The Green Village News Tagged ‘nuclear’

Nuclear Catastrophe Narrowly Avoided at Sizewell A Power Plant

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Sizewell A nuclear power stationThe Sizewell A nuclear power station in Suffolk hasn’t produced electricity since December 2006. Since then the plant has been going through a lengthy decommissioning period. However, it has come to light this week that in January of 2007, the Sizewell A plant had leaked around 40,000 gallons of radioactive water from its cooling ponds.

The cooling pond’s water level had dropped by over a foot, and it wasn’t until someone involved in decommissioning the nuclear power station saw leaking water in the laundry room that the problem was recognised. A new alarm system was in place at the time to check the level of the cooling ponds, but it hadn’t been tested and didn’t go off. Even if it had gone off, staff based at the nuclear power plant had been ignoring alarms from another incident for the last two days and possibly wouldn’t have taken any notice anyway.

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Isle of Wight Wind Turbine Factory To Close

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

wind turbineVestas Blades, Britain’s only wind turbine manufacturing factory, shut down operations and announced closure yesterday. The decision to close down has been blamed on a lack of demand for wind turbine parts in Northern Europe and the effects of the global financial problems currently affecting the world.

Workers at the plant have been given 90 days’ notice of the imminent redundancies, however environmental campaigners Greenpeace have questioned whether Gordon Brown could have done more to prevent the factory having to close down, commenting that although last week’s Budget commitment is a positive move, it is “too little too late”.

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MoD Base Fail To Prevent Radioactive Leakages

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

A major MoD nuclear submarine base in Faslane near Glasgow yesterday released information under the Freedom of Information Act detailing a number of embarrassing incidents involving nuclear and radioactive waste and admitted inadequate staff training for employees.

Angus Robertson MP, Leader of the Scottish National Party Westminster, and their Defence spokesperson commented,

“This utterly damning disclosure reveals repeated and serious nuclear safety breaches, and the MoD cannot be above the law. We are not talking about a one off incident but a whole catalogue of serious and frankly shocking failures.”

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Nuclear – Waste or Answer to Britain’s Energy Problems?

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

With the unveiling of 11 proposed sites for new Nuclear Power Stations announced by the UK government last week, a period of public consultation has now begun to get feedback from the British public about their thoughts and feelings regarding the locations put forward.

The sites, which include one in Anglesey, Essex, Suffolk, Somerset and 3 proposed locations in Cumbria, have been put forward by EDF Energy, EON, German producer RWE and the Nuclear Decommissioning Agency (NDA).

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Going Nuclear – Energy Companies Undermine Renewable Energy Projects

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Major energy companies E-on and EDF are putting pressure on the government regarding renewable energy development. They say that unless the government reduces the amount of projects and funding planned for wind farms and wind energy generation, they may be forced to rethink plans to invest in a new round of nuclear power plants.

Greenpeace have long been concerned about the relationship between nuclear and renewable technologies, and as reported in the Guardian, head of the energy solutions unit at Greenpeace, Nathan Argent, commented that Greenpeace has

“always said that nuclear power will undermine renewable energy and will damage the UK’s efforts to tackle climate change – now EDF agrees.”

Greenpeace opposes nuclear power, stating that it is not the solution to climate change. They also bring attention to the “incompetent at best” methods of nuclear waste disposal for years.

In an era where most of the population is well aware of what happened at Chernobyl, and those that didn’t live through it have seen films and photographs and heard stories of what has been left behind, perhaps there is a cautionary tale here that the people at the top of the energy companies are conveniently ignoring. It’s all too easy to gloss over the mistakes and accidents of the past as if they didn’t happen, and with a rationale that they have the solution to dwindling reserves of fossil fuels, and arguments that when run at capacity, nuclear is safe, and with no CO2 produced when energy is generated from it, no wonder the governments turn their heads.

Let’s hope future projects for renewable energy don’t end up being another casualty of consumerism, because let’s face it, if people needed less energy, renewables alone might have a chance to show their worth.