Showing posts with label Russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russia. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 October 2013


Russia’s Nuclear Reactors Could Take over the World, Safe or Not [Preview]

The federation is aggressively selling reactors to countries with little nuclear experience, raising safety concerns

<b>EXPORT:</b> Russia's VVER reactors

EXPORT: Russia's new VVER reactors, under construction in Novovoronezh, are being ordered worldwide.Image: STRIHAVKA JAKUB AP Photo

In Brief

  • Russia is preparing to sell unconventional reactors to developing countries that have little nuclear power experience.
  • The models include breeder reactors that make plutonium, mini reactors meant to float on the ocean and pressurized-water reactors equipped with passive safety features intended to stop a reactor meltdown without human intervention.
  • Western experts say some of the models may not be as safe as Russian officials maintain and could increase the chance that weapons-grade material would spread worldwide.

More In This Article

For any country that may be considering acquiring its first nuclear reactor, Russia's annual ATOMEXPO offers a seemingly simple solution. At a recent event, thousands of people from around the world flocked to a giant, czarist-era exhibition hall. A visitor could hear vendors such as Rolls-Royce talk about steam generators, watch reporters interview experts for a Russian nuclear-themed television program or pick up a “Miss Atom” calendar featuring the year's prettiest Russian nuclear workers.
The real action, though, was at a multilevel booth for Rosatom, Russia's state-owned nuclear company, which exuded a Steve Jobs vibe of pure whiteness and know-how. That was where “newcomers,” as the Russians fondly call them, from nations that do not have nuclear power plants heard about options and signed cooperation agreements for Rosatom to build or even operate reactors for them. At one point, photographers snapped shots of Nigerian nuclear officials as they clinked champagne flutes with Rosatom chief Sergey Kirienko, celebrating their baby steps toward joining Russia's growing roster of clients, including Turkey and Vietnam. Rosatom has already finished reactors in China and India. In July, Finland chose the company over French and Japanese competitors for its next reactor.

This article was originally published with the title Russia's New Empire: Nuclear Power.

Wednesday, 28 September 2011

29 Sept anniversary of the third worst nuclear accident in the world


Map of the East Urals Radioactive Trace (EURT): area contaminated by the Kyshtym disaster.

The Kyshtym disaster - Russia

In September 1957, the cooling system in one of the tanks containing about 70–80 tons of liquid radioactive waste failed and was not repaired. The temperature in it started to rise, resulting in evaporation and a chemical explosion of the dried waste. The explosion, estimated to have a force of about 70–100 tons of TNT threw the concrete lid, weighing 160 tons, into the air.[3] There were no immediate casualties as a result of the explosion, which released an estimated 2 to 50 MCi (74 to 1850 PBq) of radioactivity.[2][4][5]


In the next 10 to 11 hours, the radioactive cloud moved towards the northeast, reaching 300–350 kilometers from the accident. The fallout of the cloud resulted in a long-term contamination of an area of more than 800 square kilometers, primarily with caesium-137 and strontium-90.[2] This area is usually referred to as the East-Ural Radioactive Trace (EURT).[6]



References1.^ a b Schlager, Neil (1994). When Technology Fails. Detroit: Gale Research. ISBN 0-8103-8908-8.


2.^ a b c "Chelyabinsk-65". http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/russia/chelyabinsk-65_nuc.htm.

3.^ a b "Conclusions of government commission" (in Russian). http://nuclear.tatar.mtss.ru/arxiv/332.htm.

4.^ Kabakchi, S. A.; A. V. Putilov (1 1995). "Data Analysis and Physicochemical Modeling of the Radiation Accident in the Southern Urals in 1957". Moscow ATOMNAYA ENERGIYA (1): 46–50. http://www.fas.org/news/russia/1995/fbust037_95011.htm.

5.^ See also List of military nuclear accidents

6.^ Dicus, Greta Joy (January 16, 1997). "Joint American-Russian Radiation Health Effects Research". United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission. http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/commission/speeches/1997/s97-04.html. Retrieved 30 September 2010.

7.^ Pollock, Richard (1978). "Soviets Experience Nuclear Accident". Critical Mass Journal.

8.^ Medvedev, Zhores A. Nuclear disaster in the Urals translated by George Saunders. 1st Vintage Books ed. New York : Vintage Books, 1980, c1979, ISBN 0394744454.

9.^ Diane M. Soran; Danny B. Stillman (1982). An Analysis of the Alleged Kyshtym Disaster. Los Alamos National Laboratory. http://www.osti.gov/bridge/purl.cover.jsp;jsessionid=AE63F0635724B2D67229E70E6BAE485A?purl=/5254763-UCvDE3/.

10.^ a b "The Southern Urals radiation studies: A reappraisal of the current status". Journal of Radiation and Environmental Biophysics 41. 2002. http://www.springerlink.com/content/x3ghck8x96b74n53/.

11.^ John R. Trabalka (1979), "Russian Experience" pp. 3–8 in Environmental Decontamination: Proceedings of the Workshop, December 4–5, 1979, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, CONF-791234

12.^ The Nuclear Disaster They Didn't Want To Tell You About/Andrew Cockburn/ Esquire Magazine/ April 26 1978

13.^ Gyorgy, A. (1979). No Nukes: Everyone's Guide to Nuclear Power. ISBN 0919618952.

14.^ "The decision of Nikipelov Commission" (in Russian). http://nuclear.tatar.mtss.ru/of280490.htm.

15.^ R. Jeffrey Smith (Jul 10, 1989). "Soviets Tell About Nuclear Plant Disaster; 1957 Reactor Mishap May Be Worst Ever". The Washington Post: A1. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/access/73886738.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Jul+10%2C+1989&author=R.+Jeffrey+Smith&pub=The+Washington+Post+%28pre-1997+Fulltext%29&edition=&startpage=a.01&desc=Soviets+Tell+About+Nuclear+Plant+Disaster%3B1957+Reactor+Mishap+May+Be+Worst+Ever.

Wednesday, 17 November 2010

Accident at Russia’s Kursk Nuclear Power Plant reveals blatant disregard of safety standards:


Is the Russian nuclear industry headed for a meltdown?

Part of: Kursk NPP , Nuclear accidents and incidents

Kursk Nuclear Power Planthttp://kunpp.rosenergoatom.ru/  Related articles

Number one reactor at Kalinin NPP shuts down for second time in two weeks, raising concerns Ecological groups call for investors to boycott finishing Kursk reactor Related news

Reactor no.2 at Kursk nuclear power plant shut down Unplanned turbo generator shutdowns at Kursk NPP Four incidents at Russian nuclear power plants in August Prolonged life for RBMK reactors ST. PETERSBURG – Incidents of various degrees of severity are not uncommon at Russian nuclear power plants (NPPs), but when repairs take longer than a month – as was the case with Reactor 1 of Kursk NPP, which was scrammed on July 22 and only went online on August 31 – concerns arise that serious damage must have occurred. A scrutiny of what happened at Kursk NPP seems to indicate the frightening possibility that a malfunction involving any RBMK reactor may turn out to be as devastating as the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Andrei Ozharovsky, 05/09-2010 - Translated by Maria Kaminskaya

Kursk NPP: How extensive was the damage?

Kursk NPP is located in Kurchatov – a town bearing the name of the prominent Soviet nuclear physicist, and the man behind the Soviets’ A-bomb, Igor Kurchatov. It stands 40 kilometers southwest of Kursk, a large city in Central European Russia, and operates four power units with pressurized-tube reactors with a total capacity of 4 million kilowatts. Last July 22, an incident took place at the plant that put Reactor 1, an RBMK-1000 installation, out of commission and led to what later turned out to be five weeks of ongoing repairs. Even more disturbing, what information was finally made available about the incident did not come through the official channels from the state nuclear corporation Rosatom or Kursk NPP’s head company, the nuclear power plant operator Rosenergoatom, but from Kursk employees.

First, a press release was posted on Rosenergoatom’s website that said little about the incident or its causes. On July 22, 2010, at 12:23 p.m., Reactor 1 of Kursk NPP was scrammed, the message said. The reactor was put under repairs to fix a malfunction in the cooling circuit. The repairs are to take seven days, Rosenergoatom said.

A few routine sentences followed this announcement, which accompany Rosenergoatom’s every incident report, with safety assertions regarding background radiation levels at the plant and in the vicinity and the mention that the incident was classified as a a zero-level, or below-the-scale, event on the International Nuclear Events Scale (INES), i.e. that it had no impact on the safety of the plant or the personnel.

