Friday, December 31, 2010
How to Reduce Your Energy Consumption
Tips for conserving electricity and cutting your energy costs
EASY ENERGY-SAVING HABITS
Don't forget the basics. This simple stuff will save energy -- and money -- right now.
1.Unplug
•Unplug seldom-used appliances, like an extra refrigerator in the basement or garage that contains just a few items. You may save around $10 every month on your utility bill.
•Unplug your chargers when you're not charging. Every house is full of little plastic power supplies to charge cell phones, PDA's, digital cameras, cordless tools and other personal gadgets. Keep them unplugged until you need them.
•Use power strips to switch off televisions, home theater equipment, and stereos when you're not using them. Even when you think these products are off, together, their "standby" consumption can be equivalent to that of a 75 or 100 watt light bulb running continuously.
2.Set Computers to Sleep and Hibernate
•Enable the "sleep mode" feature on your computer, allowing it to use less power during periods of inactivity. In Windows, the power management settings are found on your control panel. Mac users, look for energy saving settings under system preferences in the apple menu.
•Configure your computer to "hibernate" automatically after 30 minutes or so of inactivity. Allowing your computer to hibernate saves energy and is more time-efficient than shutting down and restarting your computer from scratch. When you're done for the day, shut down.
3.Take Control of Temperature
•Set your thermostat in winter to 68 degrees or less during the daytime, and 55 degrees before going to sleep (or when you're away for the day). During the summer, set thermostats to 78 degrees or more.
•Use sunlight wisely. During the heating season, leave shades and blinds open on sunny days, but close them at night to reduce the amount of heat lost through windows. Close shades and blinds during the summer or when the air conditioner is in use or will be in use later in the day.
•Set the thermostat on your water heater between 120 and 130 degrees. Lower temperatures can save more energy, but you might run out of hot water or end up using extra electricity to boost the hot water temperature in your dishwasher.
4.Use Appliances Efficiently
•Set your refrigerator temperature at 38 to 42 degrees Fahrenheit; your freezer should be set between 0 and 5 degrees Fahrenheit. Use the power-save switch if your fridge has one, and make sure the door seals tightly. You can check this by making sure that a dollar bill closed in between the door gaskets is difficult to pull out. If it slides easily between the gaskets, replace them.
•Don't preheat or "peek" inside the oven more than necessary. Check the seal on the oven door, and use a microwave oven for cooking or reheating small items.
•Wash only full loads in your dishwasher, using short cycles for all but the dirtiest dishes. This saves water and the energy used to pump and heat it. Air-drying, if you have the time, can also reduce energy use.
•In your clothes washer, set the appropriate water level for the size of the load; wash in cold water when practical, and always rinse in cold.
•Clean the lint filter in the dryer after each use. Dry heavy and light fabrics separately and don't add wet items to a load that's already partly dry. If available, use the moisture sensor setting. (A clothesline is the most energy-efficient clothes dryer of all!)
5.Turn Out the Lights
•Don't forget to flick the switch when you leave a room.
•Remember this at the office, too. Turn out or dim the lights in unused conference rooms, and when you step out for lunch. Work by daylight when possible. A typical commercial building uses more energy for lighting than anything else.
Read more:
http://www.nrdc.org/air/energy/genergy.asp
Radiological hazards from uranium mining: Long term contamination after mines closure
Bruno Chareyron 1, 1CRIIRAD (Commission de Recherche et d’Information Indépendantes sur la Radioactivité), Immeuble CIME, 471 av Victor Hugo, 26 000 Valence, FRANCE,
Email : bruno.chareyron@criirad.org
Long term contamination after mines closure
Even decades after the shut down of uranium mines and mills, the radioactive contamination
of the environment will remain. This is due to the fact that 238U half life is very long (4.5 billion years).
But even the tailings from the mills - whose uranium content is lower than the
initial uranium concentration in the ore - will remain radioactive on the long term.
They contain all the radioactive metals included in the uranium decay chain which
have not been extracted in the mill, especially thorium 230 and radium 226 whose
half lives are 75,000 years and 1,600 years respectively.
This long term impact will occur in many ways.
Some examples Click here to see:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
based on studies performed by the CRIIRAD laboratory since 1992 in France (and Niger).
Transfer of radionuclides to the aquatic environment
Accumulation of radioactive metals in sediments and plants of rivers, ponds, and
lakes by contaminated waters from former mines (and also tailing deposits, uncovered
waste rock deposits, etc.) is a problem that is not yet properly addressed by
the companies.
Table 1. Radioactivity of sediments upstream and downstream Saint-Pierre a mine (year
2003, 2004, 2006), Click here:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
a Saint Pierre mine is located in Cantal (France). Uranium extraction took place from 1956
to 1985. The mining companies were SCUMRA, then Total Compagnie Minière. The site is
now under COGEMA-AREVA’s responsibility (Chareyron 2004, 2005a; Chareyron and
Constantin Blanc 2007). 4 Bruno Chareyron 1
The CRIIRAD laboratory discovered that sediments, aquatic plants and soil
from river banks downstream former uranium mines have such a contamination
that they deserve in many cases the terminology: “radioactive waste” (238U activity
or the activity of some of its by-products were exceeding 10,000 Bq/kg).
Some results are summarized in tables above (Table 1) and below (Tables 2 to
4): Table 2. Radioactivity of sediments and soil upstream and downstream Les Bois Noirs b
uranium mine (year 1996, 2001 and 2006) Click here for table:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
Les Bois Noirs mine is located in the Loire department (France). Uranium has been extracted
there from 1955 to 1980 by the CEA and then COGEMA-AREVA. (Chareyron
2002b, Chareyron 2008b).
As shown in the table above (Table 2) the accumulation of uranium and or radium
downstream uranium mines is usually more intense for surface soil sampled
from the river shore than for river sediments (one order of magnitude in this example).
Bioaccumulation of radioactive metals can be extremely high in the biota. In
some cases, the contamination of aquatic plants by radium 226 downstream uranium
mines can exceed 100,000 Bq/kg dry (Table 3). This shows that the mine
water treatment system is not operating properly.
The problem of bioaccumulation is usually not taken into consideration by the
companies nor the administrations in charge of environmental monitoring and
regulatory control.
It should be noted as well that radioactive metals are transported far away from
the mines. At Les Bois Noirs mine, uranium accumulation in sediments is still 54
times above background value 12 km downstream the mine (Table 2). Uranium
Radiological hazards from uranium mining 5 and radium accumulation in aquatic plants are 4 to 6 times above background value 30 km downstream the discharge pipe from the mine (Table 3).
Table 3. Radioactivity of aquatic plants upstream and downstream Les Bois Noirs b uranium
2004 63,000 13,400 2,770 cPuy de l’Age mine is located in the department of Haute-Vienne (Limousin, France).
Read more:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Raising Healthy Children: Hidden dangers & what to do about them
Two decades ago, when I was a new mother, we parents knew next to nothing about the health risks to children from toxins in their everyday environment. Indeed, scientists themselves knew relatively little—and what they did know was not well publicized.
Today, scientists understand much more, thanks to ongoing research. But the public still seems mostly in the dark.
That's not good. Knowledge is power, as they say—in this case, the all-important power to protect your children's health. I only wish I had more of it when I was approaching parenthood.
If you are a new parent or a parent-to-be or a person who might become a parent one day, read on and start empowering yourself now. Here are the main things to know, followed by a list of dos and don'ts.
Lesson #1: Toxins to which you, yourself, are exposed in advance of pregnancy may impact the health of children to come. Guys, this applies to you, too. Your sperm may develop improperly and the DNA you pass on may be affected.
Lesson #2: During pregnancy, toxins to which you are exposed may alter the way the fetus's organs and systems develop or contribute to cancer later.
Lesson #3: Babies and young children remain highly vulnerable to toxic substances, as their organs and systems are still in development.
Where are toxic chemicals encountered?
In food, water, paint, soap, lawn care products, baby bottles, lunch boxes, furniture—the list goes on and on. Basically, they have infiltrated all areas of our lives, not as part of some nefarious scheme by corporations to endanger our health, but as a way of tapping into our desire for greater safety (for example, with flame-retardant pajamas), convenience (plastic sippy cups) and attractiveness (scented shampoo). Yet these chemicals do bring with them serious health risks, intended or not, especially to the very young.
What to do prior to pregnancy (applies to men and women)
1.Use safer cosmetics, shampoos, soaps and other personal care items. To reduce exposure to phthalates, choose unscented or naturally scented products and avoid nail polish or get phthalate-free brands. You may also want to get paraben-free products, as parabens are suspected endocrine disruptors. And make sure your lipstick is lead-free. Find the safest brands in the Cosmetic Safety Database.
2.Don't use pesticides in your home. Old-fashioned cleanliness helps prevent pests and there are other safe pest control methods. If you do need insecticides, use baits or traps.
3.Don't use pesticides on your pets. To keep fleas and ticks at bay, regularly comb and bathe your pets, wash their bedding, vacuum and keep grass and bushes around the house clipped. If you need a pest treatment product, use flea control pills.
4.Don't use pesticides in your yard. Try organic techniques and planting native plants, which are more resistant to native pests.
5.Use natural cleaning products, such as white vinegar and baking soda or non-toxic brands.
6.Do not use scented air fresheners, which can expose you to phthalates.
7.Eat organic food as much as possible, especially organic animal products (milk, cheese and eggs as well as meat).
8.Eat less meat and, in particular, less fatty meat. (Many toxins are stored in animal fat, including our own.)
9.Steer clear of fish high in mercury. Use NRDC's Guide to Mercury in Fish to see which fish are safe.
10.Avoid eating canned food or canned soda, as cans are lined with BPA.
11.Have your tap water tested for lead. Here is info on water testing. Also get the latest water quality report from your water supplier. If the lead level is above the safety threshold or there are other serious safety issues, use bottled water. Otherwise, stick with tap, which is better regulated. You may also want to filter your water. When you first use water in the morning or after several hours, run it till it turns cold to reduce lead exposure.
12.Have your house tested for lead if you notice peeling or flaking paint and the house was built before 1978 when paint became lead-free. Learn more from the EPA lead page.
13.Don't drink alcohol if you're trying to have a baby or might be trying soon. And don't smoke or take "recreational" drugs. Check with your doctor about the safety of over-the-counter and prescribed drugs.
What to do after the baby is born
1.ALL OF THE ABOVE, as applied to your child, plus...
2.Breastfeed your baby if you can. Breast milk provides better nutrition than formula and helps to protect children from disease and infection.
3.Avoid hard, transparent plastic baby bottles and sippy cups, which may be made with BPA. Do not warm up milk in a plastic baby bottle. Heat may cause chemicals to leach from the plastic into the milk. You can warm up glass bottles, however.
4.Only microwave food in glass containers.
5.Prepare your child's meals from scratch to limit sweeteners, salt, fat and additives—and to include healthy ingredients. Buy organic foods as much as possible, especially when it comes to foods your child consumes a lot of, such as milk and apples (or apple juice) and foods with high levels of pesticide residues.
6.Get your child all the recommended vaccinations. Today's vaccines are mercury-free and there is no evidence they are dangerous, while it is a fact that they protect kids (yours and others they come in contact with) from life-threatening illnesses.
