon was detonated on July 16, 1945, Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., said in a speech on the Senate floor on the 70th anniversary of the test.

“The rest of the world didn’t know about the tragedies that happened in the Tularosa Basin. For a long time, the government denied that anything happened at all,” Udall said. “Attention was not paid then. It must be paid now.”

Udall met with residents and family members who lived near the test site and shared stories about relatives dying from cancer. He said he believes they should be included in the federal Radiation Exposure Compensation Act program, which could provide a $50,000 payout.

Nicole Navas, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Division, which oversees the program, said lawmakers would have to amend the act to expand payouts to New Mexico residents. Now, the law only covers areas in Nevada, Arizona and Utah that are downwind from a different test site.

“Because this downwind area is defined by federal statute, the Department of Justice lacks discretion to expand the area to include locations in New Mexico downwind of the Trinity test,” Navas said.

The blast sent out a flash of light seen as far as nearly 300 miles away, and Army officials said at the time it was a result of an ammunition explosion. Residents did not learn it was an atomic bomb until the U.S. dropped the weapon on Japan a month later, helping end World War II.

Many of those living near the Trinity Site were not told about the dangers and later suffered rare forms of cancer, Tularosa residents say. They say they want acknowledgement and compensation from the U.S. government.

Researchers from the National Cancer Institute are studying past and present cancer cases in New Mexico that might be related to the test. A previous study done by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found exposure rates near the Trinity Site were thousands of times higher than allowed.

Tina Cordova, co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders, said she was pleased the country finally was talking about the effects of the bomb on nearby residents.

“This is part of the story that shouldn’t be ignored any longer,” Cordova said.

The test took place in southern New Mexico as part of the Manhattan Project, the secretive World War II program that provided enriched uranium for the atomic bomb.

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再稼働で揺れる 川内原発の地震対策は、 まったくなっていない!via Diamond Online

福島第一原発事故を半年前に予言した書『原子炉時限爆弾』で衝撃的な事実を発表したノンフィクション作家の広瀬隆氏。
あの原発事故から4年が経った。
このたび、『東京が壊滅する日――フクシマと日本の運命』でおそるべき予言をした著者が、再稼働目前となった、鹿児島県にある川内(せんだい)原発の知られざる危険性を緊急警告する。
[…]
そもそも川内原発は、“わが国で最初に大地震の直撃を受けた原発”なのである。それは、たまたま幸運にも戦後半世紀、日本列島に続いた地震の静穏期を過ぎて、1995年の兵庫県南部地震によって死者6000人を超える阪神大震災を招いた直後であった。

 つまり、過去に明治・大正・昭和に頻発したと同じような地震の大激動期に入って2年後、1997年3月と5月に川内《せんだい》市(現・薩摩川内市)を襲った震度5強と6弱の激震であった。

「断層がない」と言われていた、原発からわずか十数キロが震源だったのだ。

 日本列島には、原発大事故の脅威となる最大の活断層として、列島を縦断する中央構造線と、日本の中央部を横断する糸魚川~静岡構造線(糸静線)がある。

 4年前の東日本大震災以後、ついに昨年末の長野北部地震で、その糸静線が動いて、1メートル近いズレを起こした。大変な断層の動きである。
[…]

もっと読む。

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Japan’s nuclear safety culture still lacking, says watchdog via E&T (Engineering & Technology) Magazine

Japan’s nuclear industry still lags on safety, the country’s regulator said, after discovering documents submitted by an operator had been falsified.
Chugoku Electric Power Co said on June 30 it had not conducted the mandatory inspection of equipment for handling low-level nuclear waste, yet had recorded that the checks were carried out.

Shunichi Tanaka, head of the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) set up in 2012, said this highlighted the fact that safety standards are still far from perfect more than four years after the Fukushima plant meltdown.

“From a safety culture point of view, if that kind of thing happens, it’s not good enough,” he said at a regular press conference today, when asked about the incident by Reuters. “It is not a violation under law, so I don’t think we would take legal action.”

