Nuclear Power & Radiation

"Japan Balked at Steps To Control Fukushima Water in 2011: Memo"

"Japanese authorities, now struggling to contain leaks of radioactive groundwater from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant, were urged two years ago by U.S. experts to take immediate steps to prevent groundwater contamination but decided not to act on the advice."

Source: Reuters, 09/19/2013

"Nation's Bloated Nuclear Spending Comes Under Fire"

"LOS ALAMOS, N.M. -- At Los Alamos National Laboratory, a seven-year, $213 million upgrade to the security system that protects the lab's most sensitive nuclear bomb-making facilities doesn't work. Those same facilities, which sit atop a fault line, remain susceptible to collapse and dangerous radiation releases, despite millions more spent on improvement plans."

Source: AP, 09/17/2013

"EPA Documents Raise Doubts Over Intent of New Nuclear-Response Guide"

"WASHINGTON -- Newly obtained government documents are prompting concern among critics that Environmental Protection Agency officials are seeking to use the organization’s new guide for nuclear-incident response to relax public health standards, but the agency is denying the claim."

Source: Global Security Newswire, 09/12/2013

"US Reactor Safety In Light of Fukushima"

"Japanese authorities are unable to control the radioactive water leaking out of the damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant. Now the government plans to install a wall of ice around the facility to contain the contaminated water. Ed Lyman, from the Union of Concerned Scientists, tells host Steve Curwood that the new ice wall plan is likely an act of desperation, and that some American reactors are at risk for the same kind of flooding disaster."

Source: Living on Earth, 09/09/2013

"Errors Cast Doubt on Japan’s Cleanup of Nuclear Accident Site"

"NARAHA, Japan -- In this small farming town in the evacuation zone surrounding the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, small armies of workers in surgical masks and rubber gloves are busily scraping off radioactive topsoil in a desperate attempt to fulfill the central government’s vow one day to allow most of Japan’s 83,000 evacuees to return. Yet, every time it rains, more radioactive contamination cascades down the forested hillsides along the rugged coast."

Source: NY Times, 09/04/2013

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Nuclear Power & Radiation