7.Only give your child antibiotics for bacterial illnesses or infections. Overuse and misuse of antibiotics—e.g., to combat viruses—can lead to antibiotic-resistant superbugs.
8.Don't use antibacterial soaps and cleansers made with triclosan or triclocarban. Instead wash hands well with regular soap and hot water for 20-30 seconds or use alcohol-based sanitizers.
9.Instead of buying furniture and other products made with chlorinated flame retardants, use good fire prevention practices.
Additional things to pay attention to as your child grows
1.ALL OF THE ABOVE as applied to your older child, plus...
2.Avoid school supplies made with vinyl (PVC plastic), such as plastic lunch boxes and notebooks with plastic-coated spiral bindings. Get more information from the Guide to PVC-free School Supplies.
3.Teach your child about the health risks in cosmetics and other personal care products so he or she will make good choices.
4.When you buy your child a cell phone, buy a wired headset, too. A link between cell phone use and brain cancer is a distinct possibility so the phone should not be pressed against the head—or, in fact, any part of the body.
—Sheryl Eisenberg
Read more:
http://www.nrdc.org/thisgreenlife/default.asp
Radiological hazards from uranium mining: Radiological situation during uranium extraction
Bruno Chareyron 1
1CRIIRAD (Commission de Recherche et d’Information Indépendantes sur la Radioactivité),
Immeuble CIME, 471 av Victor Hugo, 26 000 Valence, FRANCE,
Email : bruno.chareyron@criirad.org
Radiological situation during uranium extraction
The radiological situation is reversed as soon as the uranium extraction begins.
There are many reasons for this.
Radioactive dust is transferred to the atmosphere by mining operations, extraction
and crushing of ore, uranium milling, management of waste rocks and tailings.
This has to be emphasized because some of the nuclides contained in the
uranium decay chains (such has thorium 230) are very radiotoxic when inhaled.
For example, when inhaled, a given activity of actinium 227 (part of the 235U decay
chain) gives a radiation dose 5 times higher than the same activity of plutonium
238 (Euratom 1996).
Radon gas is transferred to the atmosphere by the vents of the mines and by diffusion
from radioactive rocks and tailings (Chareyron and Castanier 1994).
Surface and / or underground water is contaminated by uranium and its by
products.
Some of them are very radiotoxic when ingested (Chareyron and Castanier
1994). Lead 210 and polonium 210 for example are among the most radiotoxic
elements. When ingested, a given activity of polonium 210 gives a radiation
dose 4.8 times higher than the same activity of plutonium 239 (Euratom 1996).
Huge amounts of waste rocks, with activities exceeding the normal activity of
the earth crust by one to two orders of magnitude are dispersed into the environRadiological
hazards from uranium mining 3 ment and may be used for landfill, road construction or even building (Chareyron 2002b).
Huge amounts of radioactive tailings (with typical total activities exceeding
100,000 and even 500,000 Bq/kg) are generated and stored without proper confinement
(Chareyron and Castanier 1994).
Read more:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Governor McDonnell Announces Funding for Environmental Goals
Commonwealth of Virginia Office of Governor Bob McDonnell
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 16, 2010
Office of the Governor
Contact: Stacey Johnson
Phone: (804) 225-4260
E-mail: Stacey.Johnson@Governor.Virginia.Gov
Governor McDonnell Announces Funding for Environmental Goals
~$39 Million Investment to Support Water Quality and Land Conservation Goals ~
RICHMOND- Governor Bob McDonnell announced today that as part of his amendments to the current biennial budget, to be formally unveiled on Friday, he will call for additional funding to support water quality improvements, especially in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, as well as additional funding for land conservation within both the Secretariats of Natural Resources and Agriculture and Forestry.
Speaking about the funding, Governor McDonnell noted, “Virginians are blessed with an array of natural resources like scenic rivers, rolling hills, the Chesapeake Bay and historic battlefields. These key investments will support Virginia’s efforts to clean the Chesapeake Bay as well as continue to put us closer to meeting the goal of conserving 400,000 acres of land across the Commonwealth. In addition, it will provide extra support for our family farming community as they work to comply with water quality best management practices.”
Requested amounts total $39 million including:
· $32.8 million of the FY2010 surplus to be deposited to the Water Quality Improvement Fund administered by the Department of Conservation and Recreation to support non-point source water quality improvements and agricultural best management practices, and funds Soil and Water Conservation Districts.
· $3.6 million of the FY2010 surplus to be deposited to the Water Quality Improvement Fund administered by the Department of Environmental Quality to support point-source water quality improvements.
· $2 million in additional funding for land conservation easements. This request would provide $1 million to make grants to environmental non-profits through the Virginia Land Conservation Fund (VLCF), and $1 million to the Department of Historic Resources for deposit into the Civil War Historic Site Preservation Fund. In addition, the Governor will direct the Secretary of Natural Resources to transfer an additional $2 million remaining in the land conservation bond fund to DCR and DHR for land conservation easement purposes. The VLCF current has $1.25 million in it so these contributions will bring the fund up to $3.25 million.
· $400,000 added to the Purchase of Development Rights Program administered through Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ (VDACS) Office of Farmland Preservation under the Secretary of Agriculture and Forestry. This brings the total appropriation to $500,000.
· $186,000 for two new positions to VDACS’ Agricultural Stewardship Act (ASA) program to provide support and technical assistance to family farms with meeting water quality requirements; the ASA currently has one employee serving the entire state.
Additional investments in Natural Resource agencies include:
· $100,000 to support a Renewable Energy Program staff position to assist with establishing a regulatory framework to facilitate the development of clean, renewable, indigenous energy through Permit by Rule.
· Funds to support two new positions at the Virginia Museum of Natural History. $66,000 for two year funding for a part-time grant writer to help with outside funding opportunities and $130,000 to support two years for a Collections Manager to comply with national accreditation.
· $120,000 each year to restore funding at the Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC) for the Marine Law Enforcement Program.
“The Governor’s personal engagement with EPA on cleaning the Bay has been instrumental in improving the state’s watershed implementation plan while protecting jobs,” commented Secretary of Natural Resources Doug Domenech. “Now we are showing that commitment to the clean up by doing our part to fund the plan.”
“I applaud the Governor’s commitment to our working family farms through his budget amendments, said Todd P. Haymore, Secretary Agriculture and Forestry. The two new Agricultural Stewardship positions will provide much needed support to ensuring that our family farms are meeting water quality requirements so they can continue operations and moving products into the marketplace. The enhancement to the state’s Purchase of Development Rights program will help localities work to preserve working farmlands – lands that will continue to provide
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 16, 2010
Office of the Governor
Contact: Stacey Johnson
Phone: (804) 225-4260
E-mail: Stacey.Johnson@Governor.Virginia.Gov
Governor McDonnell Announces Funding for Environmental Goals
~$39 Million Investment to Support Water Quality and Land Conservation Goals ~
RICHMOND- Governor Bob McDonnell announced today that as part of his amendments to the current biennial budget, to be formally unveiled on Friday, he will call for additional funding to support water quality improvements, especially in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, as well as additional funding for land conservation within both the Secretariats of Natural Resources and Agriculture and Forestry.
Speaking about the funding, Governor McDonnell noted, “Virginians are blessed with an array of natural resources like scenic rivers, rolling hills, the Chesapeake Bay and historic battlefields. These key investments will support Virginia’s efforts to clean the Chesapeake Bay as well as continue to put us closer to meeting the goal of conserving 400,000 acres of land across the Commonwealth. In addition, it will provide extra support for our family farming community as they work to comply with water quality best management practices.”
Requested amounts total $39 million including:
· $32.8 million of the FY2010 surplus to be deposited to the Water Quality Improvement Fund administered by the Department of Conservation and Recreation to support non-point source water quality improvements and agricultural best management practices, and funds Soil and Water Conservation Districts.
· $3.6 million of the FY2010 surplus to be deposited to the Water Quality Improvement Fund administered by the Department of Environmental Quality to support point-source water quality improvements.
· $2 million in additional funding for land conservation easements. This request would provide $1 million to make grants to environmental non-profits through the Virginia Land Conservation Fund (VLCF), and $1 million to the Department of Historic Resources for deposit into the Civil War Historic Site Preservation Fund. In addition, the Governor will direct the Secretary of Natural Resources to transfer an additional $2 million remaining in the land conservation bond fund to DCR and DHR for land conservation easement purposes. The VLCF current has $1.25 million in it so these contributions will bring the fund up to $3.25 million.
· $400,000 added to the Purchase of Development Rights Program administered through Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ (VDACS) Office of Farmland Preservation under the Secretary of Agriculture and Forestry. This brings the total appropriation to $500,000.
· $186,000 for two new positions to VDACS’ Agricultural Stewardship Act (ASA) program to provide support and technical assistance to family farms with meeting water quality requirements; the ASA currently has one employee serving the entire state.
Additional investments in Natural Resource agencies include:
· $100,000 to support a Renewable Energy Program staff position to assist with establishing a regulatory framework to facilitate the development of clean, renewable, indigenous energy through Permit by Rule.
· Funds to support two new positions at the Virginia Museum of Natural History. $66,000 for two year funding for a part-time grant writer to help with outside funding opportunities and $130,000 to support two years for a Collections Manager to comply with national accreditation.
· $120,000 each year to restore funding at the Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC) for the Marine Law Enforcement Program.
“The Governor’s personal engagement with EPA on cleaning the Bay has been instrumental in improving the state’s watershed implementation plan while protecting jobs,” commented Secretary of Natural Resources Doug Domenech. “Now we are showing that commitment to the clean up by doing our part to fund the plan.”
“I applaud the Governor’s commitment to our working family farms through his budget amendments, said Todd P. Haymore, Secretary Agriculture and Forestry. The two new Agricultural Stewardship positions will provide much needed support to ensuring that our family farms are meeting water quality requirements so they can continue operations and moving products into the marketplace. The enhancement to the state’s Purchase of Development Rights program will help localities work to preserve working farmlands – lands that will continue to provide
Radiological hazards from uranium mining
Bruno Chareyron 1, 1CRIIRAD (Commission de Recherche et d’Information Indépendantes sur la Radioactivité),Immeuble CIME, 471 av Victor Hugo, 26 000 Valence, FRANCE,
Email: bruno.chareyron@criirad.org
Radiological situation before extraction
The activities of uranium ores have an important variability. Typical ore with a
uranium content of 0.2 % has a 238U activity of about 25,000 Bq/kg. The total activity,
including all the 238U by-products and the 235U decay chain will therefore
exceed 360,000 Bq/kg. Such material should be managed with a great deal of caution
due to the risks of exposure to ionizing radiation.
As long as the ore remains buried underground - the depth being a few tens and
even a few hundreds of meters - the radiation levels at the surface of the earth remain
low and usually have the same order of magnitude as of typical natural radiation
levels.
Except in places where the ore reaches the ground surface (typically a
few square meters), the protection offered by the soil is usually sufficient to reduce
the risks for the people living in the area.
Indeed, alpha and low energy beta particles are stopped by a thin layer of soil
(much less than 1 cm.). Even penetrating gamma radiation does not cross a layer
of soil of a few meters.