Rosatom’s Crisis and Response Centre – the nuclear industry’s agency responsible for the prevention and handling of emergencies in the field of nuclear and radiation safety – issued a slightly more detailed statement. On July 22, 2010, at 12:23 p.m., the centre said, the reactor’s emergency protection system shut it down following a pressure spike in the reactor core. This was a Type 5 Automatic Emergency Protection event – where the safety system actuates a reduction in the reactor’s power output, taking it down to the lowest level, that is, until the reactor is fully shut down. At the time, the reactor was operating at a capacity of 960 megawatts, the centre reported. The reactor would be under repairs until July 24, 2010, the statement said.

The resulting five weeks – instead of one week – of repairing works testify to the gravity of what happened at Kursk. According to a story that was described in a letter published on the website of the St. Petersburg-based nuclear news agency PRoAtom.Ru, the reactor scram at Kursk occurred as a result of a pressure increase in the reactor core caused by damage sustained by one of the channels of the control and protection system.

Such an accident may put a reactor out of commission for a long time, indeed: Repairing the damaged channel and the graphite moderator blocks effectively means carrying out works that have to be done inside the reactor core. It doesn’t take a nuclear scientist to see the seriousness of the problem – radioactivity levels are through the roof in the core even in a shut-down reactor. If damage occurs to the graphite in the core, the repairs or partial replacement may well be beyond the bounds of the possible and the problem could become an unsolvable one.

Worse, direr consequences are conceivable. Graphite is the dominant feature of the core of an RBMK series reactor. This Russian abbreviation stands for High-Power Channel-Type (or Pressurised-Tube) Reactor and describes a design where graphite is used for the moderation (slowing down) of fast fission neutrons. In essence, an RBMK core is a cylinder-shaped 21-by-21-metre graphite stack 25 metres high, with apertures allowing for both fuel channels (or pressure tubes) and the control channels of the control and protection system. The system is designed to automatically regulate reactor power, keep it at a needed level, and shut down the reactor when necessary. Cooling water is supplied to cool each of the system’s channels.

But this is what has always been Achilles’ heel of RBMK reactors – the very system by which coolant is supplied to the core. If the cooling stops in any one of the control and protection channels, or the flow rate drops significantly, overheating and damage occurs – up to the channel’s destruction and water leaking out onto the reactor’s heated graphite.

Next – a steam explosion and a graphite fire, just like it happened in Chernobyl.
Indeed, it thankfully never got as far as Chernobyl in Kursk on July 22, but if a control channel was destroyed, a discharge of radiation may well have been possible. Nothing to that effect was ever said in any official statements.

Instead, five weeks later, a short statement on Rosenergoatom’s site informed the visitors simply that on August 31, 2010, at 08:50 a.m., “power unit No.1 of Kursk NPP was connected to the grid after completion of repair works. The unit was put in operation in accordance with process procedure requirements for safe operation.”

Was there a radiation discharge?

On August 4, Greenpeace Russia sent a letter to Russian Prosecutor General Yury Chaika, which said: “According to information made available to us, an increase in background radiation levels was picked up by background radiation sensors at the moment the scram was initiated. Our information says one of the control channels of Reactor 1 was destroyed, accompanied with damage occurring to the graphite stack. The likelihood is very high that this could have led to an accidental discharge of some of the radioactive water and a release of radiation beyond the plant’s premises.”

Greenpeace urged the Prosecutor’s office to look into the matter and verify – or disprove – the authorities’ assurances that no consequences implying a release of radiation had taken place during the incident. As of late August, Greenpeace was yet to receive a response from Prosecutor Chaika, or any information at all that would indicate his office had undertaken any investigative steps.

“The prosecutors might have been more effective in their response,” said Vladimir Chuprov, who heads Greenpeace Russia’s energy unit. “What we’re talking about is a possible release of radiation into the surrounding environment, a direct threat to the well-being of the NPP’s personnel and the population of the neighbouring areas. The possibility that radiation [was] still being discharged [as the repairs were under way], cannot be ruled out, either.”

Was a “technological improvement” the underlying cause of the incident?

RBMK-type reactors are highly sophisticated and capricious machines. While no nuclear reactor design can offer an absolute failsafe guarantee of a life-long incident-free operation, RBMKs are specifically reputed to be creatures of fickle character. After the 1986 catastrophe at Ukraine’s Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, which employed reactors of exactly this type, enormous funds and studious efforts were invested into modernising the RBMK design and improving its safety record. It may have well been one of these “improvements” that could constitute the underlying cause of the July 22 accident at Kursk.

This is how the nuclear news agency PRoAtom described this improvement:

"During one of the stages of modernisation of pressurised-tube reactors, a new feature was added to the design, whose novelty was that there was no more direct contact between the cooling water used by the control and protection system and the neutron-absorbing rods. The design of this innovation is such that the absorbers move within dry wells contained inside the original control channels and are cooled by the control and protection system’s own cooling circuit. The wells are topped with seals at the channel head.

"This is what allowed for the removal of the main defect of how control rods had originally operated and which had triggered the Chernobyl disaster: Earlier, positive reactivity, or simply, an escalating nuclear reaction, was generated at the initial insertion of control rods into the core from the top end switch, as the displacement of water by the dropping rods precluded normal cooling of the core.

Alas, as it often happens with advantages introduced by a technological innovation, the upsides did not come without the downsides. Less cooling water is allowed into the channels with the new wells installed than it was in the original design, while the level of local resistance to heat removal is higher.”

Why was the reactor not shut down at once?

Further, according to PRoAtom:

The event [at Kursk] was preceded by damage that had several days prior occurred to the well seal in one of the control and protection channels and which resulted in a drastic drop in the water flow rate in the channel. Because of that, less water was available to cool the well. As the cause of the incident was being investigated and the seal changed, the flow of cooling water stopped altogether. This situation remained unchanged for over 24 hours.

The poor circulation of cooling water led to an overheating and rupture of the zirconium tube of the control and protection channel.

It is now anyone’s guess why, given an incident that involved damage of this significance, the reactor was not scrammed at once. Locals in Kurchatov say the plant’s chief engineer wanted to keep generating electricity and shut the reactor down later, so that as little power output was lost during the downtime as possible, and the personnel on site could not disobey the orders, though they foresaw the situation would get worse as things were developing further.

PRoAtom’s story caused a wave of responses by outraged visitors to the website’s forum. If the information is correct about the chief engineer demanding to cut corners in order to continue with power generation, said one guest, then this person must be fired immediately. This incident – or accident, because there was or must have been, in any case, a release of radiation beyond the plant’s perimeters – is nothing but a precursor to a severe accident, that visitor wrote.

“Accidents are not made by politicians or economists or managers – they are made by professionals at their work stations, those who are immediately in charge of the site in question. They are the ones to bear full responsibility in the court of law. Don’t forget [Chernobyl], dear sirs!” the angry post concluded.

A discussion also arose on the forum around whether or not the incident with the poor coolant flow rate was wrongfully ascribed to a faulty flow meter and supposedly unreliable flow readings, and if that was the reason why the reactor was not stopped at once.

Operating a reactor… by sheer guess-work

If PRoAtom’s information is accurate, the incident at Kursk was steadily in the making for at least 24 hours – meaning that certain measures were likely available to qualified staff to stop it developing further. Why weren’t they used? PRoAtom’s forum visitors, most of whom sounded as if they had intimate knowledge of the nuclear industry, with some possibly directly affiliated with Kursk NPP, were able to shed light on that mystery.

The upper biological shield – or “pyatak” – over the Kursk reactor. On top is the fuel-changing machine (the RBMK design allows for fuel changes even as normal reactor operation is in progress). The operator may have missed the steam rising over one of the channels, which would have been visible right over the biological shield.

http://kunpp.rosenergoatom.ru/

“The RBMKs have been in operation going on 40 years now, and still the Technological Regulations for Reactor Operation allow for equivocal interpretations,” said one visitor. “The limits of safe reactor operation are breached when the rate of water flow in a control and protection channel drops below 2 cubic metres an hour if the rod is inserted. But inserted where – in the channel? In the core? The latest events tell us that even if removed from the core, but inside the channel, a control and protection rod can come under damage in conditions of a poor water flow rate. To top that, no steam at the channel head (if steam is found there, the Technological Regulations provide for an immediate manual scram) can be detected by any technological means, so whatever there was or wasn’t that caused all the fuss, the Central Hall operator who’s looking at this steam, he may not even remember. So the question is, what was the point of investing billions into the reactor’s modernisation if the way we’re still dealing with this quite frequent occurrence is as before – by guesswork?”

