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ARTICLE ARCHIVE
Thursday
Nov032016

FOCUS: Dakota Pipeline and Geprag's Park Vermont Protests Unify

Channel 17 (CCTV, TownMeeting Television, Burlington, Vermont) host Margaret Harrington gets together with Kevin Kamps of Beyond Nuclear, Jane Palmer of Rising Tide, Vermont and Dr. Rachel Smolker of Protect Geprag's Park to talk about the unification of the Dakota Oil Access Pipeline Protest with the Fracked Gas Pipeline Protest in Addison County, Vermont. The activists emphasize the main similarity which is that corporate interests take precedence over the needs and wishes of the people and the environment. Elected officials and those running for office are noncommittal. President Obama states he will wait to see how the Dakota Pipeline plays out while 140 Native American protesters are arrested and caged by law enforcement officers from seven states. Meanwhile the Bundy Clan who took over federal land by armed violence have been acquitted by a federal jury.

Watch the 29-minute epidsode of CCTV-Channel 17's "FOCUS" here.

Wednesday
Oct262016

Ft. Calhoun nuke shuttered as renewable energy overtakes fossil fuels

While Missouri River water defenders expand resistance at the Dakota Access Pipeline to unfettered crude oil development, there is more good news downriver with the permanent closure of the Fort Calhoun nuclear power station in Blair, Nebraska. The Omaha Public Power District (OPPD) powered down its small 479-megawatt reactor for the last time on October 24, 2016 ending 43 years of electricity generation and nuclear waste production.

OPPD made the closure decision in May 2016 after admitting that Ft. Calhoun was simply too expensive to operate and maintain. Overall, nuclear power technology has become as economically unsustainable as  the notion of burning antiques in a woodstove.  More reactors are closing.

Proponents of nuclear power argue that shutting down reactors just means burning more dirty fossil fuels, predominantly climate changers like coal and natural gas.  However, the emerging trend shows that new electricity capacity is coming increasingly from solar and wind power.  In 2015, a record breaking installation of new solar power capacity surpassed new natural gas capacity in the US. According the U.S. Energy Information Agency, new photovoltaics installations for 2016 represents a 94% increase over that previous record.  What would have been thought “unthinkable” only five years ago, the Financial Times now reports that renewable energy capacity globally is outpacing coal. Renewable energy is not only transitioning the globally energy market to solar and wind power but it is also transforming a centralized electricity generation to distributed generation from solar panels on the roofs of homes and businesses and deployed on sun-tracking farms.

The closure of Ft. Calhoun and the shift to renewable energy is good for the planet, the economy and environmental justice.

Monday
Oct242016

Yet another long overdue atomic reactor permanent shutdown: Fort Calhoun, NE switched off for good today!

As reported by Cole Epley in the Omaha World-Herald, the Omaha Public Power District's (OPPD) Fort Calhoun atomic reactor permanently shutdown today, four and a half months after the nuclear utility's management proposed it, and the utility's board of directors voted in agreement.

Although OPPD emphasized Fort Calhoun's inability to compete with less expensive sources of electricity (including Nebraska's abundant wind power) as the reason for its decision, Fort Calhoun has also suffered serious safety problems for the past several years.

This included a close call with catastrophe, during historic floods on the adjacent Missouri River in the spring and summer of 2011. (This earned the atomic reactor the nickname "Port" Calhoun, as flood waters lapped against safety related systems, structures, and components! See the photo, above left.) It also included a fire, that smoldered within the plant for days, remarkably without response, also in 2011. The consequent two and half year shutdown cost Nebraskans several hundred million dollars (Fort Calhoun is publicly owned).

As soon as the irradiated fuel is removed from the core, Fort Calhoun can no longer suffer a reactor meltdown, by definition. In addition, no more high-level radioactive waste will be generated. That is the good news. The bad news is that the irradiated nuclear fuel already generated there, since 1974 -- currently stored in the indoor "wet" storage pool, and outdoor dry casks -- must be isolated from the living environment for the next million years.

Thursday
Oct202016

Beyond Nuclear joins call to oust Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission president to protect Great Lakes

The Great LakesBeyond Nuclear has joined with a coalition of U.S. and Canadian environmental groups in calling for the ouster of the beleaguered head of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), Dr. Michael Binder, for acting as a cheerleader for the nuclear power industry, instead of protecting health, safety, and the environment, as is the agency's mandate. The coalition's call comes after a scathing report by the Canadian Federal Commissioner for the Environment and Sustainable Development, documenting significant failures by the CNSC. The call for the ouster of Dr. Binder as CNSC president also comes after CNSC whistle-blowers alleged that vital safety-significant information has repeatedly been withheld from the CNSC commissioners by senior agency staff. An internal agency review ordered by Binder dismissed the whistle-blower allegations, but independent nuclear experts slammed CNSC's whitewash as a "sham." Beyond Nuclear's many interventions against Canadian radioactive risks to the Great Lakes (photo, right) -- drinking water supply for 40 million people in eight U.S. states, two Canadian provinces, and a large number of Native American First Nations -- includes: opposition to a radioactive waste dump targeted at the Great Lakes shore; resistance against unprecedented truck shipments to the U.S. of highly radioactive liquid waste; and objections to proposed new Canadian atomic reactors, as well as extended operations at dangerously age-degraded Canadian nuclear facilities, most located on the Great Lakes shores. More

Thursday
Oct202016

Lawsuits, grassroots education and activism seek to stop Cuomo nuclear bailout in NY

Energy companies and trade associations have filed a lawsuit in federal court, while Public Citizen has filed an intervention at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, in opposition to a nearly $8 billion ratepayer-funded bailout of several failing atomic reactors in upstate New York. At the same time, a grassroots campaign called Stop the Cuomo Tax -- No Nuclear Bailout (which has generated a lot of media already!) has issued action alerts, from signing onto a petition, to handing out leaflets at public transit stations, which Beyond Nuclear has forwarded to its NY supporters. NYPIRG has just called for New Yorkers to phone Gov. Cuomo's office, to urge him to change his mind on propping up the dangerously age-degraded reactors, and instead invest in renewables. (Please forward the alert to everyone you know in NY!) Investigative journalist Karl Grossman, a Beyond Nuclear board member, presented at a business association on how Cuomo's nuclear bailout would undermine wind and solar power. Such efforts in NY help build momentum against nuclear power industry money grabs in other states, such as Illinois. More