Regarding the radiological characteristics of air and water, the situation is more
complex. Nevertheless before mining activities most of the radon gas remains
trapped inside the soil.
Because of its short half-life (3.8 days) a lot of the gas atoms
will disintegrate inside the soil during their migration before reaching the biosphere.
The amount of nuclides in underground water may remain low if the minerals
containing uranium are trapped in unpermeable layers.
Read more:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
Email: bruno.chareyron@criirad.org
Radiological situation before extraction
The activities of uranium ores have an important variability. Typical ore with a
uranium content of 0.2 % has a 238U activity of about 25,000 Bq/kg. The total activity,
including all the 238U by-products and the 235U decay chain will therefore
exceed 360,000 Bq/kg. Such material should be managed with a great deal of caution
due to the risks of exposure to ionizing radiation.
As long as the ore remains buried underground - the depth being a few tens and
even a few hundreds of meters - the radiation levels at the surface of the earth remain
low and usually have the same order of magnitude as of typical natural radiation
levels.
Except in places where the ore reaches the ground surface (typically a
few square meters), the protection offered by the soil is usually sufficient to reduce
the risks for the people living in the area.
Indeed, alpha and low energy beta particles are stopped by a thin layer of soil
(much less than 1 cm.). Even penetrating gamma radiation does not cross a layer
of soil of a few meters.
Regarding the radiological characteristics of air and water, the situation is more
complex. Nevertheless before mining activities most of the radon gas remains
trapped inside the soil.
Because of its short half-life (3.8 days) a lot of the gas atoms
will disintegrate inside the soil during their migration before reaching the biosphere.
The amount of nuclides in underground water may remain low if the minerals
containing uranium are trapped in unpermeable layers.
Read more:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/Synthese_PDF/anglais.pdf
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Saskatchewan Uranium, Fallujah's Children: Report on birth defects and cancers in Iraq points to Canadian uranium
November 25, 2010
by Garson Hunter
REGINA—Radioactive armaments used by the US army in Iraq have been highlighted in a recent study as a probable cause for the region's increase in birth defects, infant deaths and cancer. Unavoidably, some of the uranium that made these weapons radioactive came from Saskatchewan.
"Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005-2009," a report in the July 2010 issue of the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, compared data gathered in Fallujah to data from the Middle East Cancer Registry. The infant death rate in Fallujah during the period of study (2005-2009) was found to be four times the rate in Egypt and Jordan and nine times the rate in Kuwait. Furthermore, the death rate in Fallujah has increased in recent years; and “the results for cancer show some alarming rates in the five-year period. Relative risk based on the Egypt and Jordan cancer rates are significantly higher for all malignancy, leukaemia lymphoma, brain tumours and female breast cancer.”
The early appearance of cancer in Fallujah is mentioned in the report to be similar to an Italian Ministry of Defence report noting the early appearance of lymphoma in Italian peacekeepers from Bosnia and Kosovo who were exposed to depleted uranium (DU) weapon contamination and the reported increase in cancer risks in Northern Sweden after the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster.
The authors of the report, though cautious in identifying the cause of the high rates of defects, deaths and cancers, concluded by drawing attention to the use of DU in armaments used by invading US forces. The report states their study does not identify the agent(s) causing the increased levels of illness, they wish to draw attention to presence of DU as one potentially relevant agent.
The largest single source of uranium for the US military is Saskatchewan, according to a 2008 article by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).
In fact, Saskatchewan produces more uranium than any other region or country in the world. The Athabasca Basin region of Northern Saskatchewan (with a small area of Alberta) is the world's leading source of high grade uranium.
Uranium mining in Saskatchewan grew in the 1970s as a major government enterprise when the NDP government of Allan Blakeney proclaimed the Saskatchewan Mining Development Corporation Act (SMDC-1977).
Bolstered by Saskatchewan Uranium Development in the Global Context, a government report that argued uranium energy was essential to the fate of poor countries, along with government minister Jack Messner’s pledge that there would be no uranium development until each operation was assessed as completely safe to health and the environment exploitation of the resource became a focus of the Blakeney government.
Indications during the 1970s for massive growth in the number of nuclear reactors worldwide—which would providing a bonanza for uranium mining—never materialized. The price of uranium dropped from $53 per pound in 1977 to $17.50 in 1982. Under the Progressive Conservative provincial government of Grant Devine in the 1980s and early '90s, uranium mining in Saskatchewan was privatized. The SMDC was combined with federal Crown Corporation Eldorado Nuclear Limited, and renamed Cameco.
Cameco is the world’s largest publically traded uranium company and is headquartered in the city of Saskatoon. Cameco’s McArthur River mine in Saskatchewan produces 15 per cent of the world’s uranium.
For mined uranium to be used as a fuel, it needs to undergo enrichment to separate uranium 235u from uranium 238u—the desired product: depleted uranium (DU). Depleted uranium has a useful property: it is 1.7 times more dense than lead.
Enter the arms industry.
Due to its high density DU is used in armour. Depleted uranium also ignites on impact if the temperature exceeds 600 degrees Celsius—a useful property if one wishes to destroy tanks, guns or buildings.
Depleted uranium is also radioactive.
The United Nations World Health Organization has made several recommendations for when DU is used in military conflict, including monitoring food and water where DU might have entered the food chain, clean-up operations in impact zones where such projectiles remain in the ground, monitoring the activities of children because "their typical hand-to-mouth activity could lead to high DU ingestion from contaminated soil," and disposal of DU in accordance with international recommendations.
Not only was the US using Saskatchewan uranium for DU munitions during its occupation of Iraq, but as late as 1990 Canada was itself processing DU which was then being sent to a US weapons manufacturer.
A section of the 1970 Treaty in the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) prohibits the sale of Canadian uranium for use in weaponry.
According to the CCPA article, “The uranium that’s going into the US for enriching becomes part of the depleted uranium stockpile, and that’s accessible for weapons."
The CCPA article further highlights that in 1993, the Inter-Church Uranium Committee released copies of a license from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission that followed uranium from the Key Lake mine in Saskatchewan (run by Cameco) to the US, back to the Port Hope uranium conversion plant in Ontario (run by Cameco), and finally to Aerojet in the US. Aerojet advertises itself on its webpage as a world leader in the defence and armament markets.
Cameco, like many players in the nuclear industry, has aligned itself as a partner in the health care industry.
The Royal University Hospital (RUH) in Saskatoon recently named its main walkway the "Cameco Skywalk," “named in recognition of Cameco’s $1.5 million donation in 2003 to the RUH Foundation’s Royal Care Campaign to create the Cameco Chair in Aboriginal Health,” according to the hospital's press release.
The company’s website boasts involvement in the Northumberland Hills Hospital, the St. Mary Wellness and Education Centre and the travelling Diabetes Resource Program in Northern Saskatchewan. The city’s acute care Saskatoon City Hospital houses the "Cameco MS [multiple sclerosis] Neuroscience Research Centre.”
During her 2007 visit to Saskatchewan, physician, Nobel Peace Prize nominee and renowned proponent of a nuclear-free world, Dr. Helen Caldicott chastised the Saskatchewan medical profession for partnering with what she called the “cancer industry.”
Middle East journalist Robert Fisk presents a sickening tale of depleted uranium armaments left lying around southern Iraq after the Gulf war of 1991 and the cancers occurring among the population in his book The Great War for Civilization: The Conquest of the Middle East. Fisk also identifies the problem of connecting depleted uranium to cancer: “
Overlooked by most Canadian media, the medical study from Fallujah adds to mounting evidence for a global ban on the production of DU munitions, and to considering their use a war crime.
In fact, last Wednesday, Irish parliament passed the Prohibition of Depleted Uranium Weapons Bill through its fifth reading. The DU bill, which drew praise from Senators and had none speak against it, is the second private member's bill ever to pass through Irish Senate.
Garson Hunter is an Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of Regina and the sponsor of Dr. Caldicott’s speaking tour of Saskatchewan. Sarah Pedersen is a social activist in Regina
Read more:
http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/3685#
by Garson Hunter
REGINA—Radioactive armaments used by the US army in Iraq have been highlighted in a recent study as a probable cause for the region's increase in birth defects, infant deaths and cancer. Unavoidably, some of the uranium that made these weapons radioactive came from Saskatchewan.
"Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005-2009," a report in the July 2010 issue of the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, compared data gathered in Fallujah to data from the Middle East Cancer Registry. The infant death rate in Fallujah during the period of study (2005-2009) was found to be four times the rate in Egypt and Jordan and nine times the rate in Kuwait. Furthermore, the death rate in Fallujah has increased in recent years; and “the results for cancer show some alarming rates in the five-year period. Relative risk based on the Egypt and Jordan cancer rates are significantly higher for all malignancy, leukaemia lymphoma, brain tumours and female breast cancer.”
The early appearance of cancer in Fallujah is mentioned in the report to be similar to an Italian Ministry of Defence report noting the early appearance of lymphoma in Italian peacekeepers from Bosnia and Kosovo who were exposed to depleted uranium (DU) weapon contamination and the reported increase in cancer risks in Northern Sweden after the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster.
The authors of the report, though cautious in identifying the cause of the high rates of defects, deaths and cancers, concluded by drawing attention to the use of DU in armaments used by invading US forces. The report states their study does not identify the agent(s) causing the increased levels of illness, they wish to draw attention to presence of DU as one potentially relevant agent.
The largest single source of uranium for the US military is Saskatchewan, according to a 2008 article by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).
In fact, Saskatchewan produces more uranium than any other region or country in the world. The Athabasca Basin region of Northern Saskatchewan (with a small area of Alberta) is the world's leading source of high grade uranium.
Uranium mining in Saskatchewan grew in the 1970s as a major government enterprise when the NDP government of Allan Blakeney proclaimed the Saskatchewan Mining Development Corporation Act (SMDC-1977).
Bolstered by Saskatchewan Uranium Development in the Global Context, a government report that argued uranium energy was essential to the fate of poor countries, along with government minister Jack Messner’s pledge that there would be no uranium development until each operation was assessed as completely safe to health and the environment exploitation of the resource became a focus of the Blakeney government.
Indications during the 1970s for massive growth in the number of nuclear reactors worldwide—which would providing a bonanza for uranium mining—never materialized. The price of uranium dropped from $53 per pound in 1977 to $17.50 in 1982. Under the Progressive Conservative provincial government of Grant Devine in the 1980s and early '90s, uranium mining in Saskatchewan was privatized. The SMDC was combined with federal Crown Corporation Eldorado Nuclear Limited, and renamed Cameco.
Cameco is the world’s largest publically traded uranium company and is headquartered in the city of Saskatoon. Cameco’s McArthur River mine in Saskatchewan produces 15 per cent of the world’s uranium.
For mined uranium to be used as a fuel, it needs to undergo enrichment to separate uranium 235u from uranium 238u—the desired product: depleted uranium (DU). Depleted uranium has a useful property: it is 1.7 times more dense than lead.
Enter the arms industry.
Due to its high density DU is used in armour. Depleted uranium also ignites on impact if the temperature exceeds 600 degrees Celsius—a useful property if one wishes to destroy tanks, guns or buildings.
