Great Lakes Region Nuclear Hotspots Map
John Jackson of Great Lakes United (GLU) and Anna Tilman of International Institute of Concern for Public Health (IICPH) have released an updated map of Nuclear Hotspots in the Great Lakes Region (see image, left):
"Great Lakes United and the International Institute of Concern for Public Health (IICPH) released today the Great Lakes Nuclear Hot Spots Map, providing a detailed regional, binational view of nuclear facilities in the Great Lakes Region. As the map shows, with the exception of Lake Superior, each of the Great Lakes has numerous nuclear sites related to nuclear power generation, most of which are located within one kilometre of the Lakes. This raises concerns about the cumulative impacts of radioactive releases over the years from so many sites. It also shows the numerous places where a serious nuclear accident could occur in the region.
This map marks the first comprehensive update of this information in 15 years and highlights the lack of information about radioactive releases from these facilities. In 1998, the International Joint Commission’s (IJC) Task Force on Inventory of Radionuclides released an assessment of nuclear facilities around the basin. At the time, the Task Force concluded that releases from nuclear facilities were substantial, but that the extent of knowledge about the releases and their impacts was “limited”. http://www.ijc.org/files/publications/C131.pdf
The map includes all aspects of nuclear power production in the Great Lakes region, including the 38 operating nuclear power plants, 12 closed plants, and four new plants proposed in Canada. It also includes the facilities that process uranium ore and manufacture the pellets, as well as tailings sites from uranium mining and milling, and facilities that store, and dispose of radioactive waste. Every site on the map is a radioactive waste site, whether operating or not.
The Great Lakes Nuclear Hot Spots Map provides a critical resource for communities concerned about the potential for radioactive waste releases into the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. Additionally, it shows the sites under consideration by the Canadian Government for storing Canada’s nuclear fuel waste. Most of the proposed sites lie within the Great Lakes basin. With the potential for new disposal sites within easy access of the Great Lakes, communities are concerned that nuclear waste could be brought in via ships, creating substantial risks of spills along Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River shipping lanes and during loading and unloading near shore.
The Citizens’ Clearinghouse on Waste Management contributed funding to this project."
The map updates work from 1990-1991 published by Irene Kock and Dave Martin of Nuclear Awareness Project.
Beyond Nuclear has also compiled a listing of major U.S. municipalities downstream of the proposed Bruce DUD on the Great Lakes shorelines of MI, OH, PA, and NY, as well as a listing of major municipalities in upstate New York directly across Lake Ontario from the nuclear power plants (Pickering, Darlington) and uranium processing facility (Port Hope) east of Toronto.
As listd in Beyond Nuclear's "Freeze Our Fukushimas" pamphlet, GE BWR Mark Is (identical to Fukushima Daiichi Units 1-4) located immediately on the Great Lakes shores include: Fermi 2, MI; FitzPatrick, NY; Nine Mile Point Unit 1, NY. Nine Mile Point Unit 2 in NY is a very similarly designed Mark IIs on the Great Lakes shoreline. However, although outside the watershed, Mark Is (two at Dresden, and two at Quad Cities) and Mark IIs (two at LaSalle) in IL are located not far upwind of the Great Lakes. A vast amount of Fukushima Daiichi's radioactive releases fell out over the Pacific Ocean's surface, as the winds drove it to the east.