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 »

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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 »

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Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“Nuclear Waste + Native Lands= Environmental Racism”

-Nuclear Information and Resource Service

Everything’s a native land. Does that mean that nobody can ever do anything anywhere, because almost every square inch of inhabitable land on the planet (except, obviously, Antarctica) has been stolen from someone at some point? NIRS staff even own houses built on land stolen from Native Americans in the 18th and 19th Centuries.
And no, there is no “racism” in selecting a repository site that is suitable for a repository–the racism is on the part of 19th Century governments forcing Native Americans to live in areas suitable only for nuclear waste repositories.

That said, Yucca Mountain is not a good idea. It’s suitable for a geologic repository, but we don’t need one. The industry wants to get nuclear waste off its hands, because it is unfair to expect them to store it all while the fossil fuel industries can dump everything they make into our air and water. The answer, we think, is to tell everyone to store their waste or put it to good use–or not make it in the first place.

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Conspiracy, Fuel Cycle, Waste

Posted on May 10, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“Indian Point is a stationary radiological nuclear weapon, a weapon of mass destruction which Entergy & NRC feel it’s fine to deploy at our collective expensense [sic]. These people belong in jail.”

-NukeNet email list, April 8, 2007, p.6

For Christ’s Sake, It’s Only a Transformer Fire.

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Conspiracy, Crackpots, Politics and Regulation, Safety, Their Actions

Posted on April 16, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“I 1988 I came to comprehend the significance of the nuclear dumping allegation(s), Allegations, that had first been relayed to me, in 1971. The personnel making the allegations had, allegedly, been employed in 1968 to decommission ‘nuclear facilities’ at Shell Research Limited’s-Thornton Research Centre, Cheshire, England.”

-’John Alfred Dyer

“Allegations, allegations, allegations. Where are all the alligators?”

-Former Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Conspiracy, Crackpots, Decommissioning, Waste

Posted on April 14, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Ding-Dong, The Wicked Witch is Dead

Paul Leventhal, famous non-proliferator and conspiracy theorist, died Tuesday at the age of 69.

I’m sure we’re all deeply saddened.

Link.

Filed under Conspiracy, Crackpots, Proliferation, Their Actions

Posted on April 14, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“So far, dirty politics, incestuous relationships between DOE, NRC, NEI and the Nuclear Industry have seen 50 of the 104 ancient failing nuclear reactors relicensed for 20 more years of operation as the Nuclear Industry plays Russian Roulette with the lives of 50 percent of America as host communities are forced and coerced to live in fear because of a false promise of a Green Nuclear Renaissance giving birth to Rosemary’s Baby, a demon’s spawn world destroyer pretending to be the Great Nuclear Driven Hydrogen Economy with a Green Electric Vehicle in every driveway…HELLO Joe DiMaggio, our nation needs you more than you can know, and someone please send out the word to the Eco Chicks hiding out on the West Coast, we need you as Heroines to save us from ourselves once again.

Bring on the Green Muffkateers, a full battalion of hot, sassy, self assured green vixens, their OMNIpotent presence ready to right wrongs as Betcee May Greens Up Penthouse, and Summer Rayne Oakes starts putting together the E-Team. In a play on the old 70’s sitcom, I can see Cherokee Cher of “Silkwood” fame playing a more visible Charlie’s Angel role, great Den Mother of a pack of fierce Green female Champions as they set out to slay the nuclear dragon.

She could perhaps be joined by the likes of Goldie Hawn (she’s always struck me as the consummate earthy woman) and Demi Moore (who just happens to live right down the road from the Idaho National Labs, where Seth Leitman published his indictment of the Th!nk EV program, which almost crushed the entire Ford Th!nk EV fleet before the king of Norway himself had to step in!) who would look so hot dressed in gladiator’s garb, shaved bald (a la G.I. Jane) as she led a dazzling array of Tangos and Tesla roadsters in a wild cross country Mad Max’s meets Cannonball Run/Rama Road Rally treck across America to the entrance of Indian Point.

