That Manhattan Project Document on Aerosolized Uranium

Once every few weeks, people who want to portray depleted uranium as the most dangerous substance on the face of the Earth trot out a document from the Manhattan Project stating that uranium could be aerosolized and used as a radiological weapon.

This happened recently, and doesn’t have anything to do with what we know about uranium’s radiotoxicity today. It doesn’t prove any conspiracy theories and doesn’t make uranium magically increase its radioactivity when aerosolized.

For the record.

Filed under Applications, Conspiracy, Non Sequitur

Posted on June 3, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 2 Comments »

Bookmark and Share

Browns Ferry Update

Anti-nuclear activist Frieda Berryhill has left no turn unstoned in a recently-published conspiracy theory about the Browns Ferry accident in 1975.

She describes the opposition to the Summit reactors, proposed in 1973 and canceled in 1975, for no reason other than the old they-don’t-want-them-as-neighbors argument (which makes about as much sense as the identical argument made against racial integration in the 1960s). They were certainly safe (that type of reactor–a High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (HTGR)–cannot even melt down), would have produced less waste than the average American reactor (approaching Canadian efficiency), and pose zero proliferation threat. They could even have run off of Hope Creek and Salem’s nuclear waste, with some minor processing to change its shape. The “excess capacity” argument doesn’t really hold, either, since a lot of that was oil-fired (and becoming rapidly uneconomic with the 1973 Arab oil embargo), you need some excess capacity in case a major plant breaks down, and electricity demand was growing fast enough to quickly eliminate any cushion.

But here’s where it gets interesting. She says that the Browns Ferry fire in 1975 was somehow covered up by a conspiracy involving the industry periodical Nucleonics Week (which she incorrectly refers to as “Nuclearonics Week”), the industry’s trade association at the time (the Atomic Industrial Forum), and the congressional Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, because somebody at DuPont had not heard of the accident (she also gets 55 Crackpot Points for her use of all-caps, but I digress). Now, if that’s not a damning charge, I don’t know what is.

On top of that, she apparently thinks that Browns Ferry Unit 1’s startup hiccups, which happen to any newly-restarted power plant of any type, mean that the unit will be permanently shut down and decommissioned, wasting $1.8 billion but allowing them to get a license renewal (which they got before the restart) and BILK THE TAXPAYER OF BILLIONS (no specifics on how that will happen). Or maybe they’ll replace a hose and fix a pump, which is what they did.

“Are you on drugs?”

-Judge Chamberlain Haller, My Cousin Vinny

Sadly, this is representative of anti-nuclear opinion–which unfortunately doesn’t get published a whole lot. I have a strong suspicion that we’re rebutting arguments that people don’t worry a lot about (such as the proliferation potential of PUREX) without covering most people’s major concerns and certainly not going on the offensive. For example, most people probably think that there aren’t any nuclear power plants any more, that uranium is a fossil fuel that emits carbon dioxide, and that global warming is caused by human activity per se instead of a physical process that humans are using (carbon combustion). They certainly think that nuclear reactors can explode like atomic bombs. I’ve said it before, but I think the best answer overall is to explain how a nuclear reactor works in conceptual terms (especially to young people, who basically “get” the engineering design process), so that the urban myths don’t get started in the first place. There aren’t a whole lot of urban myths about coal burning, because people understand it. They can’t design a coal burning power plant, but people have internalized the concept of combustion. And I don’t see any reason why somebody who can disassemble and reassemble a Volvo carburetor by memory can’t understand the very simple mechanism behind a nuclear reactor. Again, they’re not designing it; they don’t have a master’s degree in it, but they know how it works. I can (and have) explained to a group of 50% Green, 40% Democrat and 10% Republican students what the difference is between a PWR and RBMK, in 20 minutes, without using the word “moderator,” such that they knew where I was going half-way through an explanation of Chernobyl’s graphite-tipped-control-rods problem. And as those who know me will tell you, I am no master communicator. We just have to abandon our nuclear exceptionalist egos and tell it like it is in ordinary terms.
If we try to make nuclear energy seem impressive and use difficult-to-understand terminology, we’re going to leave the door open for people to just make stuff up. But I know we can do better than that. I know we will do better than that.