“Weren’t there still good reasons to shut the reactor down, if not by the scram button, then it least by power reduction according to regulations? We all know that what’s been happening at the plant, all this time since then, is the melted channel and the rod inside being 'jimmied out' [of the reactor]. So, how was it possibly melting without any steam?.. The fact that no steam was mentioned later in accident reports doesn’t mean it hadn’t been there,” another guest said, apparently in response to a suggestion that there hadn’t been grounds enough to shut the reactor down at an earlier point.

“That’s exactly the way things are done,” the same post continued, “by not hearing or seeing anything that doesn’t fit the system. The system’s in a state of a complete meltdown, and you’re still trying to jam facts into it that don’t fit! So you think it was OK to lay all the blame on the flow meter and forget about the control channel until kingdom come? Shame on you! The merits of this approach are self-evident – a total failure. Try to draw some lessons.”

“This is what’s interesting: The alterations were introduced into the design ten years ago. Why would [the Russian industry oversight agency] Rostekhnadzor permit the operation of reactors with such holes in the regulations??” yet another forum visitor wrote.

Kursk’s employees in for a meltdown of their own

According to PRoAtom forum visitors, the all-hands-on-deck emergency repairs and the general disarray have been greatly aggravating the situation in Kursk.

“The [plant’s] management have been forcing operational personnel to carry out radiation-hazardous works, which they made compulsory for them. These people are unprepared to perform such work to begin with, they are not qualified enough, plus all of this is done for no extra pay, during off-hours, and without any papers or documents drawn up… Also, they’ve been bullied by threats to fail them later on some exams like, whatever, industrial hygiene or something, and redundancies for failure to pass. It’s a total mess. Everyone knows Kursk Region is poor and there aren’t many jobs, and the plant pays well enough by comparison, so people are in fear for their jobs, in fear of the bosses… And the bosses are using it as they wish, plugging the holes left by their screw-ups with their employees’ health.”

“They’re making them work overtime and not at their assigned work places, either.”

“What money could compensate for the loss of one’s health? Yeah, keep thinking those thoughts about how radiation is harmless, you fool, when you’re in the repair zone and it’s shining straight at ya with 14 to 16 roentgen per hour. These are the conditions they do their repair work in at the plant,” posted a forum guest in response to another visitor, who had suggested hazard pay was included into the nuclear power plant workers’ compensation, and that the yearly permissible levels or radiation exposure were now anyway lower than they had been in Soviet time.

“Unprofessionalism is when…instead of scramming the reactor, they’ll just log non-existent defects in a perfectly well-functioning coolant flow meter in that channel and go home like it’s no big deal. Those who’ve allowed this accident to happen, they’ve long had a screw or two loose, from all the pressure of achieving high performance rates and being afraid of losing their cushy jobs. And the chances are nil that they’ll get their heads right again any time soon.”

“The event puts this issue on the agenda: Are Kursk NPP’s personnel capable of following the requirements of the Technological Regulations to immediately scram the reactor when emergency situations arise? Or have they been too intimidated and demoralised by all the various reorganisations in the nuclear industry? Intimidated, demoralised, and broken psychologically – this is the main tactic of manipulating personnel at Russian NPPs,” the PRoAtom story concluded.

The unshakable legacy and the sad epilogue

The picture emerging behind these comments – and behind the very story, indeed – is a lamentable one.

Firstly, the so-called “improvements” on the RBMK-1000 design, necessitated as they were by the tragedy at Chernobyl, have led to a common enough solve-one-problem-by-creating-another dilemma: One of the possible causes of the world’s greatest nuclear catastrophe to date may have been safely removed, but the upgrades have given room for the likelihood of other accident scenarios to develop that involve the infamous design. If on July 22 the supply of coolant to the damaged channel were to have been restored, the situation may have well resulted in the destruction of other channels and a steam explosion of a Chernobyl magnitude. The sheer crudeness of the solution chosen to rectify the deficiencies in the old design – turning “wet” control and protection channels into “dry” ones – is nothing short of amazing.



Secondly, the accident put into stark relief the disturbing problem where many reactor parameters that are key to its safe operation – such as steam emerging over a control channel head – are still only detected or assessed with the help of nothing but the naked eye of the operator on duty, and the regulations in place are vague and offer little recourse. This broadens the margin for the possibility of a severer accident already created by the earlier upgrades, by augmenting the risk of errors on the part of the personnel – the notorious “human factor.”



And thirdly, Rosatom, when it became a state corporation, took the worst of what this supposedly free-market form of business management could offer – an unabashed pursuit of profit – and added it to the worst traits it chose to inherit from its predecessor, the Ministry of Nuclear Energy. Its history suggests that little has changed since the ministry, now a corporation operating within a loosely defined legal format, arose in the Soviet Union in the 1950s under the name of Minsredmash. The indecipherable moniker itself – Minsredmash stands in Russian for the Ministry of Medium-Size Machine Building – would be a plain enough hint at how completely shrouded in secrecy the industry was and continues to be, while it never shook off the Soviet-style disregard for the health and well-being of both the nuclear workers and the general population.



And that legacy never shows more clearly than in the public information policies the nuclear industry apparently pursues even today.



Just a few days prior to the incident at Kursk NPP, Rosenergoatom, which regularly reports on “human-interest” events taking place at its branch outfits, wrote of this high achievement at the plant in an August 19 press release (quoted here verbatim):



“In 2010 Kursk NPP was declared the award winner of the contest called “100 Best Russian Companies. Ecology and Industrial Safety.” … The enterprise was awarded with a diploma and golden medal. Director of Kursk NPP Nikolay Sorokin was awarded with a badge of honor as “The Best Director in the Field of Environmental and Industrial Safety”. Head of Radiation Safety Department – Head of Environmental Safety Service Aleksey Trubnikov was awarded with a badge of honor as “Environmental Specialist of the Year”.



Kursk NPP became the award winner due to its constant environmental care and continuous investments in the maintaining of the environmental prosperity. The environmental safety system developed by the enterprise helps to detect possible problems and prevent them. The environmental impact of the nuclear power plant does not exceed the set standards. For the last five years state regulatory authorities have detected no violations of the environmental legislation…”



The story continues further with the same copious list of laudatory mentions and stands in sharp – if not outright mocking – contrast both to the unofficial information circulating in the nuclear field’s cyberspace and to the sparse official statements appearing, when and if they do, on incidents that Russian nuclear power plants experience on a regular basis. These are the incidents that force one to take a closer look at safety practices within the industry, and these are also the events that tell one the nuclear industry is in a state of deep crisis. Too bad the politicians and the managers in charge in Moscow keep looking the other way.

Sunday, 16 May 2010

Russia Nuclear Renaissance encounters problems

(707.6033) WISE Russia - Two years after the Russian government approved an ambitious program of building nearly 40 nuclear reactors, mass-media in Moscow are reporting about massive cuts in number of power plants to be built until 2015. According to leading business newspaper "Vedomosti", referring to the data of the Ministry of energy, the number of new nuclear reactors will be cut by over 60%.

Russia may save about US$25 billion (18 billion euro) if it will never build units which currently were removed from the 2015-target list, Russian environmental group Ecodefense estimates. Moreover, spending this amount for construction of natural gas' power plants may bring 3 times more electricity, compared to
nuclear, said Vladimir Milov, former deputy energy minister of Russia, to the Nuclear Monitor.

According to the scheme of locations for energy facilities until 2020 (the state program outlining the plan for
construction of nuclear, coal, gas, hydro plants during next decade), "Rosatom" planned to put online 13,2 GWt of new nuclear capacity until 2015. This is equal to 13 units of the VVER-1000 design or 11 units of the VVER-1200 design. Under the reduced plan, only 5,2 GWt of new nuclear capacity is planned to be added.

But even that reduced number of reactors will be hard to build, environmental campaigners say. The scheme of locations for energy facilities until 2020 was approved by the Russian government in 2008.

Environmental groups organized protests on the day of approval in more than 20 cities, because the plan includes an increased number of nuclear and coal plants which will increase the risks for public health and environment. Campaigners also protested because government excluded environmental groups from the decision-making process, what resulted in an antienvironmental and poor-quality document.