For old times sake we could throw Burt Reynolds a cameo appearance sitting at the Man Law Round Table complaining that he was not invited, which might allow us to bring in Miller Beer as a corporate sponsor as we set about greening the entire alcoholic beverage industry as a part of the deal…bring on the Clydesdale’s for a spot on ethanol fuel as a part of the renewable stock portfolio.

We need Elmer Fudd to save our children from the nuclear industry’s propaganda with another brilliantly done operatic educational piece as he turns to the audience and says, “Be very very quiet, we are hunting nuclear weactors.” Maybe we can ask Angela Lindvall, Victoria’s Secret supermodel, to play the part of Dorothy, a cute pooch by her side ready to pull aside the velvet curtain to expose Riverkeeper as the great pretender to the anti-nuclear throne that they are.”

-’Porgie Tirebiter, Royce Penstinger and Pinto Bean

Can anyone say “woo-woo?”

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Conspiracy, Crackpots, Environment, Industry Performance, Strange

Posted on March 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 2 Comments »

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Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day

“They have approved this property for nuclear fission and then they decided they are not going to build it. Now they simply want to put an industrial park in. What kind of environmental study could they do that would exceed what they did to approve a nuclear power plant?!”

-Assassination Science

Amazingly, they have to redo the environmental impact statement each time to do the same things on the same property. They aren’t kept on file.

And a nuclear power plant treads surprisingly lightly on its surroundings, so something that takes up a lot of space or pollutes would require another environmental impact statement. Nuclear power plants don’t do those things.

Filed under Anti-Nuclear Quote of the Day, Conspiracy, Environment

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

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Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Reprocessing

The reliably anti-nuclear Atlanta Journal-Constitution has published an opinion piece (Google cache) by the executive director of the Atlanta branch of Women’s Action for New Directions–which is fairly predictable in its ignorance of the subject.

The individual points are detailed below; I’ve prepared a one-pager on reprocessing for general reference.