Filed under Activism, Clueless, Conspiracy, Crackpots, Terminology

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

Bookmark and Share

Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“These [decommissioning] funds are tax exempt so long as they are held by a state regulated utility. But when they transfer to non-regulated corporations like Amergen and Entergy, under present law they become taxable. So these corporations have been lobbying the IRS and Congress, so far unsuccessfully, to change the law so they won’t have to pay these taxes. They stand to avoid paying $1 billion in taxes should they succeed.”

-Michael Steinberg

And…why should the IRS take money set aside by law for cleanup?

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Decommissioning, Missing the Point, Politics and Regulation

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

Bookmark and Share

Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“The sound waves penetrate the tank and the Helium Atoms are heated up and then they bounce into each other causing heat and get very hot by the agitation caused by the sound wave bombardment. This will make heat and with an interior of the tank coated with ceramic coating it will get really hot and stay hot, that heat can then be used to run a coil through the center filled with water which will be your basic steam generator on the exterior, which spins an electric motor. Therefore any power lost from the transmission line is recaptured and therefore there is no loss.

These little tanks can be placed on the ground, prevent that horrible noise that [expletive deleted] of [sic] people and hurts the wild life and disorients them from their normal and natural life cycles and daily patterns. The heat is used, the sound is used and we all win. If you have an idea, which is similar or based upon a similar concept, then maybe you should join a group of thinkers who do not close their minds, turn them off, think out side the box and would like to meet people like you.”

-Power Lines Should Never Be Wasted

Filed under Alternatives, Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Crackpots, Physics

Posted on May 29, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

Bookmark and Share

Nuclear Gauge Overkill

The NRC is fining a company in New Jersey $9,750 for four paperwork violations.

The NRC is like a driver who only knows how to slam on the brakes. Eventually, they’re going to do it at a yellow light–and the nuclear industry will get rear-ended. This foolishness must stop.

Link.

Filed under Missing the Point, Nitpicking, Politics and Regulation

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

Bookmark and Share

GNEP’s International Prospects

The US, Russia, China, France, and Japan have endorsed the concept.

Notice how that doesn’t include any potential customers. While the reprocessing part of GNEP is an excellent step, the overall assumption that Third World countries can’t be trusted with nuclear technology is absolutely wrong. The laws of physics still apply to the Third World, and an inherently-safe reactor built in the United States would be just as inherently safe if it were built in Ethiopia.

Link.

Filed under Fuel Cycle, International, Missing the Point, Physics, Politics and Regulation, Proliferation

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

Bookmark and Share

Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“Seems that the Ossining Chamber of Commerce is having a one sided presentation on “Where Electricity Comes From” with the primary guest speaker Entergy’s own societal misfit, Jim Steets (new nick name is poop drinker). For those not familair with this Indian Point mouth piece and his work, when the news about tritium leaking into Buchanans sewer system went public, he quipped to a reporter, well, if it were not for the other stuff in the sewage, its clean enough to drink. What a guy.”

-’Porgie Tirebiter, Royce Penstinger and Pinto Bean

Way to elevate the discourse. And yes, 60 times less radiation than orange juice is safe to drink. It’s not going to make sewage clean, but it doesn’t make it dirty, either.

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Crackpots, Environment, Health, Radiation, Their Actions

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

Bookmark and Share

More on Indian Point from The Journal News

Well, what is a spent fuel pool?

