Nuclear Energy

The Nuclear Question

Nuclear Energy on the surface is the most promising of the current "Big 3" energy industries being Oil, Coal and Nuclear. I say that because in its normal operation it is the least damaging to the environment and is the most cost efficient of the three.

However...

You must take into consideration the mining of uranium which can be just as bad as the strip mining and mountain top removal mining of coal. Uranium makes up less then .01% of the earth removed in "surface Mining" or "open pit" mining AKA strip mining. 85 to 90% of the 1% can be recovered through a several different processes. 

If the ore contains enough uranium it can be extracted in a mill, if the yield is less, it is done through Heap Leaching. Leaching liquid, normally sulfuric acid is introduced into the top of a large pile of ore. Once it reaches the bottom it is collected on a liner and then pumped to a refinery. The problem with both of these processes is that there is very large amounts of ore remaining and due to technical restrictions still contain 5 to 15% of the uranium. As uranium decomposes it releases radon gas which is a carcinogen not to mention potentially hazardous dust and the leaching chemical residue. From my research I have not found where this release of radon gas is controlled or restricted in any way.

The third is called In Situ Leaching.

It is painfully clear by looking at the above image just how potentially hazardous this process can be. The risk of contaminating a large underground water supply is quite high. This process is the least expensive so the most probable if allowed.

Just like coal and oil, no matter what you do using the material to generate electricity, no matter how safe or clean one might claim it is there is still the issues of accessing the fuel its self. Just like coal and oil nuclear energy has its draw backs in electricity generation and its by products.

If you have a failure using coal or oil to generate electricity there can be devastating environmental impact, injuries and loss of life which is unacceptable. However with nuclear the impact can be incomprehensible. 

In 1986 one the reactors at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the Ukraine in the former Soviet Union exploded. The end result claimed the lives of over 150,000, by some accounts over 400,000 and the contamination of thousands of square miles of land rendering it useless and dangerous for over 600 years. Not to mention the birth defects and cancer patients as a direct result of the contamination. Had the wind been blowing in another direction, over one million people could have died. Needless to say, the safety systems employed at Chernobyl were virtually non existent as compared to the US nuclear plants. The problem there is that nothing is 100%, just ask NASA and the people of Middletown Pennsylvania. 

In 1979, reactor unit 2 at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant malfunctioned creating a potential hazard to hundreds of thousand of people. Luckily a major disaster was averted, but it came dangerously close and I am confident to say that if we continue to operate our current nuclear plants and build new ones, it will happen again and we might not be so lucky the second time around, it is truly tempting fate.

The nuclear industry will insist that their plants are safe and a accident can not happen. this claim they must make in order to get licensed. They must show on paper that the plant can not fail overall, that the system will not allow for a catastrophic event. The more complicated something becomes the more susceptible to failure it becomes. There have been more nuclear accidents in this country then most people know about.

Here is a great website with a comprehensive listing of accidents occurring in the nuclear industry, civilian and military.

US Nuclear Accidents

I will only list here accidents from 1975 to 2002, you will be amazed, we are very lucky. It is not my intention to bore you with miles of information, I just want you to get an idea of how many problems there have been, take a quick look.

22 March 1975
A technician checking for air leaks with a lighted candle caused $100 million in damage when insulation caught fire at the Browns Ferry reactor in Decatur, Alabama. The fire burned out electrical controls, lowering the cooling water to dangerous levels, before the plant could be shut down.

28 March 1979
A major accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant near Middletown, Pennsylvania. At 4:00 a.m. a series of human and mechanical failures nearly triggered a nuclear disaster. By 8:00 a.m., after cooling water was lost and temperatures soared above 5,000 degrees, the top portion of the reactor's 150-ton core collapsed and melted. Contaminated coolant water escaped into a nearby building, releasing radioactive gasses, leading as many as 200,000 people to flee the region. Despite claims by the nuclear industry that "no one died at Three Mile Island," a study by Dr. Ernest J. Sternglass, professor of radiation physics at the University of Pittsburgh, showed that the accident led to a minimum of 430 infant deaths.

1981
The Critical Mass Energy Project of Public Citizen, Inc. reported that there were 4,060 mishaps and 140 serious events at nuclear power plants in 1981, up from 3,804 mishaps and 104 serious events the previous year.

11 February 1981
An Auxiliary Unit Operator, working his first day on the new job without proper training, inadvertently opened a valve which led to the contamination of eight men by 110,000 gallons of radioactive coolant sprayed into the containment building of the Tennessee Valley Authority's Sequoyah I plant in Tennessee.

July 1981
A flood of low-level radioactive wastewater in the sub-basement at Nine Mile Point's Unit 1 (in New York state) caused approximately 150 55-gallon drums of high-level waste to overturn, some of which released their highly radioactive contents. Some 50,000 gallons of low-level radioactive water were subsequently dumped into Lake Ontario to make room for the cleanup. The discharge was reported to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, but the sub-basement contamination was not. A report leaked to the press 8 years later resulted in a study which found that high levels of radiation persisted in the still flooded facility.