Since the meltdown at Tokyo Electric Power Co’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station in 2011, the NRA has been pushing operators to improve safety and the mindset of their personnel.

Investigations into the disaster concluded that close relations between nuclear power companies and regulators led to poor industry oversight and all nuclear reactors have been shut down while utilities apply for new operating licenses.

The NRA is continuing to review the No. 2 reactor at Chugoku Electric’s sole Shimane nuclear plant for relicencing despite the falsification of documents, an NRA official told Reuters.
[…]

Read more.

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Renewables outpace nuclear in economies making up 45 percent of world population: report via Reuters

Solar, wind and other forms of renewable energy besides hydro-electric dams now supply more electricity than nuclear in Japan, China, India and five other major economies accounting for about half the world’s population, an atomic industry report shows.

While nuclear stations on average produce about twice as much electricity as renewables annually for every kilowatt installed, the high growth of solar, wind and other renewables means atomic power is fast being eclipsed as nations turn away from the energy source after the Fukushima disaster in Japan.

This is one of the main observations of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015, a draft copy of which was given to Reuters before the release of the document at 0900 GMT in the House of Commons in London.

Nuclear power generation increased by 2.2 percent globally in 2014, even with the first extended shutdown of Japan’s atomic industry for 45 years, but with solar power increasing 38 percent and wind power up by a tenth, energy from the sun, wind and other renewable sources is outpacing that from the atom.

Rising costs, construction delays, public opposition and aging fleets of reactors are hurting the chances of nuclear while falling costs, greater efficiency and better management of fluctuating renewable supplies, along with improved storage, are changing the face of energy production globally.

[…]

Almost half of all added electricity generating capacity in 2014 was from renewables, excluding large hydro-dams, the report said.

In output terms, China, Japan and India, which are three of the world’s four largest economies, along with Brazil, Germany, Mexico, the Netherlands and Spain now generate more electricity from non-hydro renewables than nuclear, it said.

In Britain, output from renewables, including hydro, surpassed atomic generation “for the first time in decades”, while in the United States the share of renewables was 13 percent, up from 8.5 percent in 2007.

Discounting Japan’s moribund industry due to its long-term outage, the report said the world’s operating units numbered 391 in 2014, up three from a year earlier, and 47 less than a 2002 peak.

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福島第一原発 排水路から雨水が海に流出 via NHK News Web

台風の接近に伴う大雨で、東京電力福島第一原子力発電所で雨水が排水路のせきを乗り越えて港湾の外の海に流れ出しているのが見つかりました。排水路の雨水からは国の排出基準を超える放射性物質が検出され、東京電力で監視を続けています。
16日午前8時40分ごろ、福島第一原発の敷地内の排水路の1つで、雨水がせきを乗り越えて原発の港湾の外の海に流れ出しているのを点検中の作業員が見つけました。
東京電力でこの排水路で採取した雨水の放射性物質の濃度を調べたところ、16日午前11時の時点で、放射性セシウムが1リットル当たり830ベクレルと、国の排出基準を超えていたほか、ベータ線という放射線を出す放射性物質も1100ベクレル含まれていたということです。
この排水路は、ことし2月に汚染された雨水がここを通じて港の外の海に流れ出していたことが分かり、下流で雨水をせきとめてポンプでくみ上げることで海への流出を防ぐ対策が取られていました。
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住宅無償終了で県内説明会 福島原発事故自主避難者 via 琉球新報