Depleted uranium is also radioactive.
The United Nations World Health Organization has made several recommendations for when DU is used in military conflict, including monitoring food and water where DU might have entered the food chain, clean-up operations in impact zones where such projectiles remain in the ground, monitoring the activities of children because "their typical hand-to-mouth activity could lead to high DU ingestion from contaminated soil," and disposal of DU in accordance with international recommendations.
Not only was the US using Saskatchewan uranium for DU munitions during its occupation of Iraq, but as late as 1990 Canada was itself processing DU which was then being sent to a US weapons manufacturer.
A section of the 1970 Treaty in the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) prohibits the sale of Canadian uranium for use in weaponry.
According to the CCPA article, “The uranium that’s going into the US for enriching becomes part of the depleted uranium stockpile, and that’s accessible for weapons."
The CCPA article further highlights that in 1993, the Inter-Church Uranium Committee released copies of a license from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission that followed uranium from the Key Lake mine in Saskatchewan (run by Cameco) to the US, back to the Port Hope uranium conversion plant in Ontario (run by Cameco), and finally to Aerojet in the US. Aerojet advertises itself on its webpage as a world leader in the defence and armament markets.
Cameco, like many players in the nuclear industry, has aligned itself as a partner in the health care industry.
The Royal University Hospital (RUH) in Saskatoon recently named its main walkway the "Cameco Skywalk," “named in recognition of Cameco’s $1.5 million donation in 2003 to the RUH Foundation’s Royal Care Campaign to create the Cameco Chair in Aboriginal Health,” according to the hospital's press release.
The company’s website boasts involvement in the Northumberland Hills Hospital, the St. Mary Wellness and Education Centre and the travelling Diabetes Resource Program in Northern Saskatchewan. The city’s acute care Saskatoon City Hospital houses the "Cameco MS [multiple sclerosis] Neuroscience Research Centre.”
During her 2007 visit to Saskatchewan, physician, Nobel Peace Prize nominee and renowned proponent of a nuclear-free world, Dr. Helen Caldicott chastised the Saskatchewan medical profession for partnering with what she called the “cancer industry.”
Middle East journalist Robert Fisk presents a sickening tale of depleted uranium armaments left lying around southern Iraq after the Gulf war of 1991 and the cancers occurring among the population in his book The Great War for Civilization: The Conquest of the Middle East. Fisk also identifies the problem of connecting depleted uranium to cancer: “
Overlooked by most Canadian media, the medical study from Fallujah adds to mounting evidence for a global ban on the production of DU munitions, and to considering their use a war crime.
In fact, last Wednesday, Irish parliament passed the Prohibition of Depleted Uranium Weapons Bill through its fifth reading. The DU bill, which drew praise from Senators and had none speak against it, is the second private member's bill ever to pass through Irish Senate.
Garson Hunter is an Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of Regina and the sponsor of Dr. Caldicott’s speaking tour of Saskatchewan. Sarah Pedersen is a social activist in Regina
Read more:
http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/3685#
Don't make premature decision (Uranium Mining Studies)
By The Editorial Board
Published: December 26, 2010
Virginia Uranium Inc. has raised questions about Hollis Stauber sending a recent e-mail to state leaders that questions the timing of the various uranium mining studies now under way.
Hollis Stauber isn’t an elected public official and, to our knowledge, she has no official role in Virginia’s decision to allowthe mining and milling of uranium.
She is the wife of Karl Stauber, who is employed as the president and CEO of the Danville Regional Foundation. The regional foundation is doing a study of this controversial issue. But Karl Stauber serves at the pleasure of the foundation’s 11-member board; he doesn’t tell that board what to do, and certainly the same thing is true about his wife.
The Danville Regional Foundation has commissioned its own study of the social impacts of having a uranium mine and mill at Coles Hill, no surprise since the group’s mission is “the health, education, and well-being of the region’s residents.”
While it’s obvious why the Danville Regional Foundation is interested in the uranium mining and milling issue, it’s not so obvious why it’s wrong for Hollis Stauber to also be interested in the issue.
Does the fact that her husband works for an organization that’s studying uranium mining mean that she can’t express a view on the subject? That doesn’t make any sense. Hollis Stauber has the right, as an individual, to express herself. Since she can’t affect policy — or even decide what the Danville Regional Foundation will have to say about uranium mining — there is no good reason why she can’t speak out like any other concerned citizen.
As it happens, Hollis Stauber, along with KatieWhitehead, have raised an excellent question: Why can’t the socioeconomic studies of uranium mining and milling wait for the completion of the scientific study by the National Academy of Sciences?
With all studies coming due next year — just weeks before the 2012 General Assembly session begins — it would seem that the calendar favors a fast resolution when prudence begs for enough time to answer all the questions. Are we expected to decide the fate and future of the Dan River Region in just a few weeks next November and December?
If there’s a conflict of interest here, it’s not that Hollis Stauber is publicly asking questions, it’s the real possibility that a final decision about the future of the Dan River Region will be made in the weeks between the release of all those studies and the very next General Assembly session.
We’re not advocating “paralysis by analysis” on this issue, but no one has made a case for fast-tracking a final decision on uranium mining and milling in Pittsylvania County.
Read more:
http://www2.godanriver.com/news/2010/dec/26/dont-make-premature-decision-ar-734243/
Monday, December 27, 2010
Uranium threatens Chatham Hall, Hargrave
Wednesday, December 22, 2010 9:17 AM EST
At the legislative subcommittee June public hearing in Chatham, Chatham Hall President Gary Fountain spoke about how competitive it is for prep schools like his own to recruit students.
The very perception of Chatham as the location of uranium mining, he added, could be damaging to recruitment and to the future of the local school.
President Fountain's warning has the same application to Hargrave Military Academy.
I urge the faculty and staff of both institutions to actively join the effort to educate the public about the uranium threat and to contact members of the General Assembly asking them not to end the current moratorium on uranium mining.
The future of Chatham Hall and of Hargrave could be at risk.
Bill Winn
Martinsville, VA
Read more:
http://www.wpcva.com/articles/2010/12/23/chatham/opinion/opinion17.txt#blogcomments
Murder is a risky business (Mining)
NEWS RELEASE
posted on December 7, 2010
Monday December 5th, members of various community groups disrupted the Mining Business Risks conference. Crashing the opening plenary, concerned community members were protesting a conference that promised to help mining companies “successfully navigate” risks such as “environmental activist,” and “government regulation.”
“We are here because those companies shamelessly displace populations to extract the resources, without doing any land rehabilitation ; without cleaning the mess. Not to mention the horrible work conditions and the threats and deaths of union organizers”, says Marla Renn, a participant.
Since Goldcorp’s SFU’s acceptance of a controversial $10 million donation to Simon Fraser University and their subsequent renaming of their Arts Centre the Goldcorp Centre for Contemporary Arts, the human and environmental abuses of mining companies have been in the Vancouver spotlight.
“Goldcorp’s donation to housing and education came right as a series of bills that would make mining companies’ international activities fall into line with Canadian environmental laws,” said Myka Abramson from SFU Against Goldcorp and Gent ification. “They are trying to charity-wash their image.
We are here to say we know about their human rights and environmental record and we are not going to let them cover it up.”
“We see this conference as proof of the success of anti-mining and environmental activists around the world,” said Ms Renn.
“They are a threat to mining companies and we will continue to be a threat until mining companies stop privileging profit over the environment, indigenous rights, worker’s rights, and basic human dignity.”
Read more:
http://vancouver.mediacoop.ca/newsrelease/5381?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
posted on December 7, 2010
Monday December 5th, members of various community groups disrupted the Mining Business Risks conference. Crashing the opening plenary, concerned community members were protesting a conference that promised to help mining companies “successfully navigate” risks such as “environmental activist,” and “government regulation.”
“We are here because those companies shamelessly displace populations to extract the resources, without doing any land rehabilitation ; without cleaning the mess. Not to mention the horrible work conditions and the threats and deaths of union organizers”, says Marla Renn, a participant.
Since Goldcorp’s SFU’s acceptance of a controversial $10 million donation to Simon Fraser University and their subsequent renaming of their Arts Centre the Goldcorp Centre for Contemporary Arts, the human and environmental abuses of mining companies have been in the Vancouver spotlight.
“Goldcorp’s donation to housing and education came right as a series of bills that would make mining companies’ international activities fall into line with Canadian environmental laws,” said Myka Abramson from SFU Against Goldcorp and Gent ification. “They are trying to charity-wash their image.
We are here to say we know about their human rights and environmental record and we are not going to let them cover it up.”
“We see this conference as proof of the success of anti-mining and environmental activists around the world,” said Ms Renn.
“They are a threat to mining companies and we will continue to be a threat until mining companies stop privileging profit over the environment, indigenous rights, worker’s rights, and basic human dignity.”
Read more:
http://vancouver.mediacoop.ca/newsrelease/5381?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
Friday, December 24, 2010
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays!
"Each Christmas I remember
The ones of long ago;
I see our mantelpiece adorned
With stockings in a row.
Each Christmas finds me dreaming
Of days that used to be,
When we hid presents here and there,
For all the family.
Each Christmas I remember
The fragrance in the air,
Of roasting turkey and mince pies
And cookies everywhere.
Each Christmas finds me longing
For Christmases now past,
And I am back in childhood
As long as memories last."
- Carice Williams, Christmas Past
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Radiological hazards from uranium mining
Comment: Series each day about u mining.
Bruno Chareyron 1
1CRIIRAD (Commission de Recherche et d’Information Indépendantes sur la Radioactivité),
Immeuble CIME, 471 av Victor Hugo, 26 000 Valence, FRANCE, Email
: bruno.chareyron@criirad.org
Abstract. At all the French uranium mines where it made radiological surveys, the CRIIRAD laboratory discovered situations of environmental contamination and a lack of proper protection of the inhabitants against health risks due to ionizing radiation.
Radiological problems are not only to be addressed during mining or milling operations but also on the longer term after mine closure.
Uranium and its by-products
All natural uranium isotopes (238U, 234U, 235U) are radioactive. The most common isotope, 238U, decays naturally into a succession of 13 other radioactive nuclides. All are metals (thorium 230, radium 226, lead 210, polonium 210, etc) except one, radon 222, which is a radioactive gas.
Uranium and its decay products emit various ionizing radiation such as alpha and beta particles and gamma radiation.
The Earth’s crust has a typical 238U activity of about 40 Becquerels per kilogram (Bq/kg).
This presence of natural uranium in the Earth crust, and therefore in numerous building materials made out of natural minerals, is the main source of exposure of mankind to ionizing radiation. This is especially due to the diffusion of radon gas from the soil and materials containing uranium- and its accumulation in the air inside buildings and dwellings.
This radiological hazard is now well documented and International (The International Commission on Radiological Protection, ICRP) and European (Euratom) regulations determine recommendations and action levels in order to lower radon concentration inside buildings and reduce cancer risks.
The health impacts of ionizing radiation even at low doses include the increase of various types of cancers, genomic instability, life-shortening and negative impacts on all the body functions.