Reducing the number of nuclear reactors to be built in next 5 years is good news but is actually just a reflection of reality. When the plans were approved in 2008, it was already clear that Russia can not afford to build dozens of reactors during the next decade. First of all, "Rosatom" doesn't have enough heavy machinery capacity to produce reactors even for domestic plans, and there are also foreign contracts in China, India and Belarus. And Russian nuclear industry said it will try to win more contracts in Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe.

Why did the Russian government approve the program that can not be implemented? It looks like "Rosatom" just decided that.

THE END FOR RUSSIAN "NUCLEAR RENAISSANCE"?

According to the Russian government, the number of new nuclear reactors planned to be built by 2015 will be cut by 60%. But even that number of nuclear units will be hard to build. As environmental groups has been saying for years, Russian nuclear development program is far from reality.

An increasing number of reactors on paper will bring them more funds from the federal budget. But now plans and funding will be reduced, which will affect both planned and under construction reactors, Vladimir Milov said to the Nuclear Monitor.

The Russian "nuclear renaissance" may well be over, even if it did not start yet. And this is good news because reactors are expensive, inefficient and dangerous just as they were 24 years ago when Chernobyl happened.

Currently there are 31 nuclear reactors in operation in Russia producing 16% of all electricity. Several of the oldest and the most dangerous reactors -such as RBMKs and VVER-440- obtained extended licenses when planned operational lifetime was over.

THE MYTHOLOGY AND MESSY REALITY OF REPROCESSING

It is only recently that reprocessing is being promoted as a “solution” to the problem of mounting quantities of spent fuel. In this context, it is often called “recycling.” It is now explicitly being promoted as a means for greatly increasing the use of the uranium resource contained in the spent fuel. Proponents of nuclear power often state that 95 percent of spent fuel (or used fuel or irradiated fuel) can be “recycled” for recovering the energy in it.

This has become a new mantra of nuclear waste management: spent fuel is a treasuretrove of energy.

A new report ('The Mythology and Messy reality of Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing') by the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER) looks at France (often called an 'inspirational example for nuclear waste
management') and shows that for existing spent fuel the slogan belongs in the same realm of economic claims for nuclear energy that would be “too cheap to meter.”

It is worth noting at the outset that reprocessing and breeder reactors were not proposed as a solution to the problem of nuclear waste, which has so far turned out to be intractable for a host of technical, environmental,
and political reasons.

Reprocessing was also not proposed as an essential accompaniment to burner reactors, like the light water reactors, to increase the use of the uranium resource because its value in that regard is marginal.

In light water reactor systems, almost all the uranium resource winds up as depleted uranium or in spent fuel. Even with repeated reprocessing and re-enrichment, use of the natural uranium resource cannot be increased to more than one percent in such a system. The use of 90 to 95 percent of the uranium resource in the spent fuel is impossible in a light water reactor system even with reprocessing. These are technical constraints that go with the system.

Reprocessing in France Reprocessing in France is continuing mainly due to the inertia of primarilygovernment-owned electricity generation and reprocessing corporations (EDF and AREVA
respectively). It continues also due to the political and economic dislocations that closing an established large
industrial operation would cause in a largely rural area in Normandy that has scarcely any other industries. After it was clear that the breeder reactor program was not going to fulfill its theoretical promise any time soon, the decision to continue reprocessing in France was not about economics, technical suitability, waste
management, or significantly increasing the use of the uranium resource in the fresh fuel.(*1) It was driven mainly by the inertia of a system that was government-owned and had already invested a great deal of money and institutional prestige in the technology.

Light water reactors(*2) and reprocessing Uranium-238 is almost 99.3 percent of the natural uranium resource. It requires about 7.44 kilograms of natural uranium to produce one kilogram of 4  percent enriched uranium fuel, assuming 0.2 percent U-235 in the tails (depleted uranium).(*3)

This means that about 86.6 percent of the natural uranium resource winds up as depleted uranium. Even if the efficiency of enrichment improved so that only 0.1 percent of U-235 remained in.

Reprocessing in the US?

French company Areva has no immediate plans to build a reprocessing and associated MOX fabrication complex in the US. Areva spokesman Jarret Adams said the company has been discussing designs for a US reprocessing and MOX fuel fabrication complex with utilities for many years and that it is 'starting to educate President Barack Obama’s administration' on Areva’s vision for nuclear fuel recycling in the US.

But on March 25, Alan Hanson, Areva’s executive vice president of technology and used fuel management, said in Washington, that preliminary designs show that a reprocessing and associated MOX fuel fabrication complex built at one site in the US would be a US$25 billion capital expenditure. Jacques Besnainou, CEO of Areva North America, said in that Areva would be willing to invest its own money to help develop a reprocessing complex in the US. On March 25, Besnainou said that a US reprocessing complex could be a regional hub capable of reprocessing spent fuel from the Americas and small countries from other regions. “I
think we should help the [United Arab Emirates] with their used fuel 20 years from now,” he said.

It would still mean that about 84 percent of the natural uranium resource would wind up as depleted uranium when it is first enriched. (For simplicity, the authors ignore losses of uranium during milling and the series of
processing steps prior to enrichment. These are small compared to the amount of depleted uranium.)

It should also be noted that the vast majority of the uranium in the fresh fuel is still non-fissile U- 238. In the case of 4 percent enriched uranium, made from natural uranium, the other 96 percent is uranium-238. The fraction of U-238 is a little lower in fuel made from reprocessed and re-enriched uranium due to the buildup of other uranium isotopes, notably U-236. A small fraction (about two percent) of this U-238 gets converted into plutonium.

Some of this is fissioned in the course of reactor operation and therefore provides a portion of the energy output of the reactor. But the vast majority of uranium-238 will remain unused in burner reactors – that is, the
type of reactors in use today.

Commercial reprocessing using the PUREX process, the only commercial technology at present, separates the spent fuel into three streams – (i) plutonium, (ii) uranium, and (iii) fission products, plus traces of non-fission radionuclides, like neptunium.

France uses most, but not all (see below), of the separated plutonium as a mixed plutonium dioxide uranium dioxide fuel, called MOX fuel for short. It uses depleted uranium to make MOX fuel. However, of the 6.44
kilograms of depleted uranium created in the process of making fresh fuel from natural uranium, in the used example, just over a tenth of a kilogram is used as a component of MOX fuel; most of that remains unused
in spent MOX fuel.

France also uses a part of the uranium recovered from spent fuel as a fuel. But this uranium must be re-enriched to the requisite level. To get the same performance as fresh 4 percent fuel, the reprocessed uranium must (because of the degraded isotopic composition of the uranium) be enriched to about 4.4 percent, which means that about 87 percent of the recovered uranium becomes depleted uranium waste.

Further, roughly 93 percent of this re-enriched fuel is also uranium-238. When this recovered and re-enriched uranium is used as fuel only a small amount of it is converted to plutonium, while most remains unused. If repeated reprocessing and re-enrichment are carried out, the pile of depleted uranium mounts rapidly, while the amount of fissile material dwindles. Further, it should be noted that the process of
enriching reprocessed uranium also increases the concentration of uranium-236, which is not fissile; this
reduces the usefulness of re-enriched uranium as a fuel.

The flow of materials in a light water reactor scheme with reprocessing is shown in diagram in Figure 2. It
corresponds to the example the authors have been using: an initial fuel loading of 1 kilogram of fresh (4 percent) low enriched uranium fuel, 0.2 percent U-235 in the depleted uranium tails at the enrichment plant, and 8 percent plutonium in MOX fuel, and assuming that all the recovered uranium is re-enriched.

At the end of the use of the MOX fuel and re-enriched uranium fuel, only about 6 percent of the kilogram of original fresh fuel has been used to generate energy. In turn this is only about 0.8 percent of the 7.44 kilograms natural uranium resource used to make the single kilogram of 4 percent enriched uranium fuels.

Repeated reprocessing, MOX fuel use, and re-enriched reprocessing uranium fuel use does not improve the picture much. This is because most of the remaining spent fuel is left behind as depleted uranium in each round. In fact after five rounds, about 99 percent of the original uranium resource is depleted uranium. This means that the fraction of the uranium resource that can be used in a light water reactorreprocessing-
re-enrichment scheme is one percent or less. This can be raised slightly by reducing the amount of U-235 in the tails below 0.2 percent.

