On Monday, September 12, an incinerator explosion at a French nuclear waste processing center killed one, injured four, and created just enough nuclear news to edge this week’s other nuclear story right out of the headlines.
The explosion, which is reported not to have caused any leak of radiation, was at a facility that reprocesses used nuclear reactor fuel in order to create a more toxic, less stable form of fuel commonly known as “mixed oxide” or MOX. MOX, which is a tasty blend of uranium and plutonium, was in at least some of the rods in some of the reactors at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi facility when it suffered catastrophic failures after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami–and the presence of MOX fuel made the fallout from explosions at the Japanese plant more dangerous as a result. (More dangerous than already extremely dangerous might seem like a trivial addendum, but it is of note if for no other reason than the manufacture and use of MOX fuel is what nuclear power proponents think of when they call it a “renewable resource.”)
And it was the Fukushima disaster that brought diplomats, nuclear scientists, and government regulators to the negotiating table in Vienna for this week’s annual meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency. At issue, a June proposal by IAEA chief Yukia Amano that the world’s nuclear nations respond to the Japanese crisis with tougher safety regulations and mandatory inspections.
The proposal–which included a one-year deadline for new safety standards and an 18-month window for stress tests on all reactors–had the backing of large nuclear power-generating nations such as Canada, Germany, and Australia, as well as many non-nuclear nations across the globe, but that support and the ongoing disaster in Japan were not enough to overcome sustained, behind-the-scenes efforts to derail this plan. When the IAEA finally took up a draft resolution on Tuesday, it contained no timelines, deadlines or mandatory inspections. Instead, IAEA safety checks, peer reviews, and other moves to ensure nuclear safety may be taken up “upon request” of the nuclear state in question.
Which parties were behind the near-total neutering of the IAEA proposal? Who was responsible for reassuring the global nuclear power industry that virtually no lessons would be learned from the continuing crisis in Japan? It should be no surprise to find traditional foes of nuclear oversight such as Russia, China, Pakistan, and India (along with Argentina) pushing hard against the IAEA. And, given Barack Obama’s very public proclamations of support for nuclear power within days of the Japanese quake, it should probably also not surprise anyone to find the United States right there with them:
[T]he United States was also comfortable with the decision to strip the plan of language entrusting the agency with more clout that was present in earlier drafts and leaving oversight to governments, national safety authorities and power companies. . . .
And now, courtesy of the same AP story, the comic relief:
Such a stance reflects Washington’s strong belief in domestic regulatory bodies having full control of nuclear safety.
The Associated Press, which deserves immense credit for this summer’s exposé on the cozy relationship government regulators have with the nuclear industry it is supposed to police, clearly didn’t give this story the same level of effort (click through for the amusing use of the word “establish” in the penultimate paragraph). . . or maybe it did, and is just bad at communicating the sarcasm. As documented in the months since the start of the Fukushima crisis, a small collection of too-weak recommendations from a Nuclear Regulatory Commission task force is now dying a slow death thanks to lobbying from the nuclear industry, and the NRC commissioners and elected officials receptive to it.
This week’s physical explosion might have taken place in southern France, but the shot that needs to be heard around the world is the IAEA firing blanks, thanks in part to the concerted efforts of a United States government in the grip of a dangerous but powerful industry. At the same time a relative non-event like the Solyndra bankruptcy seems to be growing scandalous legs thanks to obsessive media attention, the real Obama administration scandal is its addiction to old, expensive, dangerous, and non-renewable forms of energy. (See here, too, a very interesting piece tying America’s decline to dwindling petroleum supplies.) That this “The business of America is business-as-usual” story has not made headlines is, itself, probably not news, but what can–and likely will someday–happen because the US government is adamant that Fukushima changes nothing will not be so easy to ignore.



14 Comments

Is anybody doing the research as to how much of a radiation dose we are getting from Fukishima here in North America?
Have seen a map from the first few days, but nothing since.
I live in Houston and from the map I saw, we didn’t get any of that radiation – in those first few days. So we’d be perfectly safe IF, that is, Fukishima stopped spewing after that, and IF all our water and food came from south of here.
I guess that’s what the administration wanted us to believe when they stopped measuring the fallout.
Thank you, Gregg, for this timely discussion of the IAEA which is most handy for starting wars but simply a busybody when it comes to unimportant and silly things like “safety”.
I also appreciate your description of MOX as the “renewable” aspect of nuclear energy.
You see, it is the “enhanced” danger of an already dangerous, beyond easy or even difficult human conprehension, material which we cavalierly foist upon generations yet unborn on a planet we may well make uninhabitable for ourselves in very short order or, at least, render far less friendly nad less supportive of a humanity whose “quality” of life may well not be all that wonderful for the majority; all of which seems to elude the grasp of those who happily (or wonkishly) call nuclear energy “renewable”.