2 Bruno Chareyron 1
Radiological situation before extraction The activities of uranium ores have an important variability. Typical ore with a uranium content of 0.2 % has a 238U activity of about 25,000 Bq/kg. The total activity, including all the 238U by-products and the 235U decay chain will therefore exceed 360,000 Bq/kg. Such material should be managed with a great deal of caution due to the risks of exposure to ionizing radiation.
As long as the ore remains buried underground - the depth being a few tens and even a few hundreds of meters - the radiation levels at the surface of the earth remain low and usually have the same order of magnitude as of typical natural radiation levels. Except in places where the ore reaches the ground surface (typically a few square meters), the protection offered by the soil is usually sufficient to reduce the risks for the people living in the area.
Indeed, alpha and low energy beta particles are stopped by a thin layer of soil (much less than 1 cm.). Even penetrating gamma radiation does not cross a layer of soil of a few meters.
Regarding the radiological characteristics of air and water, the situation is more complex. Nevertheless before mining activities most of the radon gas remains trapped inside the soil. Because of its short half-life (3.8 days) a lot of the gas atoms will disintegrate inside the soil during their migration before reaching the biosphere.
The amount of nuclides in underground water may remain low if the minerals containing uranium are trapped in unpermeable layers.
Read more:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/somuraniumfrance1.html
Bruno Chareyron 1
1CRIIRAD (Commission de Recherche et d’Information Indépendantes sur la Radioactivité),
Immeuble CIME, 471 av Victor Hugo, 26 000 Valence, FRANCE, Email
: bruno.chareyron@criirad.org
Abstract. At all the French uranium mines where it made radiological surveys, the CRIIRAD laboratory discovered situations of environmental contamination and a lack of proper protection of the inhabitants against health risks due to ionizing radiation.
Radiological problems are not only to be addressed during mining or milling operations but also on the longer term after mine closure.
Uranium and its by-products
All natural uranium isotopes (238U, 234U, 235U) are radioactive. The most common isotope, 238U, decays naturally into a succession of 13 other radioactive nuclides. All are metals (thorium 230, radium 226, lead 210, polonium 210, etc) except one, radon 222, which is a radioactive gas.
Uranium and its decay products emit various ionizing radiation such as alpha and beta particles and gamma radiation.
The Earth’s crust has a typical 238U activity of about 40 Becquerels per kilogram (Bq/kg).
This presence of natural uranium in the Earth crust, and therefore in numerous building materials made out of natural minerals, is the main source of exposure of mankind to ionizing radiation. This is especially due to the diffusion of radon gas from the soil and materials containing uranium- and its accumulation in the air inside buildings and dwellings.
This radiological hazard is now well documented and International (The International Commission on Radiological Protection, ICRP) and European (Euratom) regulations determine recommendations and action levels in order to lower radon concentration inside buildings and reduce cancer risks.
The health impacts of ionizing radiation even at low doses include the increase of various types of cancers, genomic instability, life-shortening and negative impacts on all the body functions.
2 Bruno Chareyron 1
Radiological situation before extraction The activities of uranium ores have an important variability. Typical ore with a uranium content of 0.2 % has a 238U activity of about 25,000 Bq/kg. The total activity, including all the 238U by-products and the 235U decay chain will therefore exceed 360,000 Bq/kg. Such material should be managed with a great deal of caution due to the risks of exposure to ionizing radiation.
As long as the ore remains buried underground - the depth being a few tens and even a few hundreds of meters - the radiation levels at the surface of the earth remain low and usually have the same order of magnitude as of typical natural radiation levels. Except in places where the ore reaches the ground surface (typically a few square meters), the protection offered by the soil is usually sufficient to reduce the risks for the people living in the area.
Indeed, alpha and low energy beta particles are stopped by a thin layer of soil (much less than 1 cm.). Even penetrating gamma radiation does not cross a layer of soil of a few meters.
Regarding the radiological characteristics of air and water, the situation is more complex. Nevertheless before mining activities most of the radon gas remains trapped inside the soil. Because of its short half-life (3.8 days) a lot of the gas atoms will disintegrate inside the soil during their migration before reaching the biosphere.
The amount of nuclides in underground water may remain low if the minerals containing uranium are trapped in unpermeable layers.
Read more:
http://www.criirad.org/actualites/uraniumfrance/somuraniumfrance1.html
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
ICE DAMS
Ice damming is a major source of water damage to many homes....
ROOF ICE BUILD-UP
Sometimes known as ice dams, these giant icicles hanging from the eaves are not only dangerous to people walking underneath, they are often a sign of serious problems with the roof and/or in the attic.
In a well designed and constructed home, the attic has its own dry and cool environment, quite separate from the living space. If your attic is not isolated from the rest of the house with proper air sealing and insulation, it can become warm and moist. Warm attics can help melt the bottom layer of snow on the roof and the water runs down to the gutter where it refreezes. This is the beginning of an ice dam.
HOW DOES MOISTURE GET INTO THE ATTIC?
There are several sources, both exterior and interior. If the roof is old and leaking, obviously that is an exterior source. But lets talk about interior sources that are often overlooked, but are not too difficult to correct.
Interior sources include air leaks from the house into the attic. Moisture is carried by air movement from the warm home into the cold attic, where the moisture in the air condenses and wets cold surfaces, such as the roof sheathing and rafters.
PLUG THE AIR LEAKS TO STOP THE MOISTURE.
The largest "holes" leading directly from the house to the attic are the attic access and the whole house fan.
When an attic access is a fold-down stairway, it was difficult to control moisture and heat loss. The Attic Stair Cover is a low-cost, easy-to-install solution to this common problem.
When a whole house fan is installed in the home, it was difficult to control moisture and heat loss.
From the experts at University of Minnesota:
What is an ice dam?
An ice dam is a ridge of ice that forms at the edge of a roof and prevents melting snow (water) from draining off the roof. The water that backs up behind the dam can leak into a home and cause damage to walls, ceilings, insulation, and other areas.
What causes ice dams?
There is a complex interaction among the amount of heat loss from a house, snow cover, and outside temperatures that leads to ice dam formation. For ice dams to form there must be snow on the roof, and, at the same time, higher portions of the roof's outside surface must be above 32° F while lower surfaces are below 32°F. For a portion of the roof to be below 32°F, outside temperatures must also be below 32°F. When we say temperatures above or below 32°F, we are talking about average temperature over sustained periods of time.
The snow on a roof surface that is above 32°F will melt. As water flows down the roof it reaches the portion of the roof that is below 32°F and freezes. Voila!—an ice dam.
The dam grows as it is fed by the melting snow above it, but it will limit itself to the portions of the roof that are on the average below 32°F. So the water above backs up behind the ice dam and remains a liquid. This water finds cracks and openings in the exterior roof covering and flows into the attic space. From the attic it could flow into exterior walls or through the ceiling insulation and stain the ceiling finish.
What causes different roof surface temperatures?
Since most ice dams form at the edge of the roof, there is obviously a heat source warming the roof elsewhere. This heat is primarily coming from the house. In rare instances solar heat gain may cause these temperature differences.
Heat from the house travels to the roof surface in three ways: conduction, convection, and radiation. Conduction is heat energy traveling through a solid. A good example of this is the heating of a cast iron frying pan. The heat moves from the bottom of the pan to the handle by conduction.
In a house, heat moves through the ceiling and insulation by conduction through the slanted portion of the ceiling (Figure 1). In many homes, there is little space in regions like this for insulation, so it is important to use insulations with high R-value per inch to reduce heat loss by conduction.
The top surface of the insulation is warmer than the other surroundings in the attic. Therefore, the air just above the insulation is heated and rises, carrying heat by convection to the roof. The higher temperatures in the insulation's top surface compared to the roof sheathing transfers heat outward by radiation. These two modes of heat transfer can be reduced by adding insulation. This will make the top surface temperature of the insulation closer to surrounding attic temperatures directly affecting convection and radiation from this surface.
Other sources of heat in the attic space include chimneys. Frequent use of wood stoves and fireplaces allow heat to be transferred from the chimney into the attic space. Inadequately insulated or leaky duct work in the attic space will also be a source of heat. The same can be said about kneewall spaces.
Read more:
http://www.batticdoor.com/icedams.html
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Pres. Obama’s oil hold rouses the anger of McDonnell and fellow Republicans
December 3rd, 2010 9:21 am ET
By Daniel Carawan,
Richmond Progressive Examiner
Virginia Gov. McDonnell reacted to President Obama’s decision to place a hold on offshore oil and gas exploration for at least seven years as “irresponsible and shortsighted.”
Of course, McDonnell is the one whose vision of the future is stunted if he cannot, or does not want to, see beyond a future in Virginia without oil or natural gas.
Not surprisingly, McDonnell played the national security and job loss cards to state his case against the hold on exploration.
At this point, though, it seems almost redundant to point out but focusing on renewable energy will itself create jobs!
But there seems to be a fear, and definitely a disconnect, about Virginia’s ability to move to renewable energy. It isn’t, after all, the tried and true method of extracting dirty sources of energy from the ground.
Renewable energy is real and it is possible to achieve in abundance in the next five years if the political leadership is strong enough.
President Obama should finally be applauded for following a progressive agenda. It seems that the only way Virginia will move closer to higher percentages of renewable energy is by force of presidential leadership.
The hold on oil and natural gas exploration is certainly a first step in this direction.
Read more:
http://www.examiner.com/progressive-in-richmond/pres-obama-s-oil-hold-rouses-the-anger-of-mcdonnell-and-fellow-republicans
Monday, December 20, 2010
What a dose of uranium will do to a policy debate
Posted at 5:09 PM ET, 12/16/2010
By Paige Winfield Cunningham
The apparent terror of Virginians living near a potential uranium mine illustrates how drastically things can change when they become personal.
Located at Coles Hill, about 60 miles southeast of Roanoke, the undeveloped uranium deposit at Coles Hill.
The land used to be owned by solely two families, but they've lately been handing a greater share of ownership to Virginia Energy Resources -- a Canadian company that invests in uranium and coal projects all over North America.
Actual mining of the deposit is still far away because Virginia has had a moratorium on uranium mining since the 1980s. Before legislators will consider whether to overturn the moratorium, they're waiting on the December 2011 completion of studies examining how mining would affect the area environmentally and socio-economically.
Most legislators, Democrats and Republicans alike, agree with doing the studies.
But Coles Hill residents are objecting every step of the way.
The residents say the first study may not be trustworthy because it is being funded by Virginia Uranium Inc. -- the private company that owns the Coles Hill land.
Never mind that it is being performed by probably the most reputable entity out there: the National Academy of Sciences.
As to the second study, residents say it's all a big conspiracy by legislators who have already staked their tent on the side of uranium mining. Del. Terry Kilgore (R-Scott), for instance, has been accused of pushing for the study through his chairmanship on the Virginia Coal and Energy Commission, then using his chairmanship of another body, Virginia's tobacco commission, to get it funded it.
The residents' argument has been bolstered, in part, by the eight tobacco commission members who voted against appropriating $200,000 for the study.
One of those was Del. Watkins Abbitt (I-Appomattox), who said he didn't think it was a good use of the commission's funds because they're supposed to be used mainly for boosting the economies of tobacco-dependent communities and the studies wouldn't directly create jobs in the area.