1982
The Critical Mass Energy Project of Public Citizen, Inc. reported that 84,322 power plant workers were exposed to radiation in 1982, up from 82,183 the previous year.

25 January 1982
A steam generator pipe broke at the Rochester Gas & Electric Company's Ginna plant near Rochester, New York. Fifteen thousand gallons of radioactive coolant spilled onto the plant floor, and small amounts of radioactive steam escaped into the air.

15-16 January 1983
Nearly 208,000 gallons of water with low-level radioactive contamination was accidentally dumped into the Tennessee River at the Browns Ferry power plant.

25 February 1983
A catastrophe at the Salem 1 reactor in New Jersey was averted by just 90 seconds when the plant was shut down manually, following the failure of automatic shutdown systems to act properly. The same automatic systems had failed to respond in an incident three days before, and other problems plagued this plant as well, such as a 3,000 gallon leak of radioactive water in June 1981 at the Salem 2 reactor, a 23,000 gallon leak of "mildly" radioactive water (which splashed onto 16 workers) in February 1982, and radioactive gas leaks in March 1981 and September 1982 from Salem 1.

9 December 1986
A feedwater pipe ruptured at the Surry Unit 2 facility in Virginia, causing 8 workers to be scalded by a release of hot water and steam. Four of the workers later died from their injuries. In addition, water from the sprinkler systems caused a malfunction of the security system, preventing personnel from entering the facility. This was the second time that an incident at the Surry 2 unit resulted in fatal injuries due to scalding [see also
27 July 1972].

1988
It was reported that there were 2,810 accidents in U.S. commercial nuclear power plants in 1987, down slightly from the 2,836 accidents reported in 1986, according to a report issued by the Critical Mass Energy Project of Public Citizen, Inc.

28 May 1993
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission released a warning to the operators of 34 nuclear reactors around the country that the instruments used to measure levels of water in the reactor could give false readings during routine shutdowns and fail to detect important leaks. The problem was first bought to light by an engineer at Northeast Utilities in Connecticut who had been harassed for raising safety questions. The flawed instruments at boiling-water reactors designed by General Electric utilize pipes which were prone to being blocked by gas bubbles; a failure to detect falling water levels could have resulted, potentially leading to a meltdown.

15 February 2000
New York's Indian Point II power plant vented a small amount of radioactive steam when a an aging steam generator ruptured. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission initially reported that no radioactive material was released, but later changed their report to say that there was a leak, but not of a sufficient amount to threaten public safety.

6 March 2002
Workers discovered a foot-long cavity eaten into the reactor vessel head at the Davis-Besse nuclear plant in Ohio. Borated water had corroded the metal to a 3/16 inch stainless steel liner which held back over 80,000 gallons of highly pressurized radioactive water. In April 2005 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission proposed fining plant owner First Energy 5.4 million dollars for their failure to uncover the problem sooner (similar problems plaguing other plants were already known within the industry), and also proposed banning System Engineer Andrew Siemaszko from working in the industry for five years due to his falsifying reactor vessel logs. As of this writing the fine and suspension were under appeal.

So, as you can see, it has not just been the Three Mile Island incident but many others. The bottom line is Nuclear Energy may be by far the safest based on technology but it is by far the most devastating when you consider that one accident can kill hundreds of thousands and render massive areas uninhabitable for hundreds of years. Then there is the problem of the highly radioactive waste transportation and storage.

The current answer? Pack 15,400,000 pounds of highly radioactive waist on trains and ship it cross country through major metropolitan areas and then bury it in Nevada. There are hundreds of rail accidents a year, derailments, crossing accidents and train to train collisions. It will only take one catastrophic accident to kill hundreds, thousands, hundreds of thousands, more? Every time we bury a hazardous waste no matter how well contained it gets out. It makes its way into the water and eventually makes its way to the surface and that in my opinion is a risk we simply do not need to take. As a matter of fact with alternative energy where it is today and where it will be tomorrow there is no need to consider the risk nuclear energy poses. Some corporate entities and their puppet law makers might beg to differ.

You decide.

Below are some links to sites regarding nuclear issues and damage. I have also included pictures from damage done from the Chernobyl incident and a couple of videos. Be warned, one of the videos "The Children of Chernobyl" contains very disturbing images that everyone needs to see.

Nuclear Energy Information Service

Navajo Uranium Radiation Victims

Uranium Mining and Milling Wastes

Chernobyl The Children of Chernobyl
   

Images from Chernobyl

Compliments of Elena

What you see here could easily be somewhere in the United States

Kidd of speed - GHOST TOWN - Chernobyl Pictures -
Elena's Motorcycle Ride through Chernobyl

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