Trident nuclear submarine officers destroy Navy bar in drunken riot after 3 months at sea via RT

Royal Navy officers returning from a three-month patrol on a nuclear submarine have been ordered to turn themselves in after devastating a bar and cinema in a drunken rampage.

The senior Trident submarine crew trashed the Faslane naval base Neptune Cinema after a civilian who manned the bar clocked off, leaving an ‘honesty bar.’

A source at the base told the Daily Record that ordinary sailors would be “up on charges” over the crime, so “officers shouldn’t be treated any different.

The submarine, which carries Britain’s constant at-sea nuclear deterrent, returned to base in Scotland last Friday, the Daily Record reports.

It looks like things got out of hand and they just went around smashing anything they could get their hands on for the sake of it. When a member of civilian staff went in the next morning one of the young officers was lying asleep under a piano in the bar.

The Navy is currently undergoing a recruitment crisis because so few young people are willing to be cut off from social media for up to 90 days at a time.

One serving submariner told the Daily Express the job isn’t attractive to young sailors.

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原発事業者の事故賠償に上限案 超えた分は国民負担もvia朝日新聞

 重大な原発事故を起こした電力会社などの賠償責任に上限を設け、超えた分は税金や電気料金などの国民負担で補う「有限責任」案が浮上し、具体案が明らかになった。国の専門部会が近く示す。現行の無限責任制度と比べながら、今年度中に見直し案をまとめる。

 東京電力福島第一原発の事故による損害は兆円規模となり、現行の民間保険や政府補償で備える最高1200億円を大きく超えた。電力業界から有限責任化を求める声が強まり、内閣府の原子力委員会が設けた専門部会(部会長=浜田純一・前東大総長)で昨年5月に議論が始まった。
[…]
関係者によると、有限責任案では、事業者負担に「相当高額の責任限度額」を定める。上回った場合、①事故に事業者の過失などがあれば残りも事業者が負担②原因が自然災害などなら過失に応じ「国による補償」を追加する。国の補償は一般税による負担、電気料金による消費者負担などを念頭に置く。

 ただ、有限責任案では過失の大きさの認定に時間がかかって賠償手続きに支障が生じる問題や、事業者責任が軽くなることで安全対策が薄れる恐れを内閣府は指摘する。

 いまの無限責任でも、福島事故級の事故の備えとしては現行の保険などは「少なすぎる」との指摘があるものの、その大規模化には事業者や保険会社の反発が予想される。

 今回の議論が始まったのは、安倍内閣の副大臣会議が事業者責任を限定する必要性の検討を提案したため。専門部会が案をまとめた後は、賠償制度を担当する文部科学省が法改正などを検討する。
「。。。」

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<原発事故>側溝堆積物撤去 国が支援via河北新報

東京電力福島第1原発事故で飛散した放射性物質の影響で福島県内の側溝の汚泥処分が滞っている問題を巡り、政府は30日、堆積物を撤去、処理する市町村への支援方針を明らかにした。国は処分費用の全額を負担し、処分先や仮置き場の確保に向けて協力する。

 対象は放射性物質汚染対処特措法に基づく除染実施計画を作成した43市町村のうち、側溝堆積物で路面冠水や悪臭などの実害が発生している地区。国や市町村の除染事業で堆積物が撤去された箇所は除外する。福島県外の自治体は「要望を受けていない」(復興庁)として対象外とした。
 1キログラム当たり8000ベクレル超の堆積物は、除染廃棄物を保管する中間貯蔵施設(福島県双葉町、大熊町)か指定廃棄物最終処分場(同県富岡町)に搬入する。8000ベクレル以下の場合、市町村が主体的に処分先を確保し、国や県は廃棄物処理業者に処理の働き掛けを行う。
 処分先に搬入するまでの間の仮置き場は放射能濃度にかかわらず、市町村が主体となって確保し、国と福島県はそれに協力する。
 総事業費は100億円台を見込む。福島再生加速化交付金で2分の1を補助、残る市町村負担分は震災復興特別交付税を充てる。
 市町村が自主的に堆積物を搬出したケースでは、原則としてさかのぼって財政支援しない。いわき市がモデル的に行う側溝汚泥除去事業に関しては「作業工程を調整し、国事業を適用できる所は極力支援する」(復興庁)方針。
[…]

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<東通原発>5km圏 ヨウ素剤を事前配布へvia河北新報

青森県と東通村は30日、東北電力東通原発(東通村)での重大事故に備えるため、11月に住民へ安定ヨウ素剤を事前配布すると発表した。対象は原発から5キロ圏内の約1300世帯、約2800人。県内でのヨウ素剤の事前配布は初めて。