Still, Abbitt and most legislators are looking forward to getting the results. Republican Del. Lee Ware (R-Powhatan), chairman of the Coal and Energy Commission's uranium subcommittee, wrote in an e-mail:
"Not 'til the technical study is completed would one be able to declare a reasonable and also definitive view one way or another on the question of whether the uranium deposit at Coles Hill could be efficiently and safely extracted.
Type the word "uranium" into Google images, and horrifying photos of mangled babies appear.
Can you blame residents for fearing uranium pollution in their drinking water, even if the studies do end up casting a positive light on the mining?
Fears that are perhaps irrational look foolish until a policy discussion becomes a personal discussion. Del. Abbitt put it this way: "I would not want to own my own land within a mile of it."
Read more:
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/local-opinions/2010/12/the_apparent_terror_of_virgini.html
Obama administration reimposes offshore oil drilling ban
Posted at 4:05 PM ET, 12/ 1/2010
By Juliet Eilperin
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced Wednesday afternoon that the Obama administration will not allow offshore oil drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico or off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts as part of the next five-year drilling plan, reversing two key policy changes President Obama announced in late March.
We are adjusting our strategy in areas where there are no active leases," Salazar told reporters in a phone call, adding that the administration has decided "not expand to new areas at this time" and instead "focus and expand our critical resources on areas that are currently active" when it comes to oil and gas drilling.
In March--less than a month before the BP oil spill--Obama and Salazar said they would open up the eastern Gulf and parts of the Atlantic, including off the coast of Virginia, to offshore oil and gas exploration.
Wednesday's announcement is sure to please environmentalists while angering oil and gas companies as well as some lawmakers from both parties who have pressed for continued offshore energy exploration in the wake of massive Gulf of Mexico spill.
Salazar said while the administration will still allow offshore drilling in both the central and western Gulf of Mexico and in the Arctic, it will delay lease sales planned for March and August in the gulf to conduct additional environmental reviews, and will prepare a new environmental assessment of Shell's proposal to drill in Alaska's Beaufort Sea next year.
Shell officials warned that the additional review could jeopardize its ability to explore for oil and gas in the Arctic in 2011.
Marilyn Heiman, director of offshore energy reform for the Pew Environment Group, welcomed the announcement but questioned why the administration is still leaving open the possibility of leasing areas in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas between 2012 and 2017.
Activists such as Margie Alt, executive director of Environment America, also praised the administration's plan, saying, "Today, anyone who loves our beaches, who fishes in the ocean or who depends on a healthy coastal economy can thank the Obama administration for protecting the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and the west coast of Florida from oil drilling.
The only way to truly keep our coasts and ocean ecosystems safe is to keep them rig free."
Read more:
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/post-carbon/2010/12/obama_administration_will_ban.html?wpisrc=nl_natlalert
Saturday, December 18, 2010
NAS Uranium Mining Study: Danville Va Meeting 12-13-2010
I am Deborah Lovelace representing League of Individuals for the Environment, Inc., L.I.F.E., Inc.
Happy Holidays and welcome to Pittsylvania County Virginia the largest county in our state and home to over 1300 farms.
We pride ourselves in our locally grown produce, family gardens, organic farms, wineries, dairy farms, berry, tree and beef cattle farms etc. We have an abundance of wildlife and many avid hunter and fishermen, also another source of food. How will uranium mining, milling and storage of tailings affect this?
We have close knit communities whereas if someone is sick or lost a family member or friend, we rally to their rescue with food, prayers and fellowship.
Selling real estate here in the area for over 20 years, people flocked here to retire or relocate from other more expensive areas. They loved the “slower pace of life, clean environment, less crime etc.”
Each and every person of this county and state deserve clean water, clean food and clean air to breath. Your own NAS study (copy attached) in 2006 states no amount of radiation is safe. Keep this in mind as you conduct this study. Also, the use of the “common man” for measurement does not account for the more adverse affect on women and children.
Water is our most precious commodity! We are blessed to have an abundance of lakes, streams, rivers, creeks and springs. Our water flows in all different directions due to the water pressure. It changes routes frequently with our earthquake tremors. We cannot and do not want to take the chance of contamination to this precious supply.
As little as 3 inches of water causes flooding in the Coles Hill area. This does not include storm events. Our area is under flood watch and warnings several times throughout each year. (Pictures and videos included)
Whether or not uranium mining, milling and storage of tailings can or can not be done, the perception is harmful in itself. I get calls very often from residents who are unable to sell their properties because mining and milling “might” become a possibility. Investors such as myself have stopped investing because it “might” become a possibility. All this is lost revenue to our county, state, contractors and others who benefit when money is flowing from the buying, selling, building and remodeling of real estate.
Uranium mining, milling and the storage of tailings will cause environmental harm and have negative health effects on such a population as ours and the state of Virginia. We have too much water, population, earthquakes, rainfall, and storm events etc for this to ever be undertaken safely in my opinion. Regulations no matter how strict will be broken. The fines are often less than the damage caused.
I can understand why you will not make a determination as to whether it can or can not be done and leave that up to our legislators.
Volunteers of Life, Inc do not want it; thousands of signatures on petitions we have gathered do not want it. People we talk to daily do not want it.
It is hard for me to understand why we are even considering an activity to benefit a few citizens and non citizens who hope to become rich with this volatile commodity at our expense, not because of new technology but by the ten-fold increase in the price of uranium
Happy Holidays and welcome to Pittsylvania County Virginia the largest county in our state and home to over 1300 farms.
We pride ourselves in our locally grown produce, family gardens, organic farms, wineries, dairy farms, berry, tree and beef cattle farms etc. We have an abundance of wildlife and many avid hunter and fishermen, also another source of food. How will uranium mining, milling and storage of tailings affect this?
We have close knit communities whereas if someone is sick or lost a family member or friend, we rally to their rescue with food, prayers and fellowship.
Selling real estate here in the area for over 20 years, people flocked here to retire or relocate from other more expensive areas. They loved the “slower pace of life, clean environment, less crime etc.”
Each and every person of this county and state deserve clean water, clean food and clean air to breath. Your own NAS study (copy attached) in 2006 states no amount of radiation is safe. Keep this in mind as you conduct this study. Also, the use of the “common man” for measurement does not account for the more adverse affect on women and children.
Water is our most precious commodity! We are blessed to have an abundance of lakes, streams, rivers, creeks and springs. Our water flows in all different directions due to the water pressure. It changes routes frequently with our earthquake tremors. We cannot and do not want to take the chance of contamination to this precious supply.
As little as 3 inches of water causes flooding in the Coles Hill area. This does not include storm events. Our area is under flood watch and warnings several times throughout each year. (Pictures and videos included)
Whether or not uranium mining, milling and storage of tailings can or can not be done, the perception is harmful in itself. I get calls very often from residents who are unable to sell their properties because mining and milling “might” become a possibility. Investors such as myself have stopped investing because it “might” become a possibility. All this is lost revenue to our county, state, contractors and others who benefit when money is flowing from the buying, selling, building and remodeling of real estate.
Uranium mining, milling and the storage of tailings will cause environmental harm and have negative health effects on such a population as ours and the state of Virginia. We have too much water, population, earthquakes, rainfall, and storm events etc for this to ever be undertaken safely in my opinion. Regulations no matter how strict will be broken. The fines are often less than the damage caused.
I can understand why you will not make a determination as to whether it can or can not be done and leave that up to our legislators.
Volunteers of Life, Inc do not want it; thousands of signatures on petitions we have gathered do not want it. People we talk to daily do not want it.
It is hard for me to understand why we are even considering an activity to benefit a few citizens and non citizens who hope to become rich with this volatile commodity at our expense, not because of new technology but by the ten-fold increase in the price of uranium
Canadian company expands ownership of Virginia uranium deposit
December 15, 2010
By Paige Winfield Cunningham
Virginia Statehouse News
A Canadian company now owns one-third of the largest undeveloped uranium deposit in the U.S. And it's located at Coles Hill in Virginia.
The site is at the center of a controversy over whether Virginia’s moratorium on uranium mining should be lifted. Supporters and opponents are anxiously awaiting the results of two studies examining the environmental and socioeconomic impacts if the Coles Hill deposit is mined.
Legislators may consider lifting the moratorium after those studies are completed in December 2011.
With all that money potentially at stake, the site has been attracting more investors. British Columbia-based Virginia Energy Resources has been expanding its ownership of Virginia Uranium Inc., a company set up by Walter Coles Sr., an owner of the Coles Hill property.
VUI is “locally owned and managed,” according to its Web site, which indicates the company is 78 percent owned by the two families — the Coles family and the Bowen family. But the families have recently been cutting back their stakes as VER inches up its ownership of the property, said VUI project manager Patrick Wales.
VER is investing more in Coles Hill than any of its other uranium projects, which include stakes in Saskatchewan, Quebec, Mexico and Labrador. Wales said the VUI Web site will be updated next month to reflect VER’s now roughly 30 percent ownership of the Coles Hill property.
Formerly called Santoy Resources, the corporation last year changed its name to Virginia Energy Resources.
As corporations advocate for the moratorium to be lifted, they’ve incited fierce criticism by residents in the Coles Hill area who fear the effects of uranium mining on their drinking water and soil.
Phillip Lovelace, who farms beef cattle about five miles away from the site, formed a nonprofit last year to support the moratorium.
Even though the environmental study is being performed by the National Academy of Sciences, Lovelace criticizes it because it’s being paid for with VUI funds funneled through Virginia Tech.
“It concerns a lot of people in this area,” he said. “It hurt the National Academy of Sciences’ credibility in a lot of peoples’ eyes.”
Funding of the socioeconomic study has sparked some criticisms as well.
Del. Terry Kilgore, chairman of the Coal and Energy Committee, led the creation of a uranium subcommittee in 2008. After the subcommittee called for the socioeconomic study to be conducted, Kilgore found funding for it from another group over which he presides — the Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Fund, a fund set up to support the economies of tobacco-dependent communities using money from a settlement with tobacco companies.
The Tobacco Commission is paying $200,000 for the study, which will be conducted by the Richmond-based firm Chmura Economics & Analytics.
Del. Watkins Abbitt also sits on both the Coal and Energy Commission and the Tobacco Commission. He opposed using tobacco funds to pay for the study, which was approved by the commission 18-8. Abbitt said he opposed using the tobacco money because it didn’t directly create jobs in the area. VUI says the potential mining operation would employ 300-500 people.
“I’m not criticizing Kilgore. Everyone’s entitled to his opinion,” Abbitt said. “I just didn’t think it was the proper place, but obviously the majority of people did.”
Read more:
http://virginia.statehousenewsonline.com/2550/canadian-company-expands-ownership-of-virgin ia-uranium-deposit/
Friday, December 17, 2010
Uranium impacts, deposits discussed with geology panel
Uranium in Barborsville, VA
By Ray Reed
Published: December 14, 2010
DANVILLE — A Virginia Tech professor told some of the world’s leading geologists Tuesday that research is under way to help determine whether more valuable uranium deposits exist in Virginia.