This is a conservative calculation, done as a simple illustration. It ignores the isotopic degradation of both the
uranium and plutonium in the second and subsequent rounds of use in a reactor. Specifically, uranium-236 and uranium-234, which are not fissile isotopes and which degrade fuel performance, build up in the fuel as the reactor operates; uranium-236 increases in concentration with re-enrichment.

Small amounts of uranium-232 also build up.(*5) This isotope has a specific activity (defined as disintegrations per second per unit mass) that is 30 million times greater than natural uranium.

Unlike fresh uranium fuel, it quickly generates decay products that emit strong gamma radiation, which creates higher worker radiation risks. Fuel quality requirements limit U-232 to a few parts per billion. As a result, re-enrichment becomes more complex and costly for each round of recycled uranium fuel use in a reactor. The interaction of uranium-236 and uranium-232 must be reduced by blending the enrichment feedstock with natural, un-reprocessed uranium or by blending the enriched uranium derived from reprocessed uranium with enriched uranium originating from fresh ore.

Similarly, the isotopic composition of MOX fuel degrades with each round of MOX fuel use and reprocessing; this makes reprocessing even more expensive and the fuel less valuable. As a result of the above considerations, technical and cost considerations limit the practical ability to reprocessing and re-enrich for more than one round past the first use of fresh fuel made from natural uranium.

Even when the initial depleted uranium is left out of the calculation (though it should not be, since it contains most of the natural uranium resource), reprocessing and repeated re-enrichment and MOX fuel use will
utilize only about six percent (rounded) of the fuel originally loaded into the reactor, with about two-thirds of that occurring in the initial irradiation and most of the rest occurring in the first round of MOX fuel use. Repeated reprocessing, re-enrichment, and MOX fuel use just does not increase resource use significantly, because most of the uranium becomes part of the depleted uranium stream at each step. Finally, it should be noted that these numbers ignore uranium losses at the uranium mill (where, typically, several percent of
the uranium is discarded into tailing ponds along with almost all the radium-226 and thorium-230 in the ore)
and in the processing steps needed to make the uranium hexafluoride feed for the enrichment plant. The actual resource utilization based on the uranium content of the ore at the mill is, in practice significantly less than one percent. Fresh fuel plus one cycle of MOX use and re-enrichment uses only about 0.8 percent of the natural uranium resource. This is reduced to about 0.7 percent when the losses of uranium in the processing at the uranium mill and the conversion to uranium hexafluoride are taken into account.

France currently only re-uses a third of the recovered uranium. This means that France uses less than six percent of the uranium resource in the original fresh fuel; about 80 percent of this is used in the first round of fresh fuel use prior to reprocessing. In other words, the expense, risk, and pollution created by French reprocessing only marginally increases the use of the underlying uranium resource. Further, the re-enrichment is not done in France but in Russia. The depleted uranium from re-enrichment, amounting to roughly 87
percent of the reprocessed uranium by weight, remains behind in Russia.

In sum, the French use only about 0.7 percent of the original uranium resource to create fission energy. The rest is mainly in depleted uranium at various locations, or is piling up as reprocessed uranium that is not being used, or is uranium left in spent fuel of various kinds (including MOX spent fuel). This figure cannot be increased significantly even with repeated reprocessing and re-enrichment so long as the fuel is used in a light water reactor system.

Notes
(*1) All calculations are based on four percent enriched fresh fuel made from natural uranium as the starting point, unless otherwise specified. The results would be similar with any starting enrichment for light water reactors, which are designed to use low enriched fuel (generally less than five percent U-235).

(*2) Light water reactors are a specific example of “burner” reactors, which have a net consumption of fissile
materials in the course of energy production from fission. Some new fissile material is created, mainly
plutonium-239, but the amount of fissile material used (or burned), mainly a combination of uranium-235 and
plutonium-239, is greater than the amount of fissile material residing in the irradiated material at the end of the
reactor operation period. This discussion is focused on light water reactors (LWRs), and specifically on
pressurized water reactors (PWRs), the design used in France. The arguments are essentially the same for boiling water reactors (BWRs). The U.S. commercial nuclear power reactor system consists entirely of PWRs and BWRs. Unless otherwise stated, the examples and figures used in this report are typical of pressurized water reactors. The exact assumptions, such as the enrichment level of the fresh fuel, make no difference to the overall conclusion about the efficiency of resource use in a light-water-reactor system with reprocessing and re-enrichment.

(*3) Used is 4 percent enrichment as a typical figure. Actual enrichments in pressurized water reactors may range from 3 percent to above 4 percent. During enrichment, natural uranium is separated into two streams – the enriched stream, which is then chemically further processed to make reactor fuel, and the depleted stream, which is also called the “tails.” These tails, which consist of depleted uranium, have been accumulating at enrichment.

NUCLEAR BANK? NO THANKS!

On April 18 a global campaign against private banks supporting nuclear energy will be launched with the release of a new report and a website dedicated to make campaigning easy. The campaign is carried out by the French section of Friends of the Earth, German Urgewald, Austrian Antiatom Szene, Italian CRBM, WISE, the Banktrack-network and Greenpeace International. (707.6035) WISE Amsterdam - As the
report will be launched at press conferences in three European major cities just the week after the publication
of this Nuclear Monitor we cannot publish its findings yet.

Just go to http://www.nuclearbanks.org/ (online from April 19) and check the facts on dozens of banks and their involvement in financing the nuclear disaster.

The campaign activities itself will focus on a handful of so-called ‘dodgy deal’s’, projects which should be stopped immediately. Representatives of ngo’s working in the countries where these projects are built will be speaking at the press conferences and will have talks with representatives of the involved banks, both at public meetings and behind closed doors.

The Angra 3 Dodgy Deal

One of these dodgy deals is the Brazilian Angra 3 reactor, a typical example of a nuclear ‘hang-over’ project, where construction started decades ago and has never been finished. It is a second generation
reactor designed by Siemens in the early 1980s. Work started in 1984 but was suspended two years later. While 70% of the equipment is reportedly on site, full construction never got under way. The government announced in 2006 that it intends to finish construction, and in December 2008 the state-owned utility Electronuclear signed an agreement with the French company AREVA to complete the power plant.

Brazil’s nuclear utility Eletronuclear has been looking for 1.35 billion euro (US$1.8 billion) from a private partner to complete the project.

After everything, the expected costoverruns and the expected delays, the completion of Angra 3 would mean
nuclear power generates just 6% of Brazil’s electricity.

Facts about nuclear safety, local approvals, institutional frameworks and project economics strongly indicate the application of double standards when compared to what is common and required in European countries,
plants in the United States and elsewhere.

The authors assume a U-235 content of about 0.2 percent in the tails (i.e., in the depleted uranium). In practice, the U-235 in the tails varies and a typical range generally considered is 0.2 to 0.3 percent. The amount of natural uranium needed to produce a kilogram of fuel will vary according to the enrichment of the fuel used and the percent of U-235 in the tails. The lower the percent of U-235 in the tails, the less natural uranium is needed for a given level of enrichment.

Hence the example discussed here is a favorable practical case for maximizing resource use in a light water reactor system.

(*4) The main isotope (over 50 percent) in the separated plutonium is Pu-239, but there are also substantial amounts of higher isotopes, including Pu-240 and Pu-241. The mixture is known as reactor-grade plutonium. Pu-240 is not fissile. When used as part of MOX fuel in light water reactors some of it gets converted into Pu-241, which is fissile. Pu-240 can fission with fast neutrons and generate energy.

(*5) Uranium-233 and -237 are also formed in very small quantities and have very little radiological impact.
Uranium-233 is a fissile material which gives a tiny added benefit to the reprocessed uranium.

(IAEATECDOC-1529 2007 pp. 7-8)
Source: 'The Mythology and Messy reality of Nuclear Fuel reprocessing', Arjun Makhijani, Ph.D., April 8, 2010, available at: http://www.ieer.org/reports/reprocessing2010.pdf

Contact: Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER), 6935 Laurel Ave., Suite 201, Takoma Park, Maryland, 20912 USA. Tel: +1-301-270-5500

Email: info@ieer.org

Web: http://www.ieer.org/

Basic facts:

- One PWR reactor (1,270 MWe) to be supplied by Areva/Siemens and built for Electronuclear
- Cost officially put at 1.8 billion dollars (ca 1.35 billion EUR)
- Construction to start in 2010 and operational in 2015-2016
- Location 23.00 S and 44.46 W (coastline, 130 km West of Rio de Janeiro and 220 km East of Sao Paulo)

Nuclear Safety

Being based on a 30-year-old design, and with many components already fabricated and stored for decades,
Angra 3 is a nuclear power plant that falls far behind current reactor technologies. Upgrades can only partly
address these issues and Angra 3 will never reach the same standards as, for example, the French Generation III+ European Pressurized Reactor (EPR).