 原発での重大事故時に服用することで甲状腺被ばくを防ぐ狙いがある。30日に村内に配布した村広報誌に告知記事を掲載した。
 対象地区は原発から5キロ圏の予防的防護措置区域(PAZ)に指定されている老部、白糠、小田野沢の3地区。3歳未満や服用困難な人を除く全住民に11月4~19日、順次配布する。
 住民は事前に既往歴などを問診票に記入し、配布当日は指定会場で医師による服用に関する説明を受ける。住民が希望しない場合は拒否できる。
 配布されるのは住民1人当たり服用1回分で、3~12歳は1錠、13歳以上は2錠。合わせて保管ケースも各戸に1個ずつ配る。
 東通原発から30キロ圏の緊急防護措置区域(UPZ)の住民には重大事故が発生した場合、避難に合わせて配布する。
[…]

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Japan, India to sign nuclear cooperation deal in November: report via Reuters

Japan and India are likely to sign a civil nuclear cooperation pact during a visit to Japan by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in mid-November, the Mainichi newspaper reported on Saturday.

The governments of Asia’s second-and third-largest economies are leaning toward holding a summit meeting between Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe, the report said, citing unidentified diplomatic sources from both nations.

The two leaders last December reached a basic agreement for cooperation in the peaceful use of nuclear energy, but they stopped short of signing the agreement, citing outstanding technical and legal differences.

Japan, the only country to have suffered a nuclear attack, has been demanding additional non-proliferation guarantees from India, which has a nuclear weapons program, before exporting nuclear reactors.

India and Japan have been negotiating the nuclear energy deal since Japan’s ally, the United States, opened the way for nuclear commerce with India, which has shunned the global Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

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愛媛・伊方町長選は一騎打ち 原発対応で論戦 via 47 News

 27日告示された愛媛県伊方町長選は午後5時で届け出が締め切られ、元県議高門清彦氏(58)と、共産党南予地区委員長西井直人氏(59)の無所属新人2人による一騎打ちとなった。10月2日に投開票される。

同町に立地し、営業運転を再開した四国電力伊方原発3号機を巡り、高門氏は安全対策を推進するとアピール。共産党南予地区委員会の推薦を受ける西井氏は、運転停止と廃炉を主張。

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How Shimon Peres Faced Down the Generals and Pacifists to Build Israel’s Nuclear Program via Haaretz

[…]
It is impossible to exaggerate the role Peres played in every facet of Israel’s nuclear development. Veteran journalist Dan Margalit, who in his book “I Saw Them” revealed some of the details of Peres’ involvement, said in a radio interview this week that when no geologists would sign off on the plans for the nuclear reactor near Dimona, Peres signed as the “geologist.”
[…]
Peres rarely spoke of his role in public. Earlier this year, in a moment of candor during an interview with Time magazine, he said that “Dimona helped us to achieve Oslo. Because many Arabs, out of suspicion, came to the conclusion that it’s very hard to destroy Israel because of it, because of their suspicion. Well, if the result is Dimona, I think I was right.”
Forty years earlier, as a backbench Knesset member of the Rafi party of David Ben-Gurion loyalists, Peres, for the first time in his life in the opposition and shorn of power, made a similar speech. He defended his nuclear record, though few in the Israeli public understood what he was talking about: “I know that this suspicion [of Israel having a nuclear capability] is a powerful deterrent. Why should we dispel the suspicion? Why should we decipher it?”
[…]
As a young civil servant in his early thirties, sent out by Ben-Gurion to build a nuclear program, Peres was a convenient target for criticism. He had to overcome the largely pacifist academic community, the majority of whom were against the notion of Israel having a nuclear weapon. He had to face down most of the Israel Defense Force’s generals who feared that an expensive nuclear program would eat up scarce budgets needed for building a conventional army. They distrusted Peres, the civilian, anyway.
The professors rebelled against Peres. In 1957, when they felt that their academic credentials were being undermined for other purposes, most of the members of the IAEC, with the exception of the chairman Professor Ernst David Bergmann, who was also Ben-Gurion’s scientific advisor, resigned. In Jerusalem, a group led by philosopher Professor Yeshayahu Leibowitz founded a disarmament committee and predicted a nuclear holocaust, after which only “Shimon’s ruins” would be left of Israel.
Together with Bergmann, Peres overcame the professors. He recruited young physicists to work at the research centers at Dimona and Soreq rather than the veteran Weizmann Institute scientists who refused to cooperate. He bypassed the generals’ objections by obtaining a large portion of the funds for the nuclear project from outside the defense budget, in the shape of secret donations from Jewish philanthropists, eager to play their part in ensuring the survival of the nascent Jewish state.
One of Peres’ key decisions was not to take the long and expensive route by developing an Israeli-designed nuclear reactor. Instead, he made a daring decision to take advantage of a short-lived historical opportunity. With the backing, hesitant at the outset, of IDF Chief-of-Staff Moshe Dayan, he included a large nuclear reactor in the list of requests made by Israel to the French government on the eve of the 1956 Suez campaign. Peres navigated the turbulent political establishment of the Fourth Republic, where power was constantly changing hands until Charles de Gaulle was called in to take over. De Gaulle would prove to be much less friendly than the socialists with whom the first nuclear deals were signed, but by then the foundation had been laid. While the professors were still drinking tea and arguing and American and British intelligence officers were trying to work out the purpose of the suspicious “textile plant” being built in the Negev, work underground was already at an advanced stage.