Researchers at Tech also are looking into whether sediment from ore that could be mined from the Coles Hill uranium deposit near Chatham might possibly migrate into drinking water used by cities, said Robert Bodnar, a geochemistry professor.
Bodnar, who was named Virginia’s outstanding scientist of the year, spoke to a National Academy of Sciences panel that has been asked to study the potential impacts of uranium mining in Virginia.
The panel’s report, expected next December, may serve as a guide to Virginia legislators in deciding whether to lift the state’s ban on uranium mining.
Bodnar told the audience that Virginia Uranium, the company that wants to mine the Coles Hill deposit, has supported much of his research.
Bodnar also said he recommended many of the panel members who are conducting the NAS study.
“I want that to be part of the public record,” Bodnar said.
Bodnar said he’s interested in learning how the uranium deposit was formed at Coles Hill, so that information can be used to find other uranium deposits in Virginia and nearby states.
Most granite rocks contain uranium, he said, but only a few sites have enough of the mineral to be worth mining.
Research done in the 1970s indicates uranium deposits exist in the Irish Creek area of Rockbridge County and in the Taylorsville basin in the Fredericksburg area, among other locations.
He also acknowledged that if the price of uranium were to go high enough, “many rocks that are not economic today may be economic tomorrow.”
But if he can determine how the Coles Hill deposit was formed, Bodnar said, he can narrow the search for other deposits.
Based on available information, Bodnar said, possible uranium deposits might be found along the western edge of the Dan River Basin and other Triassic-era basins in Virginia. Or, he said, another theoretic model for uranium’s formation could mean deposits might be found in granite rocks along the eastern edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Read more:
http://www2.newsadvance.com/news/2010/dec/14/uranium-impacts-deposits-discussed-geology-panel-ar-716305/
Forest Woman Uses Hobby to Recycle Plastic Bags
Posted: Dec 02, 2010 5:36 PM EST
Reporter: Lauren Compton
Forest, VA - It's estimated that Americans use 300 to 700 plastic bags each year that's enough to tie a giant chain around the Earth 760 times.
A Forest woman has come up with an interesting way of keeping plastic bags out of landfills.
Amy Castine's love of crocheting is keeping hundreds of plastic grocery bags from ending up in landfills.
"I was been looking for different ways to make my home greener," said Castine.
She found the idea of crocheting grocery bags online, and now her home is filled with plastic bags. She crochets, and designs the plastic bags into reusable tote bags.
"For every bag that I make, it uses 50 to 60 plastic grocery bags so that makes a fairly sizable difference," said Castine.
The bags are a replacement for grocery bags, and Castine says they're more durable.
Castine says anyone with crocheting skills can make them. She takes the plastic bags, cuts them, and ties them together to make plarn which is plastic yarn. Then, she crochets the plarn into tote bags.
Castine doesn't profit from this hobby. Castine say it's more about making a statement about what we all can do to help the environment.
"If everyone made a choice like this, and did something a little greener it could have a huge impact, faster than anybody realizes," said Castine.
ON THE WEB:
•About the Impact of Plastic Bags: http://www.bagmonster.com/
•Website that Inspired Castine's Hobby: http://etsy.me/gnkmzN
Read more:
http://www.wset.com/Global/story.asp?S=13605915
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Uranium study group meets in Danville
By TIM DAVIS/Star-Tribune Editor
Tuesday, December 14, 2010 5:49 PM EST
DANVILLE -The National Research Council's committee conducting a scientific study of uranium mining in Virginia met at the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research in Danville this week.
The scientific study will examine the short- and long-term health, safety and environmental concerns from uranium mining, milling, processing, and reclamation.
The committee, which began work on the scientific study this fall, held a town hall meeting Monday from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Around 300 people attended the information session, and 50 spoke to the study committee. Speakers were limited to three minutes each.
David Feary, the study's director, said the National Research Council is limited to an "advisory" role.
"We don't make laws, and we don't suggest policies and regulations," he said.
The committee's chairman, Dr. Paul A. Locke, described the Danville meeting as an "information gathering process."
Read more:
http://www.wpcva.com/articles/2010/12/15/chatham/news/news50.txt
How to Recycle Different Types of Plastic

Dear EarthTalk: What is the deal with plastics recycling these days? Can you explain what the different numbers molded onto the bottom of plastic containers stand for? – Tom Croarkin, Fairfield, CT
The confusion over what we can and cannot recycle continues to confound consumers. Plastics are especially troublesome, as different types of plastic require different processing to be reformulated and re-used as raw material. Some municipalities accept all types of plastic for recycling, while others only accept jugs, containers and bottles with certain numbers stamped on their bottoms.
Recycling by the Numbers
The symbol code we’re familiar with—a single digit ranging from 1 to 7 and surrounded by a triangle of arrows—was designed by The Society of the Plastics Industry (SPI) in 1988 to allow consumers and recyclers to differentiate types of plastics while providing a uniform coding system for manufacturers.
The numbers, which 39 U.S. states now require to be molded or imprinted on all eight-ounce to five-gallon containers that can accept the half-inch minimum-size symbol, identify the type of plastic. According to the American Plastics Council, an industry trade group, the symbols also help recyclers do their jobs more effectively.
Easy Plastics to Recycle
The easiest and most common plastics to recycle are made of polyethylene terephthalate (PETE) and are assigned the number 1. Examples include soda and water bottles, medicine containers, and many other common consumer product containers. Once it has been processed by a recycling facility, PETE can become fiberfill for winter coats, sleeping bags and life jackets. It can also be used to make bean bags, rope, car bumpers, tennis ball felt, combs, cassette tapes, sails for boats, furniture and, of course, other plastic bottles.
Number 2 is reserved for high-density polyethylene plastics. These include heavier containers that hold laundry detergents and bleaches as well as milk, shampoo and motor oil. Plastic labeled with the number 2 is often recycled into toys, piping, plastic lumber and rope. Like plastic designated number 1, it is widely accepted at recycling centers.
Plastics Less Commonly Recycled
Polyvinyl chloride, commonly used in plastic pipes, shower curtains, medical tubing, vinyl dashboards, and even some baby bottle nipples, gets number 3. Like numbers 4 (wrapping films, grocery and sandwich bags, and other containers made of low-density polyethylene) and 5 (polypropylene containers used in Tupperware, among other products), few municipal recycling centers will accept it due to its very low rate of recyclability.
Another Useful Plastic to Recycle
Number 6 goes on polystyrene (Styrofoam) items such as coffee cups, disposable cutlery, meat trays, packing “peanuts” and insulation. It is widely accepted because it can be reprocessed into many items, including cassette tapes and rigid foam insulation.
GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; submit it at: www.emagazine.com/earthtalk/thisweek/, or e-mail: earthtalk@emagazine.com
Read more:
http://environment.about.com/od/earthtalkcolumns/a/recycleplastics.htm
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Statement of the Issue: Uranium Mining in Virginia
There are many questions surrounding the safety and wisdom of uranium mining and processing in Virginia. As two, state-commissioned studies go forward; the Virginia Conservation Network maintains its opposition to lifting the current ban on uranium mining, which has been in place since 1982. The burden is on the studies to prove that it can and will be done safely under the conditions found in Virginia.
Of paramount concern is safeguarding water quality for downstream metropolitan areas such as Virginia Beach. Protecting the agricultural history and natural beauty of rural Virginia, is also a vital consideration. If the ban is lifted and new regulations are in place, there will be pressure to mine sites throughout Virginia, including sites north of Charlottesville and west of Richmond. There might also be pressure to mill uranium in Virginia, using ore that has been mined in states without milling regulations.
The pressure to lift the ban today is not driven by any major advances in safety or mining technology. It is driven solely by a ten-fold rise in the price of uranium. The techniques for mining and milling are virtually unchanged from the last time the state considered this issue, roughly thirty years ago.
Background
A ban on uranium mining and milling was imposed in the early 1980s, while Virginia officials were undertaking a study of uranium mining. That study was costly, time-consuming, and divisive. It failed to consider several Virginia-specific questions, and that failure, as noted by dissenting study committee member Elizabeth Haskell, marred the study’s conclusions. The Commission made no recommendation on lifting the moratorium and the General Assembly and Governor did nothing to lift it.
In 2008, pressure to lift Virginia’s ban resurfaced, as the global price of uranium rose.
With leadership from VCN, the General Assembly rejected a bill that would have fast-tracked efforts to lift the moratorium. Following that legislative action, the Virginia Commission on Coal and Energy decided to initiate new studies on uranium mining and milling. It appointed a Uranium Mining Subcommittee to work with Virginia Center for Coal and Energy Research at Virginia Tech to negotiate a contract with the National Research Council (NRC) of the National Academy of Sciences. The purpose of the NRC study presumably is to determine whether uranium mining, milling, and waste disposal in Virginia can be undertaken in a manner that will safeguard the Commonwealth's environment, natural and historic resources, agricultural lands, and the health and well-being of its citizens. As noted by Delegate Terry Kilgore, Chairman, Coal and Energy Commission: "We need to leave no stone unturned on this. If it's not safe, we don't want to do it."
The NRC held its first open sessions on October 26 and 27, 2010 and November 15 and 16 in Washington, D.C. Open sessions are scheduled for December 13-15 in the Danville area, and February 2011 in Richmond. Other public sessions are scheduled for Denver and Saskatchewan in April and June. The NRC expects to have a pre-publication draft of its report completed by December 2011. This pre-publication draft would then be subjected to peer-review and circulated for public comment. A final report to the General Assembly would not be finished until December 2012.
In addition to the NRC report, the Uranium Mining Subcommittee is chartering a second, separate study on the socio-economic impacts of uranium operations. This study will consider, among many other factors, the costs to communities if there is a major environmental catastrophe linked to uranium mining or milling. The Subcommittee has requested proposals from third-party firms to conduct this study. Finally, two other independent studies are ongoing: one by the Danville Regional Foundation, and the other by the City of Virginia Beach, which is particularly concerned about the threat uranium mining would pose to drinking water supplies from Lake Gaston.
Recommendations
Neither the Coal and Energy Commission nor the General Assembly should consider legislation or recommendations to lift Virginia’s existing ban on mining and milling until all studies are finalized and the NRC peer-review process is complete. Any bill introduced during the 2011 or 2012 sessions would be opposed, as that would be before the finalization of all relevant studies. In the meantime, both the NRC study and the proposed socio-economic study must be made available for adequate and thorough public review and comment, throughout the development of those studies.
Contacts
Todd Benson, Piedmont Environmental Council
540.347.2334
Cale Jaffe, Southern Environmental Law Center
434.977.4090
Resources
Uranium Mining Whitepaper
2011 Briefing Book
Read more:
http://www.vcnva.org/anx/index.cfm/1,258,1821,0,html
Of paramount concern is safeguarding water quality for downstream metropolitan areas such as Virginia Beach. Protecting the agricultural history and natural beauty of rural Virginia, is also a vital consideration. If the ban is lifted and new regulations are in place, there will be pressure to mine sites throughout Virginia, including sites north of Charlottesville and west of Richmond. There might also be pressure to mill uranium in Virginia, using ore that has been mined in states without milling regulations.