Illegal and Unconstitutional Approval

The construction of Angra 3 was originally approved in 1975 by presidential decree number 75870/75.
The current government resolved in 2007 to resume construction, based on this 1975 decree. However, this original decree was repealed by a presidential decree in 1991.

More importantly, the recent decision to build the third reactor at Angra and subsequent governmental approvals have been found to be in conflict with the Brazilian constitution Adopted in 1988, Brazilian federal constitution requires that, in addition to an authorizing act of the executive power, any action to construct nuclear facilities in Brazil must be approved by Congress.

The construction of Angra 3 was neither discussed nor voted upon in Brazilian Congress. The government
is arguing that the reactor was already approved in 1975 before the constitution was adopted, again ignoring the fact that the 1975 decree was nullified by the decree of 1991.

Weak Regulatory Environment:

The Brazilian nuclear regulator CNEN is not an independent body, and has many conflicting interests including a direct commercial link to the Angra 3 project.

While CNEN, as regulator, has the authority to issue licenses to the operator of Angra 3, one of its branches, INB, is simultaneously providing fuel to power Angra’s reactors. The way in which CNEN is organized also poses a conflict of interest. For example, CNEN’s institutions are contracted to analyze the impact of
accidents occurring in INB factories.

CNEN also operates nuclear installations inside research institutes that it licenses and regulates. Nuclep, a
group that manufactures the equipment for the nuclear industry, is also part of the CNEN infrastructure. So, in Brazil, CNEN is an umbrella group with its own supplier, operator, contractor, licensor and regulator.

CNEN has a track record of showing a favorable attitude towards the Angra nuclear power plant. For example, in contradiction with legislation, it has repeatedly extended a provisionary operational license to Angra 2 unit despite the fact that satisfactory evacuation plans are not in place and that the Federal Public Ministry has required improvements to this situation since 2001. Similarly, it allows the operation of two existing units despite the fact that not even an interim repository for its radioactive waste has been licensed.

Since the 70s, some Brazilian organizations have been arguing that the CNEN should become an independent body. The Brazilian Physics Society (SBF) is one of the leading proponents of creating this separation.

In 1985, by presidential decree, the Brazilian nuclear program evaluation committee was formed. Members of this committee included scientists, engineers, managers and businessmen, whose remit was to produce
recommendations to the public administration for the nuclear industry.

Its report included a recommendation to create CNEN as an independent regulatory body, but no action has been taken to resolve the innate conflict of interest. A similar recommendation was made in 2007, but to no avail.

The governance structure of CNEN does not reflect the regulatory independence required by the international convention on nuclear safety (CNS) that was adopted more than 10 years ago by the national congress in Brazil.

Similarly, current EU legislation requires that “Member States shall ensure that the competent regulatory authority is functionally separate from any other body or organisation concerned with the promotion, or utilisation of nuclear energy, including electricity production, in order to ensure effective independence from undue influence in its regulatory decision making.“

(EU Directive 2009/71).

Economic Risks

The projected cost of 1.35 billion euro to build a 1,270 MW reactor seems to be too low. Although it may be argued this is due to some equipment having already been purchased in the 1980s, current reactor projects are nevertheless three to four times more expensive per unit of installed capacity.

Also, securing construction funding in euros increases the financial risk of the project, an aspect that is increasingly challenging to manage in a repaymentof-debt scheme. The Brazilian Real has fluctuated by 37% over a one-year period compared to the euro. This volatility will eventually impact the project’s cost.

Large-scale of upgrades and adaptations required to integrate new safety requirements into the existing Angra 3 structure may lead not only to higher construction costs, but also increase the risk of unplanned outages during its operation. For example, the Temelin nuclear power plant in the Czech Republic, which used outdated Russian technologies but was upgraded in the 1990s, struggles to achieve a 70% cumulative capacity factor. The first reactor at Angra also demonstrates this problem. Angra has a cumulative load factor as low as 44%, while Angra 2 manages to reach 78%. Angra 1 and 2 took 13 and 25 years respectively to be completed, and their total expenses have reached US$10 billion US dollars for a combined capacity of 2,000 MWe.

Not a Least-Cost Option for CO 2 Emission Reduction

Brazil has great potential for renewable energy sources that can deliver electricity at cheaper rates than new
reactors. A peer-reviewed analysis published in the journal Energy Policy in 2009 shows that power generated at Angra 3 will be more expensive than hydro, biomass and wind energies. Its production has been calculated at 113 US dollars per MWh, while co-generation with sugarcane bagasse delivers at US$74 per MWh, natural gas at US$79 per MWh, and hydroelectric at US$46 per MWh. It concludes that even wind at US$107 per MWh can deliver more affordable electricity than Angra 3.

Procel, an energy efficiency program of the Brazilian government, also identified the potential of energy efficiency measures that can save 7,000 MW of energy by investing just US$560 million in related measures.

Lack of Transparency

The Brazilian nuclear program does not appear to make any economic sense or to be driven by energy needs, but instead seems to be driven by geopolitical strategic interests. People who were previously involved in a secret program to build nuclear weapons, terminated in 1992, continue to be strongly involved – including the current chair of Electronuclear, operator of the Angra reactors, former Admiral Othon

Luiz Pinheiro da Silva. In a December 2006 interview, the former creator and coordinator of the Naval Nuclear Program between 1979 and 2004, claimed that nuclear submarines are

(707.6036) Laka Foundation - The radioactive material, left over from decades of nuclear weapons production and contaminated with reactor originated radionuclides, was stored in 15,600 drums and intended for disposal at EnergySolutions Inc.’s facility in Clive, 70 miles (110 km) west of Salt Lake City, Utah. This is a facility for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste or Class A waste. Though the Nuclear

Regulatory Commission (NRC) recently

decided against reclassifying DU as

hotter than Class A waste, after the

arrival of the first shipment of 5,408

drums from Savannah River Site (SRS)

in December, Utah's governor protested

further shipments. The Department of

Energy (DOE) then idled two trainloads

that remain at the nuclear weapons

facility in South Carolina.

It wasn't immediately clear if the

radioactive waste would remain in

South Carolina or be disposed of

elsewhere. In a November presentation

given to the SRS Citizens Advisory

Board, the DOE said if shipments to

Utah were interrupted, the waste would

be diverted to the Nevada Test Site, 65

miles north of Las Vegas. The total

amount of the SRS waste covers 6,500

tons. The cleanup program was

accelerated through the Federal

Recovery & Reinvestment Act, which

allocated US$1.4 billion (1 billion euro)

to SRS, mostly to speed up

environmental-management projects.

According to the Inspector General’s

report, the newest proposal calls for

moving the material to a facility owned

by Waste Control Specialists in

Andrews, Texas, for interim storage. The

auditors note (April 9): “Clearly, this

choice carries with it a number of

significant logistical burdens, including

substantial additional costs for, among

several items, repackaging at SRS,

transportation to Texas, storage at the

interim site, and, repackaging and

transportation to the yet-to-be

determined final disposition point.” A

local newspaper, the Augusta Chronicle

is citing information from an unnamed

source within the department

suggesting that it might be better to

keep the material at SRS, where it has

been ‘safely stored for decades’, until a

permanent disposal solution is found.

Despite assertions by EnergySolutions

that the action is unnecessary, the Utah

Radiation Control Board signed off on a

new rule that imposes additional

restrictions on the disposal of DU.

EnergySolutions can take no more DU

until it shows its radioactive landfill can

contain the radioactive waste for

thousands of years. The rule, which

requires the Clive facility to conduct a

performance assessment for disposal of

the radioactive material, will be

published May 1 and go into effect by

June 1. Yet, EnergySolutions is first in

line to accept up to 1.4 million tons of

DU in coming years - about half from

uranium enrichment plants coming

online and half from government

stockpiles. DU is different from most

other Class A because it becomes most

hazardous after 1 million years. About

49,000 tons is already buried at

EnergySolutions, and DOE has put the

disposal of another 11,000 tons on hold

until the state agrees it can come to the

Clive facility.