1. Apparently there’s some vast conspiracy in which everybody who advocates for reprocessing is paid off by President Bush to do so. Hey, why didn’t anybody tell me about it?
2. GNEP is not being “heavily marketed by the nuclear industry.” The Department of Energy is pushing GNEP; all the industry wants is to get spent fuel off their hands, which means Yucca Mountain, not GNEP.
3. The writer confuses the old reprocessing process (PUREX, a military-surplus technology used for extracting weapons-grade plutonium at bomb factories) with the new process that GNEP would use (UREX+, which is designed specifically for recycling). UREX+ does not produce liquid waste.
4. The writer apparently also thinks that we don’t know the difference between reprocessing and recycling; recycling is the reuse of materials from spent fuel in reactors, and recycling must involve reprocessing, which is a broad label applied to anything that recovers materials from fuel rods. Recycling involves reprocessing, but reprocessing does not necessarily involve recycling.
5. The US used the PUREX plutonium-extraction process at Hanford and the Savannah River Site to (surprise, surprise) extract plutonium for use in nuclear weapons. Horror stories from those two sites do not apply to GNEP because those sites did not use UREX+.
6. I don’t know where she gets the idea that PUREX reprocessing has anything to do with producing highly-enriched uranium (which itself is not necessarily weapons-grade)–highly-enriched uranium is produced at a uranium enrichment facility, which separates isotopes of uranium by weight. A PUREX facility uses a chemical process to separate plutonium from the rest of the spent fuel.
7. Even if PUREX were used for reprocessing prior to recycling, it would not result in weapons-grade plutonium because nuclear power plants do not produce weapons-grade plutonium, and PUREX only separates plutonium, whatever type of plutonium you have. To make weapons-grade plutonium, a country would need specialized weapons-production reactors similar to the one used at Chernobyl; no nuclear power plant outside of the former Soviet Union works like that. In fact, the author (deliberately?) obscures this by saying that the sites reprocessed fuel during the Cold War, without mentioning that the spent fuel involved came from military reactors.
8. There’s no such thing as a “simple” plutonium-based nuclear weapon.
9. The extracted uranium would be reused if these people wouldn’t get in the way; furthermore, UREX+ never separates the uranium from the plutonium, so we would have to. This is the subtle difference between what the French do with their military-surplus PUREX facility (separating the plutonium from everything else, separating the uranium from the remainder, storing some of the uranium, mixing the rest of it in with the plutonium, and using it once and only once more in their current reactors) and what GNEP proposes (separating the unused fuel–uranium and plutonium together–storing the highly-radioactive but short-lived already-split atoms, and reusing it as many times as necessary in an advanced reactor). That’s what we mean when we say that we advocate recycling: to reuse as much of it as possible, including some of the already-split atoms that are useful as industrial catalysts.
10. There will be no stockpiles of separated plutonium because UREX+ does not separate plutonium. Furthermore, the type of reactors that use fresh uranium are not the type of reactors that would reuse fuel from GNEP, so the industry’s preference vis a vis the cost of each type of fuel does not really apply–the two fuel types are not competing against each other. And if storing spent fuel gets expensive enough, they will recycle on economic grounds.
11. Once again, reprocessing does not involve enrichment, so I don’t know what she means by “newly-enriched” (emphasis mine).
12. Something else that is not clear to this person is that the plutonium isotope that makes reactor-grade plutonium reactor-grade and not weapons-grade decays faster than the weapons-grade isotope. While it is not possible to separate them mechanically or chemically, waiting several centuries will produce that result. Their standard response is that it is possible to use reactor-grade plutonium in weapons; it isn’t, but that’s not the point. If it were possible, it would be to our advantage to get rid of the plutonium by splitting its atoms in half in reactors rather than burying it for someone to find later. We have to do something with it, and burying it as though it were waste is a lose-lose option.
13. The advanced reactors that would be built under GNEP are actually much, much safer than the ones operating today (read: ones designed in the 1960s). These reactors control their reaction rate with physics, not active pumps and valves; prototypes of these reactors have had their cooling systems shut off while at full power without incident. A Chernobyl-style accident is physically impossible in these reactors–a key engineering factor that describes the response of the reactor to temperature increases is positive at Chernobyl-type reactors and negative in these reactors, meaning that their reaction rate goes down when the temperature goes up. It’s all physics. It doesn’t depend on the good intentions of operators or whether George Bush is dumb; these reactors are safe. Period. Osama bin Laden and Homer Simpson could both be at the controls. It doesn’t matter.
14. GNEP is untested. Guilty as charged. But if we only did things that had already been tested, we’d still be swinging in trees.
15. GNEP, contrary to what she says, is actually a cleanup program. The “waste” that we’ve already made, if reprocessed and recycled, contains enough unused fuel to power the US for 500 years–and the actual waste itself decays within 300 (as opposed to 10,000 for current “waste”). If we want to clean up the legacy of the 1950s, we should turn long-lived materials into short-lived ones, and generate electricity while we’re doing it, as soon as possible.
16. GNEP will require billions of dollars; so will everything else. What’s the cost of guarding 500 years’ worth of fuel for 10,000 years instead of using it?

I hope I’m not the only one to see parallels between the tactics used here and the tactics of creationists and “Moon hoax” conspiracy theorists; dear scientists and engineers, they’re one and the same, and need to be fought as hard as the creationists. Plain and simple, they are trying to destroy science for political purposes. We’ve gotta kick their butts, or there won’t be science and engineering professions for our kids.

Filed under Conspiracy, Economics, Fuel Cycle, Physics, Plutonium, Proliferation

Posted on February 12, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Weekly Nuclear Poll #6

Who should receive the second annual Dr. John Gofman Nuclear Pseudoscience Award?
Helen Caldicott
Jan Peczkis
Jim Phelps

View Vote Stats
Discuss this Poll

Filed under Activism, Conspiracy, Crackpots, Humor

Posted on January 12, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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