The pressure to lift the ban today is not driven by any major advances in safety or mining technology. It is driven solely by a ten-fold rise in the price of uranium. The techniques for mining and milling are virtually unchanged from the last time the state considered this issue, roughly thirty years ago.
Background
A ban on uranium mining and milling was imposed in the early 1980s, while Virginia officials were undertaking a study of uranium mining. That study was costly, time-consuming, and divisive. It failed to consider several Virginia-specific questions, and that failure, as noted by dissenting study committee member Elizabeth Haskell, marred the study’s conclusions. The Commission made no recommendation on lifting the moratorium and the General Assembly and Governor did nothing to lift it.
In 2008, pressure to lift Virginia’s ban resurfaced, as the global price of uranium rose.
With leadership from VCN, the General Assembly rejected a bill that would have fast-tracked efforts to lift the moratorium. Following that legislative action, the Virginia Commission on Coal and Energy decided to initiate new studies on uranium mining and milling. It appointed a Uranium Mining Subcommittee to work with Virginia Center for Coal and Energy Research at Virginia Tech to negotiate a contract with the National Research Council (NRC) of the National Academy of Sciences. The purpose of the NRC study presumably is to determine whether uranium mining, milling, and waste disposal in Virginia can be undertaken in a manner that will safeguard the Commonwealth's environment, natural and historic resources, agricultural lands, and the health and well-being of its citizens. As noted by Delegate Terry Kilgore, Chairman, Coal and Energy Commission: "We need to leave no stone unturned on this. If it's not safe, we don't want to do it."
The NRC held its first open sessions on October 26 and 27, 2010 and November 15 and 16 in Washington, D.C. Open sessions are scheduled for December 13-15 in the Danville area, and February 2011 in Richmond. Other public sessions are scheduled for Denver and Saskatchewan in April and June. The NRC expects to have a pre-publication draft of its report completed by December 2011. This pre-publication draft would then be subjected to peer-review and circulated for public comment. A final report to the General Assembly would not be finished until December 2012.
In addition to the NRC report, the Uranium Mining Subcommittee is chartering a second, separate study on the socio-economic impacts of uranium operations. This study will consider, among many other factors, the costs to communities if there is a major environmental catastrophe linked to uranium mining or milling. The Subcommittee has requested proposals from third-party firms to conduct this study. Finally, two other independent studies are ongoing: one by the Danville Regional Foundation, and the other by the City of Virginia Beach, which is particularly concerned about the threat uranium mining would pose to drinking water supplies from Lake Gaston.
Recommendations
Neither the Coal and Energy Commission nor the General Assembly should consider legislation or recommendations to lift Virginia’s existing ban on mining and milling until all studies are finalized and the NRC peer-review process is complete. Any bill introduced during the 2011 or 2012 sessions would be opposed, as that would be before the finalization of all relevant studies. In the meantime, both the NRC study and the proposed socio-economic study must be made available for adequate and thorough public review and comment, throughout the development of those studies.
Contacts
Todd Benson, Piedmont Environmental Council
540.347.2334
Cale Jaffe, Southern Environmental Law Center
434.977.4090
Resources
Uranium Mining Whitepaper
2011 Briefing Book
Read more:
http://www.vcnva.org/anx/index.cfm/1,258,1821,0,html
For EPA Regulations, Cost Predictions Are Overstated
When EPA promulgates regulations, industry often expresses concern that the regulations will cause extreme economic hardship. Now this argument is being made regarding EPA regulation of carbon pollution using existing legal authorities like the Clean Air Act.
In fact, there is extensive literature showing that the costs of environmental regulations are more than offset by a broad range of economic, public health and jobs-related benefits.
Additionally, initial cost estimates are consistently found to be exaggerated.
Economists and researchers who have compared actual costs with initial projections report that regulations generally end up costing far less than the dire predictions from industry and even, as an RFF study shows below cost projections by the Environmental Protection Agency.
EPA, Greenhouse Gases, and the U.S. Economy
As the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency uses its authority to limit greenhouse gases and other pollutants, members of Congress are wondering what these rules mean for the people and industries in their states. Is the EPA acting reasonably? Which industries will be affected and when and how will they need to comply? How do actual environmental compliance costs compare with industry and EPA estimates? How can the rules be designed to spur technology innovation and advance industrial competitiveness? In this series, the non-partisan World Resources Institute examines pending actions and what they mean for the U.S. economy:
•What Are Limits on EPA? Clean Air Act Holds Answers
•EPA, The Clean Air Act, and U.S. Manufacturing
•For EPA Regulations, Cost Predictions Are Overstated
How do the benefits of environmental regulations stack up to the costs?
Though costs have always been highlighted by industry – and many policymakers – the fact is that public benefits associated with environmental regulations consistently outweigh the costs. For example, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) recently released its thirteenth annual Report to Congress, detailing the estimated benefits and costs of federal regulations, finding that:
“The estimated annual benefits of major Federal regulations reviewed by OMB from October 1, 1999, to September 30, 2009, for which agencies estimated and monetized both benefits and costs, are in the aggregate between $128 billion and $616 billion, while the estimated annual costs are in the aggregate between $43 billion and $55 billion.1”
For clean air and water regulations promulgated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over the same time period, the estimated aggregate annual costs range from $26 to $29 billion, while benefits range from $82 to $533 billion.
Does environmental regulation force U.S. firms to relocate elsewhere?
Few firms flee the United States to “pollution havens” in poor countries, despite industry’s frequent claims to the contrary. Economics for Equity and the Environment Network points out that:
“Environmental costs are generally below 2 percent of total business costs. Firms that do leave the U.S. generally do so in pursuit of lower labor and health-coverage costs, expenditures that form a much higher percentage of their total costs. Economists searching for evidence supporting widespread flight of polluting industries have not found significant effects.”
Is environmental regulation a job killer?
Independent researchers who have examined this question say no.
First, looking only at job losses inevitably ignores a larger truth: environmental spending creates jobs that offset losses. Compared to overall spending in the economy, on a per dollar basis, spending on environmental protection and clean-up employs more than twice as many workers in construction (11 percent versus 4 percent) and 25 percent more in manufacturing (20 percent versus 16 percent). Plant closings and layoffs in response to environmental regulation are very rare, affecting only 1/10th of 1 percent of all layoffs nationwide. Over that same 1990-1997 period, 10 million U.S. workers were laid off for non-environmental reasons.2
A case in point: opposing the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments, a study sponsored by the U.S. Business Roundtable expressed “little doubt that a minimum of 200,000 (plus) jobs will be quickly lost, with plants closing in dozens of states. This number could easily exceed one million jobs – and even two millions jobs – at the more extreme assumptions about residual risk.” In fact, in the eight year period following the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments, less than 7,000 total jobs were lost across the entire United States as a direct consequence of the Clean Air Act, and, as noted above, many more jobs were created.
Resources for the Future studied four heavily regulated industries (steel, petroleum, plastics, and pulp and paper) to conclude that the data does not support claims that environmental spending significantly reduces employment in heavily polluting industries.
Most studies examine macro level (i.e., economy-wide) impacts. But what about local impacts?
Berman and Bui tested whether regulation of air pollution in manufacturing plants in the South Coast Los Angeles region reduced employment. In this highly polluted manufacturing area of Los Angeles, they concluded that the most stringent episode of increased industrial air quality regulation did not have a large effect on manufacturing employment. And, they found evidence that increased air quality regulation increased oil refinery productivity. Among their conclusions:
•The data clearly ruled out conclusions that these regulations caused large job losses. Admittedly, the regulations did impose costs on regulated plants, but they had little effect on employment. Some contemporary critics misleadingly discuss job losses that resulted from declining military spending, but this was unrelated to environmental regulations.
•No plants were shut down by environmental regulations, nor were new startups dissuaded by environmental regulations, as measured in the Census of Manufactures.
•The oil industry in the South Coast did not shed any more or less jobs relative to similar facilities in Texas and Louisiana that were not subject to the same level of regulation. Regulated plants actually increased their energy productivity through technological changes, including cogeneration of electricity using waste gases.
Berman and Bui concluded: “This study carefully documents an important case in which [industry cost] projections grossly exaggerated the costs of regulation.”
Are the government’s own estimates of job losses reliable?
For decades, OMB has required EPA to estimate the costs and benefits of proposed regulation (Executive Order 12291). Experts compared EPA’s pre-regulatory cost estimates of the economic burden with what actually happened (including reduced productivity and lost jobs) when the regulations went into effect. Their conclusion? Even EPA’s (and other agencies’) own pre-regulatory estimates of economic burden are overly pessimistic of the total costs. Often, this is because they underestimate the potential that technological change, including innovation and commercialization, minimizes pollution abatement costs.
Why do even EPA’s numbers overestimate the costs of regulation?
There are many reasons why EPA overestimates costs. Here are a few:
•Economists do not own crystal balls to project technological innovation. In the acid rain (SO2) program (the model for climate change cap-and-trade proposals), scrubbing turned out to be more efficient and more reliable than expected. Pre-regulation, analysts assumed that scrubbers operate at 85 percent reliability and remove 80 to 85 percent of the sulfur. In fact, scrubbers typically run in excess of 95 percent reliability, removing 95 percent. The original estimate of opportunities to blend low and high sulfur coal in older boilers was a 5/95 mixture. In fact, industry was able to achieve a much more efficient 40/60 mixture.
•Industry often finds creative ways to meet standards at lower compliance costs, that aren’t anticipated in EPA’s pre-regulation estimates. For example, about two million tons of SO2 reductions came from railroad deregulation that allowed industry access to low-sulfur, western coal. After OSHA set air lead standards, industry complied by putting workers into protective gear to reduce their lead exposure, rather than changing the ambient air conditions; the levels of air lead in plants remained high for years.
•Government estimates sometimes calculate the maximum cost to industry rather than the mean – in other words, the worst rather than the average impact. Why? One reason is that the agency’s inventory of installed pollution control equipment may be out-of-date. It may not include the most recent pollution control investments, thereby overestimating the quantity of emissions reductions required to meet a particular goal.
•Industry is frequently the source of EPA’s cost estimates because industry has direct access to the most relevant cost information. Though most regulated industries have an interest in over-estimating costs, Agency officials must either refute or accept their estimates at face value; skepticism or mere suspicion of industry numbers is not a legally defensible reason to disregard them during the rulemaking process. Asked “what will it cost?” a firm’s analyst may provide an “off-the shelf” compliance technology, when in fact a more considered approach would reveal that substantial cost savings can be achieved through innovation, for example. Sometimes, EPA has no choice but to ask outside contractors who hire industry experts to develop cost estimates, leaving the agency cost estimates subject to the same biases as those of industry.
The Office of Technology Assessment reached similar conclusions in a 1995 study (one of the last they issued before being eliminated) of occupational health and safety regulation. OTA found that pre-regulatory cost estimates systemically under-predicted innovative responses and over-predicted impacts.
In conclusion, independent experts have demonstrated why initial claims about costs and job losses related to EPA action under the Clean Air Act should not be taken at face value.
The author is a former EPA attorney, with 17 years of experience implementing several environmental laws managed by EPA.
Read more:
http://www.wri.org/stories/2010/11/epa-regulations-cost-predictions-are-overstated
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