Cancer in Sweden from Chernobyl, or, Why the LNT Needs a Swift Kick

A completely bogus study from Sweden purporting to demonstrate that people are more likely to get cancer if exposed to pre-industrial levels of radiation than if they were exposed to atomic bomb detonations once again raises a question about anti-nuclear groups’ unwavering support of the politically-motivated Linear-No-Threshold radiation impact hypothesis (LNT):

Why on Earth do they support it?

The LNT is, at its core, an assumption. A graph is constructed, with radiation exposure on the horizontal axis and cancer deaths on the vertical axis. The Japanese atomic bombing survivors’ exposure and cancer data is then plotted, and a line is drawn from there to zero radiation and zero cancer.
Seriously.
No low-dose data is included–not from pre-industrial cancer rates, which involved basically the same radiation exposure as today yet were practically nonexistent, and not from the definitive study on the matter, which tracked all the radiation ever received by maintenance crews in Navy nuclear shipyards–and found a mortality rate over 20% lower than their coworkers in non-nuclear shipyards.

But if anti-nuclear groups want a scientific investigation of the health effects of radiation, as they so often claim to do, why do they support an assumption?

Pro-nuclear, anti-nuclear, and in-between organizations all should recognize the fallacy of relying on assumptions, and insist on a well-funded NAS investigation of the health effects of ionizing radiation, with the objective of identifying whether or not there is a threshold, and if there is one, upper and lower bounds.
I call on anti-nuclear groups to show that they have confidence in their claims by submitting them for rigorous peer review.

Filed under Fun With Statistics, Health, Radiation, Research, Their Actions

Posted on May 31, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Hormesis Fungus?

A species of fungus has been found to grow faster while being irradiated by Cesium-137. No, it didn’t mutate and eat Tokyo.

Yes, it’s a preliminary study; yes, it will have to be replicated; yes, it needs to be studied instead of ignored.

Link.

Filed under Health, Radiation, Research

Posted on May 26, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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China to Extract Uranium Commercially from Coal Ash

Good. Lower environmental impact all around; they’ve certainly got enough coal ash.

They’re also obviously still pursuing conventional deposits and reprocessing.

Link.

Filed under Fuel Cycle, International, Research

Posted on May 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Myanmar to Get Research Reactor

A Russian one, obviously; the military dictatorship there is under sanctions by the West–light water reactor, 20% enrichment, 10 megawatts, no electricity.

Link.

Filed under International, Research

Posted on May 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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INL Reactor Now Available to Scientific Community

The Advanced Test Reactor may now be used by people outside of DoE.

Link.

Filed under Research

Posted on April 30, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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More Radio Wave Baloney

Following up on the brilliant, cutting-edge research from a few days ago, some people in Britain now think that Wi-Fi causes “cancer and premature senility.”

This is, of course, the return of the popular “radio waves cause cancer” motif, to which the only solution is the elimination of all electronic devices. Not only is there no evidence for it and no proposed mechanism for carcinogenesis, but the advocacy methods look disturbingly similar to the fallout controversy of the late 1950s. They have a very, very weak case, but so did the LNT proponents (for those who are unfamiliar with it, the Linear No Threshold hypothesis (LNT) is the school of thought in radiological protection that takes a graph of the Japanese atomic bomb survivors’ radiation exposure and their cancer rate and draws a line down to zero cancer at zero exposure; its major weakness is that every single study ever undertaken has shown it to be wrong and every credible one has shown it to be a huge overestimate at low doses).

I get the feeling that this is going to be a problem in the near future.

Filed under Health, Radiation, Research, Scientific Method

Posted on April 22, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Study: Ethanol Burning Emits Formaldehyde

This actually looks credible to me; of course, the results are preliminary and follow-ups must be carefully monitored.

Healthy, clean biofuels, eh?

Link.

Filed under Alternatives, Environment, Research, Scientific Method

Posted on April 22, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“On this Tax Day, we ask you to think about this: just four days of Iraq war spending equals the Bush administration’s entire renewable energy and energy efficiency annual budget! Meaning that just another four days of war spending could double that budget.
This Tax Day, we ask you to Call Congress and urge the new Congress to shift funding away from nuclear power and fossil fuels and toward the renewable and efficient energy sources that offer real solutions to the climate crisis.”

-Nuclear Information and Resource Service

Not to shift funding from the Iraq war?

I guess that’s OK because it was started largely over radiophobia–the aluminum tubes allegation that I, as someone with a passing knowledge of the Apollo program and its Lunar Module’s stress corrosion problems (which the Iraqis sought to remedy in their own artillery rockets through the use of the exact same material), saw through immediately.

Filed under Activism, Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Financing, Politics and Regulation, Proliferation, Research

Posted on April 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Thorium Advances

Thorium Power has signed an agreement to test thorium fuel rods in a Russian nuclear reactor.

While not the most promising thorium technology, using it in a light-water reactor is good enough (in other words, it shouldn’t be banned because it isn’t perfect).

Filed under Fuel Cycle, Research

Posted on April 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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IAEA: Nuclear Technically Viable for Australia

Link.

This amazing assessment was made at a photo op for John Howard at OPAL.

Filed under Applications, International, Research

Posted on April 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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