read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.745192In 1963, during a visit to Washington as deputy defense minister to sign the first arms deal with the U.S. for Hawk anti-aircraft missiles, Peres also met with President John F. Kennedy, who was staunchly opposed to Israel having nuclear weapons. That was when Peres came up with the carefully worded commitment that “Israel will not be the first to introduce atomic weapons to the region,” the basis of Israel’s policy of “nuclear ambiguity” to this day.
[…]
One of Peres’ last decisions as prime minister before handing over the reins to successorYitzhak Shamir in October 1986, was to order Mossad abduct Mordechai Vanunu. The technician from the Dimona reactor had revealed Israel’s nuclear secrets to the Sunday Times.
The order called for Vanunu to be brought to trial in Israel. Nuclear ambiguity was to be preserved at all costs.
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.745192

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Toshiba, Hitachi, Mitsubishi Pursue Talks to Merge Nuclear Units via Latin American Herald Tribune

OKYO – Japan’s Toshiba, Hitachi and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries are in final stages of talks to integrate their nuclear fuel units.

The companies are aiming to merge the units to sustain them at a time when most Japanese reactors are offline as a fallout of the Fukushima disaster, reported economic daily Nikkei Thursday.

The three Japanese conglomerates are looking to merge their nuclear units as early as the spring of 2017 and the move is expected to cut costs in fuel rod manufacturing and other operations, added the report.

While none of the three companies confirmed the news Thursday, they have acknowledged they are considering several options for their nuclear fuel businesses, including a joint holding company.

Currently, only three reactors, of the 43 in working condition in the archipelago, are active, following the nuclear shutdown triggered by the 2011 Fukushima plant accident, and the subsequent tightening of safety norms.

The situation has made nuclear units unsustainable for these companies, which have helped build the reactors and supply fuel to Japanese power companies for years.

Meanwhile, the three companies are also trying to acquire majority control in other firms in the sector.

Mitsubishi Heavy bought back shares of Mitsubishi Nuclear Fuel from partners such as the France-based Areva, raising its stake in the company from 35 to 95 percent, said the daily.

[…]

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放射性物質含む指定廃棄物 濃度が基準下回り初の処分 via NHK

東京電力、福島第一原子力発電所の事故で発生した放射性物質を含む指定廃棄物のうち、山形県寒 河江市で保管されていた廃棄物の濃度が国の基準を下回ったことから、指定を解除され、市は27日までに一般のごみとして埋め立て処分しました。環境省によ りますと、指定を解除された廃棄物が処分されたのは初めてです。

原発事故のあと、各地の自治体などで保管が続く、放射性物質を含んだ指定廃棄物について、環境省は、濃度が国の基準の1キロ当たり8000ベクレルを下回った場合は指定を解除し、一般のごみとして処分できるようにしました。

山形県寒河江市では、市内2か所の公園に合わせて、およそ2.5トンの指定廃棄物が保管されていましたが、基準の8000ベクレルを下回ったことから、環境省は今月23日、指定を解除していました。

これを受けて、寒河江市は一般のごみとして、別の場所に埋め立て処分することになり、27日までに作業を終えたということです。

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Japan performs tsunami debris cleanup off Fukushima 1st time since nuclear disaster via RT

Local fisheries have begun a debris cleanup near the Fukushima plant for the first time since the tsunami-triggered nuclear disaster. However a plan to start trial fishing next year may face a setback as a nearly-completed ice wall is failing to halt water contamination.

[…]

On Monday Soma-Futaba Fisheries Cooperative Association send out 32 fishing boats to recover debris from the ocean floor. That fleet is focusing their efforts on the North side of the nuclear power plant.

On Tuesday, the Iwaki City Fisheries Cooperative Association also sent in their fleet to help with the cleanup efforts of the southern side of the contaminated segment.

Once the debris is pulled out and delivered to shore, the unloading of the waste is handled by the industrial waste treatment company. The rubble is then sent to a temporary storage facility where after an inspection for radioactive reading, cleared waste is disposed of in an industrial manner. It is as of yet unclear how the contaminated waste will be treated.

The cleanup work of the seabed endorsed by the Fisheries Agency is scheduled to last at least until February of next year. Fishing on a trial basis can start as early as March.

However such a prospect seem problematic as the recently-completed ice wall around the crippled station has failed to meet expectations, with contaminated groundwater still seeping into the sea.

The $320 million Land-Side Impermeable Wall was built to halt an unrelenting flood of groundwater into the damaged reactor buildings and consequent flow of the contaminated water into the ocean.

But on Tuesday the Japanese government and plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. reported that 1.5 km (1 mile) barrier frozen barrier failed to produce the intended results, Nikkei reported.

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