EnergySolutions is building a processing

facility for blending more hazardous

Class B and Class C waste with Class A

waste and has proposed to dispose this

waste at its Clive facility. Members of

the Utah Radiation Control Board opted

against trying to regulate this nuclear

industry's practice of mixing low-level

radioactive waste with more hazardous

B&C waste so that reactors can dispose

of waste that now has nowhere else to

go. “At very least, DU is incompatible

with the state's ban on B&C waste,”

said board member Jenkins, “It will

present an unacceptable risk after 100

years.”

Meanwhile the NRC is studying on

options on how to dispose the DU

waste in the mid- and long-term.

The entire report by the U.S. Energy

Department's Inspector General is

available at http://www.ig.energy.gov/

documents/OAS-RA-10-07.pdf

Sources: Augusta Chronicle, The Salt

Lake Tribune, Deseret News, all 13 April

2010.

Contact: Healthy Environment Alliance

ah (HEAL): 68 S Main St, Suite 400, Salt

Lake City, UT 84101, USA.

Tel: +1 801 355-505

Email: info@healutah.org

Web: www.healutah.org

While the debate on what to do with Savannah River Site’s depleted uranium (DU) waste lingers

on, the US Energy Department’s Inspector General calls a plan to store two trainloads of this DU

waste in Texas unnecessary and wasting taxpayers' money.

INTERIM STORAGE OF DU WASTE IN UTAH

REMAINS TO RAISE QUESTIONS

critical if Brazil is to be considered a

major power. Brazil joined the Non-

Proliferation Treaty only in 1994, and to

date has not yet ratified its Additional

Protocol to safeguards. On several

occasions, it has rejected missions by

the International Atomic Energy Agency,

for instance regular site visits. This all

has implications also on existing lack of

transparency and public participation

around Angra 3.

The involved banks (check the site,

on-line from April 19 on!) know all these

facts aswell and are not too eager to

step in with loans and guarantees.

Therefor they seek public money to

back-up the risks involved. Interestingly

it is the German government who

considers to provide financial backup

with a loanguarantee by the German

export credits agency Hermes (see also

Nuclear Monitor 703, January 29, 2010

for more background on this).

Please help this campaign to be

succesfull; put the website www.

nuclearbanks.org as a link on yours, join

the campaign (see possibilities on the

site), contact your bank on their nucear

policy and join the international days of

actions that will be announced soon!

Source and contact: www.

nuclearbanks.org and www.banktrack.

org

8 Nuclear Monitor 707

(707.6037) Nuclear Heritage Network

- The Baltic Sea Info Tour is arranged by

different groups, organisations and individuals

who share the concern of radioactive

pollution. The Tour topics will be

arranged by local people. Everyone can

take part and join the Tour by informing,

arranging local action, joining the network

meetings, spreading information

about nuclear issues or just showing up

in the events. Every step counts!

The Baltic Sea is one of the most

radioactively polluted sea compared to

other water bodies in the world. This

has happened mainly because of the

radioactive releases of nuclear power

plants in the Baltic Sea area (mostly due

Swedish and Finnish power plants), the

radioactive particles distributed from

the Tschernobyl accident, nuclear bomb

tests in the atmosphere and Sellafield’s

discharges.

Also the Russian and Lithuanian reactors

increased the amount of radioactivity

in the Baltic Sea. Additionally the

proposed uranium mining projects and

final disposal sites as well as nuclear

transports are strengthening the risk

of pollution for the vital sea between

Finland, Russia, Baltic States, Poland,

Germany, Denmark and Sweden.

Including the impacts of uranium mining,

processing of the ore to produce

nuclear fuel and the disposal of the

created long-life nuclear waste, the operation

of nuclear power plants has an

immense impact to the global warming.

Nuclear power is expensive and dangerous

and the resources used in the

nuclear industry would be more beneficial

for present and future generations if

spent in renewable energy systems.

The Info Tour has started as an action

of concerned people of the Baltic Sea

community. The tour will inform people

about the facts of uranium energy and

radioactive pollution of the Baltic Sea.

The tour will activate and emancipate

people to take part in the events of the

local stops. The Tour will advance active

courage both locally and in large social

and ecological systems.

The tour is an informative event, dedicated

to the Baltic Sea, embracing the

communities surrounding the Baltic Sea.

We want to discuss the challenges with

people living across the Baltic Sea and

to give more information about certain

issues connected to radioactivity, nuclear

power and renewable alternatives.

The Baltic Sea Info Tour will consist of

different kinds of activities: street actions,

information events, workshops,

performances, discussions, local gatherings,

spreading of flyers and posters.

The Tour will include several stops in the

Baltic Sea countries. It will start from

Finland in June and end in Finland in

August 2010 visiting: Russia, Estonia,

Latvia, Belarus, Poland, Germany, Denmark

and Sweden.

Contact: Baltic Sea Info Tour.

Tel. +358 41 7243254

e-mail: contact@nuclear-heritage.net

http://baltic-tour.nuclear-heritage.net

The Baltic Sea Info Tour will inform about nuclear power and its risks as well as about the

renewable alternatives. The Tour group will travel around the Baltic Sea in summer 2010, informing

and emancipating young people and calling citizens of all ages to raise awareness of the

challenges of nuclear industry and current development surrounding the Baltic Sea area.

On April 12, the Russian environmental group Ecodefense released a major new report focused

on the use of plutonium as fuel in Russian nuclear reactors. This is the first independent research

done during the last decade that exposes the civil plutonium program and its risks for public

health and the environment, and comes as the U.S. and Russia prepare to sign an agreement for

each nation to dispose of 34 metric tons of plutonium removed from nuclear weapons by using it

to generate nuclear power.

STOP NUCLEAR POWER – JOIN THE

BALTIC SEA INFO TOUR

RUSSIA: SAFETY PROBLEMS SURPLUS

WEAPONS-GRADE PU DISPOSITION PROGRAM

(707.6038) Ecodefense! - The Ecodefense

report ('Russian Plutonium

Program: Nuclear Waste, Accidents,

and Senseless Huge Costs') finds that

the cornerstone of Russia’s program

-the BN-800 breeder reactor- has been

under construction for over 25 years,

has cost over US$6 billion, and remains

far from completion.

In the framework of the Russian-US disarmament

agreement, each country will

“dispose” of 34 tons of weapon-grade

plutonium from dismantled warheads.

Presently, the governments are planning

to use the plutonium in the form of

mixed oxide fuel (MOX) in nuclear reactors.

Russian breeder reactors BN-600

(in operation) and BN-800 (under construction)

will be used for this plutonium

disposition. But breeder reactors may

be used for both burning and breeding

plutonium, which offers to the Russian

nuclear industry the possibility of actually

producing more plutonium rather

than net destruction of the element.

Later, the MOX fuel may also be used

in Russian light-water reactors (VVER-

1200 design).

Environmental groups in both Russia

and the U.S. are opposed to the use of

MOX fuel and

instead promote safer, cleaner vitrification

technology to permanently dispose

of plutonium.

Nuclear Monitor 707 9

(707.6039) WISE Amsterdam – This

new publication of the Annals of the

New York Academy of Sciences (Volume

1181), is a collection of papers translated

from Russian with some revised and

updated contributions. Written by leading

authorities from Eastern Europe, the

volume outlines the history of the health

and environmental consequences of the

Chernobyl disaster. Although there has

been discussion of the impact of nuclear

accidents and Chernobyl in particular,

never before has there been a comprehensive

presentation of all the available

information concerning the health and

environmental effects of the low dose

radioactive contaminants, especially

those emitted from the Chernobyl nuclear

power plant. Official discussions

from the International Atomic Energy

Agency and associated United Nations'

agencies (e.g. the Chernobyl Forum

reports) have largely downplayed or

ignored many of the findings reported in

the Eastern European scientific literature

and consequently have erred by not

including these assessments.

The senior author, Dr. Alexey Yablokov

was State Councilor for Environment

and Health under Yeltsin and a member

of the Russian Academy of Science –

since then he receives no support. Yablokov

is an Honorary Foreign Member of

the American Academy Art and Science

(Boston.) Dr. Vassily Nesterenko, head

of the Ukrainian Nuclear establishment

at the time of the accident, flew over the

burning reactor and measured radiation

levels. In August 2009, he died as a result

of radiation damage, but earlier, with

help from Andrei Sakarov, he was able

to establish BELRAD to help children

of the area. Dr. Alexey Nesterenko is a

biologist/ ecologist based in Minsk, Belarus.