“Common sense”, and engaged imagination must suggest both caution and perspective.
Though such evidence as there is of either of those two things is NOT encouraging when money is all that matters.
And frankly, Gregg, MONEY is the the ” … behind the scenes efforts …”.
MONEY and the political power it “represents”.
And the “comic relief” is so quintessentially neoliberal, in the “best” American tradition, as to have Reagan happily off-gassing in his infernal repose. And it also reflects Obama’s view that the nuclear “club” should be exclusive and wielded for the benefit of hegemonic elites.
The next time the IAEA speaks out to the world it will be to inform us that those pesky Iranians are up to no good; then their words will be taken as gospel … as good as yellow-cake gold.
Could the IAEA be merely a pandering “front” organization for the Aligned Oligarchs of the World (the AOOTW)?
What do you think, Gregg?
DW
…domestic regulatory bodies having full control over nuclear safety…
it’s enough to strike terror into the heart of anyone who can spell BP. Or ‘Massey Mining.’
We are doomed.
Go here they have maps if you look back and they’re update.
If you think you were missed, think again.
http://enenews.com/
No, I didn’t, in that my IQ is at least double digits. What I wanted is what you have provided – thanks.
It’s Friday afternoon… has news of Zero’s approval of the pipeline been dumped yet?
Thnx again Gregg for keeping the nuke issues on the radar.
Thank you, Jo6pac, that brings it all “home”.
We shall certainly all glow togther when we glow …
DW
From Wiki it seems recycle of nuke waste is stupid, dangerous, and more costly – with the last item – more costly – making one wonder if the better “PR” is worth it to the industry – it is certainly not worth it as a society.
From wiki:
Nuclear reprocessing technology was developed to chemically separate and recover fissionable plutonium from irradiated nuclear fuel.Reprocessing serves multiple purposes, whose relative importance has changed over time. Originally reprocessing was used solely to extract plutonium for producing nuclear weapons. With the commercialization of nuclear power, the reprocessed plutonium was recycled back into MOX nuclear fuel for thermal reactors. The reprocessed uranium, which constitutes the bulk of the spent fuel material, can in principle also be re-used as fuel, but that is only economic when uranium prices are high. Finally, the breeder reactor can employ not only the recycled plutonium and uranium in spent fuel, but all the actinides, closing the nuclear fuel cycle and potentially multiplying the energy extracted from natural uranium by more than 60 times.
Nuclear reprocessing reduces the volume of high-level waste, but by itself does not reduce radioactivity or heat generation and therefore does not eliminate the need for a geological waste repository. Reprocessing has been politically controversial because of the potential to contribute to nuclear proliferation, the potential vulnerability to nuclear terrorism, the political challenges of repository siting (a problem that applies equally to direct disposal of spent fuel), and because of its high cost compared to the once-through fuel cycle. The Obama administration stepped back from President Bush’s plans for commercial-scale reprocessing and reverted to a program focused on reprocessing-related scientific research.
The relative economics of reprocessing-waste disposal and interim storage-direct disposal has been the focus of much debate over the past ten years… the total fuel cycle costs of a reprocessing-recycling system based on one-time recycling of plutonium in existing thermal reactors (as opposed to the proposed breeder reactor cycle) and compare this to the total costs of an open fuel cycle with direct disposal … (as modeled has a).. range of results produced by these studies.. (that)..is very wide, but all are agreed that under current (2005) economic conditions the reprocessing-recycle option is the more costly.
If reprocessing is undertaken only to reduce the radioactivity level of spent fuel it should be taken into account that spent nuclear fuel becomes less radioactive over time. After 40 years its radioactivity drops by 99.9%, though it still takes over a thousand years for the level of radioactivity to approach that of natural uranium. However the level of transuranic elements, including plutonium-239, remains high for over 100,000 years, so if not reused as nuclear fuel, then those elements need secure disposal because of nuclear proliferation reasons as well as radiation hazard.
Also note that breeder reactors decay from the inside out so you have a husk with a radioactive interior that has to be baby sat after it’s shutdown from operating.
Has the Obama Admin. ever met a regulation it likes?
More brainstem media, Baracketeer CS (China Syndrome)!
Thanks again, jo. Went there and made a shortcut – important info.
Was pretty much what I expected, unfortunately.
PS: You did catch those two big IFs in my comment, didn’t ya?
Points for the Tom Lehrer reference, DW.
True -
the destruction of the strength of the metal walls is amazing – God help us if any are load bearing.