Radiation Bulletin:Week History

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Read the latest summary of the Radiation Bulletin! The 'Weekly News' ticker will be continuously published on the main page ...

2010 we provided this news service already for several months on our website. Unfortunately we had to interrupt it when the author couldn't continue to write the weekly news summaries and only provided the news links without comments. Now these summaries are available again. You can check these former weekly news archive provided on the Nuclear Heritage Network's website.


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Aug. 19th – 25th 2013
News out of Japan continues to be the top nuclear story on the planet, however the number of articles pushing for Yucca Mountain has gone through the ceiling in the U.S. Press. The Fukushima story has a lot of subthemes, including growing concerns from nearby countries as S. Korea regulators found radiation Japanese fish destined for their market, with a similar story on contaminated Tuna offshore of California. Lots of subtle manipulation in the coverage, for example, UPI claims that Japan has raised the severity of the leak to level "1" while its actually been raised to level 3. Another story published how students had just gotten 150,000 anti-nuclear signatures, while the next day the number jumped to 1 million. Tepco has claimed that its stopped the leak on the main tank, while another says there are leaks in other units.

Germany spoke out this last week about EU attempts to mess with their plans to continue with a nuclear phaseout. There wasn’t a lot of news around the world other than the n-waste dump on Lake Huron on the US border with Canada that continues to heat up.

Again, as mentioned there’s now been a howling by conservative papers across the country about how Obama broke the law and can’t be allowed to get away with it on his order to stop Yucca Mountain. Senator Reid continues to call Yucca dead. Speaking of leaks, a fairly serious leak happened at Hanford. There was literally no coverage of an NRC hearing on n-waste and spent fuel issues however. In a fairly serious turn of events, the Nation published a new story supporting nuclear power, relying on the recent pro-nuclear push out of the NY Times to rationalize the story, even quoting Pandora’s Promise! They at least put a link to their recent debate with Mark Hertzgaard however. Joe Mangano released a new report on the health impacts around the Palisades reactor. And of course there was one a media frenzy this weekend about an African found with enriched uranium in his shoes at JFK that will be making the terrorist rounds. Note that I pulled all the Yucca stories out of the top stories section and put them in the Fuel Cycle tab if you want to dig through them. Its kind of clear that there needs to be a bit of a response to this huge pro-Yucca spin.

[edit WEEKLY STORIES]   |   [more stories]   |   [STORIES' ARCHIVE]
The Radiation Bulletin is published by the Abalone Alliance Clearinghouse


About the Radiation Bulletin

These stories are provided by the Abalone Alliance Clearinghouse, which is part of the Nuclear Free California Network, week by week. They publish them in several anti-nuclear networks and on their website. Here is their own description of the service:

The Energy Net has been online since 1988 when we were given permission to take over the name from the folks that started the original Energy-Net back in the early 1980′s.
The original Energy-Net was a network of activists across California who were organizing community based renewable energy programs, starting with making homes more energy efficient. This popular project was in competition against PG&E’s version of how to reduce electricity demand. The project died when PG&E and NRDC was able to push their own version of how to do energy efficiency programs within “the captured” California Public Utilities Commission.
In 1988 The Energy Net first went online as a member of the global network of Bulletin Board Services (BBS) called Fidonet. It stayed a local BBS system until 1994 when we switched to its current location on the world wide web. The formation of this blog is hopefully the next jump in the evolution in online communications… The Energy Net has been the archival home of the Abalone Alliance, the California statewide anti-nuclear movement that ran between 1977 and 1985. Please check out these resources about the Alliance.
This blog (containing the weekly news, the editor) was setup on April 3rd 2007 in response to the growing push to develop nuclear power by the Bush Administration and the nuclear power industry. The blog has initially been setup as a vehicle for publishing the best nuclear news in the world. Go HERE to see the full RSS Feed from where these stories are coming from. As oldtimers start checking back in and get over the huge PR push by the media on nuclear, there will be a growing need to organize a response.


Feb 25th - Mar 3rd 2013
Commentaries are on vacation this week as I'm busy with a slideshow. However, there were a few notables events, with Taiwan going ahead with a referendum on whether or not to let a new reactor go ahead, the Belene reactor was shut down by the Lithuanian government and its likely any nukes in Japan will be started this year. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists did a whole series on nuclear power, and much more from Pilgrim to San Onofre.

Nuclear News | Fuel Cycle/DOE | Government Docs | Fukushima News


Feb. 4th - 10th 2013
The UK nuclear snafu continues to reverberate big time as nukesters are pulling out all the stops to try and save their baby. Even China is now being brought back in as the option to build reactors! Pictures and scandals in Japan and uranium in Africa... Same old..

Speaking of same old, the cold weather and noreaster proof that climate change is bogus.. not.. A lot of stories about the industry getting a nuclear cold, or maybe a depression. Vermont, Pilgrim and especially the news about San Onofre were all over the local papers, which means very little national news other than Yucca part...zzz.

Nuclear News | Fuel Cycle/DOE | Government Docs | Fukushima News


Dec. 24th - 30th 2012
Seasons Greetings.
Not a large number of major stories in the last week, but there were a lot of news both out of Japan and on the fuel cycle front.
See also the overview in Top Nuclear Stories for 2012.

Nuclear News | Fuel Cycle/DOE | Government Docs | Fukushima News


Dec. 10th – 16th 2012
As predicted in recent poles, the LDP, which was ousted barely 3 years ago after ruling Japan since the end of WW II won control over the government with Noda's Democratic Party was badly beaten. Of course, it was the LDP that played the central role in promoting nuclear power will likely reopen all reactors by spring, having gained a super majority. Shortly after a major sea action off of Kudankulam, the government put off opening the reactors until next year. Routine attacks on Germany's move towards solar continues to be regularly attacked in the European press. A fun story out of Europe, Don't worry about the truck carrying nuclear waste by a passenger train!!!

Back in the good old USA there were quite a few stories. The Indian Pt hearings ended, while important stories from Browns Ferry, Vermont Yankee, Oyster Creek hit. Not to mention opposition to ending a ban on uranium mining got a new and important allie, while Exelon has called for its employees to lobby for the end of wind energy support. An interesting article on DC lobbying strategies on energy hit.

Nuclear News | Fuel Cycle/DOE | Government Docs | Fukushima News


Dec. 3rd - 9th 2012
There should be major news tomorrow about the direct action battle over Kudamkulam. Election coverage in Japan is heading the news, with polls showing the conservatives likely winning at this point. There was more than a bit of frayed nerves in as a result of the 7.3 quake at the same location as the 9.0 on 311. France took another major policy hit as a major Italian utility pulled out of nuclear development partnerships, while Obama and Russia are talking about weapons treaty discussions again. In the US hearings started for both San Onofre (ASLB).

The final report for uranium mining in Virginia was released. The report did not make any major findings either way, but mining proponents claimed it was a victory for them, and their push to remove the 30 year moratorium. The state was unable to determine the economic costs of mining because it could not find an unbiased contractor. 14,000 signatures were submitted by opponents, that also claimed that the more people learn the more people will oppose uranium mining. There were a few videos and a bit of coverage on the national conference in Chicago, a fair amount of fuel cycle/DOE news as well.