The book was expertly translated

into readable English by Janette Sherman,

Medical Toxicologist and Adjunct

Professor in the Environmental Institute

at Western Michigan University.

The authors abstracted data from

more than 5000 published articles and

studies, mostly available only in Slavic

languages and not available to those

outside of the former Soviet Union or

Eastern bloc countries. The findings

are by those who witnessed first-hand

the effects of Chernobyl. This book

is in contrast to findings by the World

Health Organization (WHO), International

Atomic energy Agency (IAEA)

and (United Nations Scientific Committee

on the Effects of Atomic Radiation

(UNSCEAR) who based their findings on

some 300 western research papers, and

who found little of concern about the

fallout from Chernobyl.

While the most apparent human and

environmental damage occurred, and

continues to occur, in the Ukraine, Belarus

and European Russia, more than 50

percent of the total radioactivity spread

across the entire northern hemisphere,

'Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment is written by

Alexey Yablokov, Vassily Nesterenko and Alexey Nesterenko. ' This book is in contrast to findings

by the World Health Organization, International Atomic energy Agency and the United Nations

Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation who based their findings on some 300

western research papers, and who found little of concern about the fallout from Chernobyl. They

are leaving out the findings of some 30,000 scientific papers prepared by scientists working and

living in the stricken territories and suffering the everyday problems of residential contamination

with nuclear debris and a contaminated food supply.

CHERNOBYL: CONSEQUENCES OF THE

CATASTROPHE FOR PEOPLE AND THE

ENVIRONMENT

The report describes the nuclear facilities

that will be used for the plutonium

program in Russia: * the Beloyarsk

nuclear plant near Ekaterinburg city, *

NIIAR (Scientific and research institute

of atomic reactors) in Dimitrovgrad city,

* GHK nuclear weapon facility near

Krasnoyarsk city, and * SHK nuclear

facility near Tomsk city. The report also

focuses on issues of safety, accidents,

nonproliferation and public opinion. A

public policy issue raised in the report

is the lack of liability coverage for a

nuclear accident in Russia. This is particularly

troubling given the more than

1,000,000 people living in very close

proximity of the proposed MOX factory

near Ekaterinburg.

On January 21, 2010, Russian government

approved a program of advanced

technologies

development worth 128 billion rubles

(US$4.3 billion or 3.1 billion euro). Most

of the funding will go to breeder reactor

development.

Fast breeder reactors operating with

MOX fuel are being promoted as "advanced

technology" in Russia. But it is

a little known fact that the BN-800 has

been under construction for over 25

years and its design, which pre-dates

the 1986 Chernobyl accident, does not

meet modern safety requirements. According

to the Russian nuclear industry,

this reactor will cost nearly US$4 billion,

but independent estimates suggest that

US$6 billion already has been spent and

construction will be finished not earlier

than 2014 and likely later.

In a detailed financial analysis, the

report concludes that the plutonium fuel

program is only

viable because of US and European

subsidy for weapons grade plutonium

disposition, but given that it may result

in a net increase in plutonium stocks,

the Russian program will undermine this

goal.

The full report in English is available

at http://anti-atom.ru/downloads/Ru-

PuApr2010.pdf

Source: Press release 12 April 2010,

Ecodefense! and NIRS

Contact: Ecodefense, Vladimir Sliviak:

+7 903 2997584

Email: ecodefense@rambler.ru

or: Mary Olson at NIRS, +1-828-252-

8409

10 Nuclear Monitor 707

IN BRIEF

New York thwarts reactor relicensing. The U.S. New York state's Environment Department has told Entergy that its Indian Point

nuclear power plant (units 2 and 3) can no longer use water from the Hudson River for direct (once-through) cooling, whereby a

large volume of water is drawn from the river and discharged back into it, a few degrees warmer. In March the Environment

Department introduced a draft policy requiring certain industrial facilities - including nuclear and other power plants - to recycle

and reuse cooling water through "closed cycle cooling" technology with large evaporative cooling towers. Water use from the river

is then much lower, to replace that evaporated and allow some discharge to maintain quality. (see Nuclear Monitor 706: 'Proposal:

cooling towers required for New York reactors')

Entergy has applied to renew the operating licences for the two reactors for 20 years from 2013 and 2015. It estimates that

building new cooling towers would cost some US$1.1 billion (805 million euro) and involve shutting down the reactors for 42

weeks.

According to Michael Mariotte of NIRS Entergy is making so much money with the 20-year lifetime extension at Indian Point,

"there is a pretty good chance they'll go ahead and

build the cooling towers".

World Nuclear news, 6 April 2010 / NIRS statement, 12 April 2010

U.K.: Higher bills for nuclear. UK energy minister Ed Miliband has confirmed the Government intends introducing a new 'carbon

levy' on consumer electricity bills. While Mr Miliband insisted the levy was to help all low-carbon forms of generation, it is widely

accepted the main reason is to help the financing of building new nuclear reactors.

The Conservative Party also wants to introduce a tax on electricity generation to encourage renewables and nuclear power. A

clear commitment to nuclear power was also given by the party's energy spokesman, Greg Clark. He said there would be "no

limit" on the growth of nuclear power and they wanted to see a new reactor completed every 18 months.

The Government has also announced it will create a new 'green bank', using private money, to finance low-carbon energy

developments.

General elections in the U.K. will take place on May 6.

N-Base Briefing 646, 1 April 2010

potentially contaminating some 400 million

people.

Based on 5000 articles, by multiple

researchers and observers, the authors

estimated that by 2004, some 985,000

deaths worldwide had been caused by

the disaster, giving lie to estimates by

the IAEA and World Health Organization.

All life systems that were studied –

humans, voles, livestock, birds, fish,

plants, mushrooms, bacteria, viruses,

etc., with few exceptions, were changed

by radioactive fallout, many irreversibly.

Increased cancer incidence is not the

only observed adverse effect from the

Chernobyl fallout – noted also are birth

defects, pregnancy losses, accelerated

aging, brain damage, heart, endocrine,

kidney, gastrointestinal and lung diseases,

and cataracts among the young.

Children have been most seriously affected

– before the radioactive Chernobyl

releases, 80% of children were

deemed healthy, now in some areas,

only 20% of children are considered

healthy. Many have poor development,

learning disabilities, and endocrine

abnormalities.

The government of the former Soviet

Union previously classified many

documents now accessible to the

authors. For example, we now know

that the number of people hospitalized

for acute radiation sickness was more

than a hundred times larger than the

number recently quoted by the IAEA,

WHO and UNSCEAR. Unmentioned

by the technocrats were the problems

of “hot particles” of burning uranium

that caused nasopharyngeal problems,

and the radioactive fallout that resulted

in general deterioration of the health

of children, wide spread blood and

lymph system diseases, reproductive

loss, premature and small infant births,

chromosomal mutations, congenital and

developmental abnormalities, multiple

endocrine diseases, mental disorders

and cancer.

The authors systematically explain the

secrecy conditions imposed by the

government, the failure of technocrats

to collect data on the number and

distribution of all of the radionuclides

of major concern, and the restrictions

placed on physicians against calling any

medical findings radiation related unless

the patient had been a certified “acute

radiation sickness” patient during the

disaster, thus assuring that only 1% of

injuries would be so reported..

Below is the New York Academy of Sciences

site for the book. Unfortunately,

its selling price is now about US$150,

which may limit its distribution:

http://www.nyas.org/Publications/Annals/

Detail.aspx?cid=f3f3bd16-51ba-

4d7b-a086-753f44b3bfc1

Source: Rosalie Bertell on Globalresearch.

ca and

http://sustainableloudoun.wordpress.

com/

Nuclear Monitor 707 11

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WISE/NIRS NUCLEAR MONITOR

The Nuclear Information & Resource Service was founded in 1978 and is based

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same year and houses in Amsterdam, Netherlands. NIRS and WISE Amsterdam

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ISSN: 1570-4629

Reproduction of this material is encouraged.

Please give credit when reprinting.

Editorial team: Dirk Bannink and Peer de Rijk

With contributions from: WISE Amsterdam,

Bankwatch, Ecodefense!, IEER, NIRS, Nuclear

Heritage Network, WISE Russia and Laka

Foundation.

Next issue of the Nuclear Monitor (#708) will be

mailed out on April 30, 2010

The “Elfi Gmachl Foundation for a Nuclear-free

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(not available in English (yet))

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