Most people’s experience of “fuel” is gasoline. Thus, the image that comes into most people’s heads when you say “spent fuel pool” is somebody draining spent nuclear gasoline from the reactor and pouring it into a spent fuel pool. Unsurprisingly, this image is far enough from the reality of what a spent fuel pool is that the general public does not understand how we can say that a leak from a spent fuel pool is irrelevant.
Spent fuel pools look very much like swimming pools, but with a rack at the bottom. That rack is used to store fuel rods that have already been through the reactor and are awaiting long-term storage, disposal, or the recovery of unused energy. Hence, a spent fuel pool.
The term “spent fuel pool” does not accurately describe what it is. It is more correctly described as an “underwater rack”–so why can’t we call it one?
Easy. Because we don’t. We always do what we always have done, simply because we always have done it; accordingly, we haven’t changed our approach and the industry hasn’t changed its products since about 1975. If someone had decided in 1975 that it was a violation of professional ethics to speak languages other than Romanian, nuclear engineers all would have said “OK,” learned Romanian, and conducted every meeting, hearing, and public briefing in Romanian. When the public shows up to an NRC hearing and listens to two hours of rapid-fire Romanian, they (a) don’t understand anything and (b) start throwing eggs at those onstage.
We can’t please the loons. But we can communicate to the public in a way that they can understand; the packaging is independent of the content and there is nothing more ethical than transparency.

More important, I suppose, is “why does the industry insist on calling it a spent fuel pool?”

I agree with the article in that leaks aren’t convincing. They’re a lot less convincing when we’re unwittingly misleading people about what’s leaking.

As usual with The Journal News articles, the comments section is more encouraging; the article is a better barometer.

Link.

Filed under Activism, Industry Performance, Missing the Point, Waste

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

Bookmark and Share

New York Times’ Resident Nuclear Illiterate Has a Few Snarks About Browns Ferry

Basically, the $1.8 billion cost of restarting Browns Ferry Unit 1 is indicative of how poorly the industry manages projects, even though that number hasn’t gone up since the start of the project, and the fact that TVA chose to spend this money on restarting an old unit shows that the new ones are going to be even worse from a project management perspective, even though the delays that TVA wants to avoid are purely regulatory. Why a safer facility should be subject to more scrutiny is another perversion of the NRC’s intent for a transparent regulatory system–and another sign that we really need to reexamine how we do nuclear regulation in the United States.

Pointed out in the article is that many of the parts that were replaced were replaced not because they needed replacement, but because the NRC wanted “a paper trail.” Not pointed out is that most of the costs of Generation II plants like Browns Ferry were “little things” like pipe and wires–much of which was replaced as part of this project. The Generation III, III+, and IV reactors that would be built today have far fewer “little things”–because they were designed by computer and not by back-of-the-envelope approximations, thus not requiring backup systems in the first place.

Link.

Filed under Industry Performance, Missing the Point, New Build, Nitpicking, Politics and Regulation

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

Bookmark and Share

Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“The toxic wastes from atomic power systems will poison planet Earth for thousands of years to come. Our soil and water are being poisoned by the widespread burying of nuclear waste on land and sea! Atomic energy is always in conflict with all Life, because the very nature of ‘atom-splitting’ is destruction not construction. For this reason, it can never be used for peace or peaceful activities. How can peace be achieved by that which is by nature unpeaceful? Splitting atoms disrupts the flow of force through them.”

-’infinity2‘ (hat tip: Freedom for Fission)

Wow.

You know, I’d rather not swing in a tree. But nuclear power sure has a knack for ticking off anti-science crackpots.

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Clueless, Crackpots, Environment, Missing the Point, Sustainability, Waste

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

Bookmark and Share
Nuclear Advocacy Webring
Ring Owner: Nuclear is Our Future Site: Nuclear is Our Future
Free Site Ring from Bravenet Free Site Ring from Bravenet Free Site Ring from Bravenet Free Site Ring from Bravenet Free Site Ring from Bravenet
Get Your Free Web Ring
by Bravenet.com
taking viagra woman; Order Viagra Cheap gerneric viagra cheap herbal herbal viagra viagra viagra 576.