Other Regions
Attempts to market nuclear power across the globe endanger these societies not only from the routine radioactive contamination and potential for accident or attack posed by operating reactors, but by the opportunity this technology provides to transition to nuclear weapons.
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Two earthquakes strike near Iran nuclear plant
The Bushehr nuclear power plant, on the coast of the Persian Gulf in southwestern Iran, was under construction from 1975 to 2011. During the 1980s, the pre-operational construction site was repeatedly attacked by Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Commercial electricity (and high-level radioactive waste) generation at Unit 1 began in 2011.
It is the first operational commercial atomic reactor in the Middle East (although there have long been several operational research reactors for a long time: two in Iraq, two in Israel, one in Syria and three in Iran).
The Russian government and nuclear industry was in charge of construction of the first unit beginning in 1995. It is now undertaking construction of two more full-scale commercial reactors at the site, and up to six more elsewhere in Iran.
The madness of nuclear power in Saudi Arabia
As reported by the Washington Post, just as U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry became embroiled in the Trump-Ukraine impeachment scandal, he announced his resignation by the end of the year.
Perry has been a good friend to the nuclear power industry in the U.S. He has long advocated "low-level" radioactive waste dumping in West Texas -- the owner of Waste Control Specialists (WCS), Dallas billionaire Harold "King of Superfund Sites" Simmons, was Perry's biggest campaign contributor, over multiple campaigns for governor, and even president.
This long support for WCS then morphed into Perry's advocacy for high-level radioactive waste "consolidated interim storage" in West Texas. Last spring, as Energy Secretary, Perry let it be known at a congressional hearing that he is even supportive of "interim" becoming permanent surface storage. As the U.S. Department of Energy itself has acknowledged, in its Yucca Mountain Environmental Impact Statement, this would risk catastrophic releases of hazardous radioactivity into the environment, as containers failed, with a corresponding loss of institutional control (failure to replace degraded containers before they leaked).
Reuters has reported that Energy Secretary Rick Perry now denies he will resign this month or next month. This begs the question, will he resign in December, then?!
The New York Times has also reported on the U.S. Energy Secretary, in an article entitled "Rick Perry's Focus on Gas Company Entangles Him in Ukraine Case."
As reported by the Washington Post:
12:15 p.m.: Perry declines to say whether he will comply with subpoena
In an appearance on Fox Business Network on Wednesday, Energy Secretary Rick Perry declined to commit about complying with a congressional subpoena.
“Hey, listen,” Perry said. “The House has sent a subpoena over for the records that we have. And our general counsel and the White House counsel are going through the process right now. And I’m going to follow the lead of the, of my counsel on that.”
Friday is the deadline for documents to be released from the White House and Perry. Trump has said Perry asked him to make the July call to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, but Perry told reporters last week he did it so that the two could talk about energy issues.
Politico: "Democrats Turn Eye to [Energy Secretary] Rick Perry in Ukrainian Probe"
The former Texas governor has been a regular visitor to Saudi Arabia, where he traveled in 2017 to persuade the Kingdom to partner with the U.S. rather than Russia or China to develop two nuclear reactors. That effort came as the Trump administration continued to seek close ties with the Saudis, despite intelligence linking them to the death of dissident and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi last October.