Radioactive Waste
No safe, permanent solution has yet been found anywhere in the world - and may never be found - for the nuclear waste problem. In the U.S., the only identified and flawed high-level radioactive waste deep repository site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada has been canceled. Beyond Nuclear advocates for an end to the production of nuclear waste and for securing the existing reactor waste in hardened on-site storage.
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Beyond Nuclear on "The Hopgood Hour" re: Great Lakes radioactive waste dump
Beyond Nuclear's Radioactive Waste Watchdog, Kevin Kamps, as well as Michigan State Representative Sarah Roberts (D-St. Clair Shores), are guests on Michigan State Senator Hoon-Yung Hopgood's (D-Taylor) "The Hopgood Hour" television program. They discussed the "Deep Geologic Repository" (DGR) for radioactive waste targeted at the Lake Huron shoreline by Ontario Power Generation. Both Sen. Hopgood's and Rep. Roberts' districts are downstream of the proposed DGR, and their constituents draw their drinking water from the Great Lakes and connecting rivers. Last spring, Sen. Hopgood introduced a State Senate resolution challenging the DGR that was passed unanimously by the Republican majority chamber. Both Sen. Hopgood and Rep. Roberts testified before the Canadian federal Joint Review Panel overseeing the environmental assessment on the DGR, as did Kevin.
What can you do to help stop the Great Lakes radioactive waste dump? If you haven't already, please sign the Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump petition, already signed by more than 40,000 people. And please share it with everyone you know.
You can also urge your city, county, and state elected officials to pass a resolution opposing the DGR, as numerous communities already have.
Finally, please urge your elected officials at all levels to do what they can to stop this dump, as U.S. Senators Carl Levin (D-MI) and Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) recently have done. If you live in Michigan, please contact Sens. Levin and Stabenow and thank them for taking action. You can contact your U.S. Senators and U.S. Representative via the U.S. Capitol Switchboard, (202) 224-3121. Urge them to join Sens. Levin and Stabenow in calling on the U.S. Secretary of State, John Kerry, to activate the International Joint Commission on this threat to the Great Lakes.
OH and MN NRC nuke waste con public comment meetings rescheduled for Dec. 2 & 4, respectively; comment deadline now Dec. 20
As posted at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's (NRC) Nuclear Waste Confidence Directorate website, the public comment meetings on NRC's Nuclear Waste Confidence Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS), to be held in Perrysburg, OH near Toledo, and Minnetonka, MN near the Twin Cities, have been rescheduled for December 2nd and 4th, respectively.
NRC has also announced that the deadline for public comments on the "Nuke Waste Con Game," or "Nuke Waste Con Job," as critics call it (see photo, left), has been extended till December 20th.
The reason for the changes is the October government shutdown, which caused a postponement of the public comment meetings.
Transport risks and economic pressure rear their ugly heads at DGR hearings
As reported by the Toronto Star's John Spears, in an article entitled "Burning truck hauling nuclear load flies under the radar," a load of uranium hexafluoride bound from Canada to the U.S. attached to a semi truck that caught fire was abandoned on the side of the interstate for a period of time. The incident was never reported to state or federal nuclear authorities in the U.S., nor to the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission.
The incident takes on added urgency in light of Ontario Power Generation's proposal to construct and operate a deep geological repository (DGR) for so-called "low" and "intermediate" level radioactive wastes from 20 reactors across Ontario at the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station in Kincardine, Ontario, about 50 miles across Lake Huron from Michigan. The DGR, or DUD, as critics have sarcastically dubbed it (for Deep Underground Dump), would be located just 3/4ths of a mile from the Lake Huron shoreline. The Great Lakes serve as the drinking water supply for 40 million people in 8 U.S. states, 2 Canadian provinces, and a large number of Native American First Nations.
After all, those LLRWs and ILRWs from 12 other Ontario reactors must be transported to Bruce (where there are 8 operable commercial reactors, plus an additional early prototype reactor, long shutdown), if they are to be buried at the DUD.
In addition, a national high-level radioactive waste (HLRW) dump is being targeted at the Kincardine area, perhaps even at the DGR itself. A half-dozen Kincardine area municipalities, disproportionately populated by Bruce Nuclear workers, have raised their hands as potential "hosts" for a "DGR" for HLRWs from all the commercial atomic reactors across Canada (around two dozen), including from New Brunswick and Quebec. Those HLRWs would also have to be transported to the Lake Huron shoreline, if a Kincardine-area dumpsite is chosen, whether it be by truck, train, and/or barge upon the Great Lakes themselves.
A Bruce Nuclear proposal to ship 64 city bus-sized radioactive steam generators by boat on the Great Lakes was recently cancelled due to intense grassroots activism that extended from the U.S., to Canada, Native American First Nations, and even to European shores. The so-called "low level" radioactive wastes (despite containing five isotopes of ultra-hazardous plutonium) were bound for Sweden, to be "recycled" into consumer products.
In addition to the Bruce Nuclear workers living in the Kincardine-area municipalities, Bruce Nuclear Generating Station and OPG hold powerful economic sway in the region. As reported by the Globe and Mail's Shawn McCarthy in an article entitled "OPG pressed non-profits to back Bruce County nuclear-waste plant," OPG pressured nearly two-dozen area non-profits to speak out in support of the controversial DUD. OPG's implicit threat to the non-profits' funding streams seems obvious. Area non-profits have come to depend on OPG's relatively large funding donations, although, relative to its profits, OPG's charitable donations are a vanishingly small fraction of its revenues.
In fact, OPG has promised a total of $25 million to Kincardine and neighboring towns, but only if they continue to adequately support and promote the DGR. That money began to flow around 2005. OPG gets to decide if a recipient municipality is performing enthusiastically enough in promotion of the DGR. Again, the implicit threat is that the promised funding will be yanked.
The federal Canadian Joint Review Panel environmental assessment hearings have now ended in Kincardine, after several weeks of testimony.
The Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump petition now has over 40,000 signatures. If you haven't signed it yet, please do. And please spread the word to everyone you know.
NRC re-schedules IL and CA Nuke Waste Con Game public comment meetings postponed by govt. shutdown
As reported by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's (NRC) Nuclear Waste Confidence Directorate, in regards to the disruption of the previously scheduled, hard-won, court-ordered "Nuke Waste Con Game" draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS) public comment meetings:
"The Chelmsford [MA], Tarrytown [NY], Charlotte [NC], Orlando [FL], and November 14 NRC headquarters [Rockville, MD] meetings are taking place as planned.
The NRC has rescheduled the Oak Brook, Illinois meeting for Tuesday, November 12; the Carlsbad, California meeting for Monday, November 18; and the San Luis Obispo meeting for Wednesday, November 20. The NRC is still working on rescheduling the Perrysburg, Ohio, and Minnetonka, Minnesota meetings. The NRC will communicate dates for rescheduled meetings to interested groups and individuals through the Waste Confidence webpage and the WCOutreach@nrc.gov e-mail list."