東京電力福島第1原発事故による自主避難者についてことし6月、災害救助法に基づく避難先の住宅の無償提供を2017年3月で打ち切る方針を決め福島県が、今月12日に那覇市内で県内避難者向けの説明会を開いた。
 福島から沖縄への被災者数は近畿以西では最多の518人(6月11日現在)に上る。放射線の健康への影響は明確ではなく、夫を福島に残しての母子避難者もおり、県内の対象者からは打ち切り後の生活に不安の声が聞かれる。
 原発事故の避難指示区域外から福島県外に避難している人の多くは民間アパートなどを「みなし仮設住宅」の扱いで借り上げており、沖縄では7月1日現在で176世帯417人が入居している。
 福島県は、インフラ整備や除染が進み県内の生活環境が整ってきたとして、自主避難者への住宅無償提供を16年度で打ち切ると決定した。
[…]
郡山市から避難し、6歳の長男と暮らすシングルマザーの30代女性は「打ち切り後は(補助を)検討するという段階で止まっており、結局どうなるのか分からない。自分にも知識がないので答えが出てこない」と戸惑いを隠さない。「やっとママ友のコミュニティーもできてきた。引っ越しで環境が変わるのは不安」と話した。
[…]

もっと読む。

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Renewables overtaking nuclear in major economies via E&T (Engineering and Technology Magazine)

Renewable energy supplies more electricity than nuclear in countries that account for roughly half the world’s population, a new industry report shows.
While global nuclear power generation increased by 2.2 per cent in 2014, solar power increased 38 per cent and wind power was up by a tenth, according to the World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015.

Among the eight major economies where renewables – excluding hydro-electric dams – now contribute more electricity than atomic energy are China, India and Japan, which is in the midst of the first extended shutdown of its industry for 45 years in response to the 2011 Fukushima meltdown.
[…]
Brazil, Germany, Mexico, the Netherlands and Spain make up the remainder of the list of countries generating more electricity from non-hydro renewables than nuclear in terms of total output.

In Britain, output from renewables, including hydro, surpassed atomic generation “for the first time in decades”, the report said, while in the USA the share of renewables was 13 per cent, up from 8.5 per cent in 2007.

According to the report, almost half of all added electricity generating capacity in 2014 was from renewables, excluding large hydro-dams.

Nuclear power stations on average produce about twice as much electricity as renewables annually for every kilowatt installed, but the high growth in solar, wind and other renewables means atomic power is fast being eclipsed.

This is in part due to improvements in renewable technology as greater efficiency and better management of fluctuating renewable supplies is realised alongside advances in electricity storage.

At the same time, the nuclear industry is battling rising costs, construction delays, aging fleets of reactors and public opposition, especially in the wake of the Fukushima disaster, which has put pressure on governments to move away from nuclear energy.
[…]

Read more.

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My view: Depleted uranium should not be Utah’s problem to solve alone via Deseret News

By Ashley Soltysiak

Utah will soon face a huge decision — whether or not to allow the disposal of depleted uranium (DU), an extremely long-lived nuclear waste, at EnergySolutions’ facility in our West Desert. But here’s the question that state officials and all Utahns should be asking first: Why are the feds so eager to offload their 700,000-ton problem on our state?

This disposal problem originated decades ago. In 1982, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission published rules governing nuclear waste disposal. Back then, the NRC didn’t anticipate the massive volumes of DU that another federal agency, the Department of Energy, would eventually need a place to stash.
[…]
DU is the best known of these “unique waste” streams. It is radically different from other Class A waste. Instead of gradually degrading and becoming much less dangerous within a few hundred years, DU actually increases in hazard for 2.1 million years. It will eventually exceed Class A hazard levels — which unequivocally violates our ban.

That’s why the NRC, in a recent hearing in Salt Lake City, has stated that properly classifying this waste is a priority, although not at the top of its to-do list.

This federal bureaucratic delay provides a small window of opportunity for EnergySolutions to capitalize and push Utah to accept DU — before it becomes officially classified out of their reach. They’ve got big-time motivation. According to a company spokesman, they are estimated to earn $15 to $20 million annually if awarded the federal contract.

The irony here is that a viable federal disposal site already exists. The Nevada test site has taken small quantities of DU in the past and is federally owned and operated. That begs the question: Why don’t the feds manage their own problem? Wouldn’t it be cheaper to internalize those disposal costs?

Another big policy question: If a state like Utah is forced to take DU, which is vastly different than the short-lived waste we typically accept, what implications will this have nationally?

[…]

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