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ARTICLE ARCHIVE

Canada

Canada is the world's largest exporter of uranium and operates nuclear reactors including on the Great Lakes. Attempts are underway to introduce nuclear power to the province of Alberta and to use nuclear reactors to power oil extraction from the tar sands.

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Entries by admin (358)

Wednesday
Oct032012

Great Lakes events in resistance to uranium fuel chain, atomic reactor & radioactive waste risks

The Great Lakes comprise 20% of the world's surface fresh water, providing drinking water to 40 million people in the U.S., Canada, and a large number of Native American First NationsFrom the "Nuclear Labyrinth" conference in Huron, OH Oct. 4-6, to an Oct. 11 "Entergy Nuclear Watch" presentation in Kalamazoo, Michigan (bridging resistance from Vermont Yankee to Palisades), to"A Mountain of Radioactive Waste 70 Years High" summit in Chicago Dec. 1-3, strong resistance to the uranium fuel chain in the Great Lakes is building! Beyond Nuclear is proud and honored to be a co-sponsor and active participant in all three events.

Friday
Sep282012

Deep Trouble -- Nuclear Waste Burial in the Great Lakes Basin

The Great Lakes comprise 20% of the world's surface fresh water, and the drinking water supply for 40 million people in 8 U.S. states, 2 Canadian provinces, and a large number of Native American/First NationsThe St. Clair County Community College Green Team and Blue Water Sierra Club are proud to present: 
 
Brennain Lloyd and John Jackson speaking on: 

Deep Trouble - Nuclear Waste Burial in the Great Lakes Basin

Sunday, September 30, 2012, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. - Room 150, MTEC Building, St. Clair County Community College, 735 Erie St, Port Huron, MI  48060, USA

The MTEC Building is on the corner of Glenwood Ave and Erie Street. 

The parking lot entrance is off of Glenwood Ave.  

Room 150 is on the 1st floor right off the main lobby.

The nuclear industry in Canada is currently pursuing approval of their plan to bury 200,000 cubic meters of radioactive waste below the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station on the eastern shore of Lake Huron, and is studying 21 different communities - 15 of them in the Great Lakes basin - as possible burial locations for all of Canada's high level nuclear fuel waste. 

The presentation will include descriptions of the burial schemes, the hazards and risks for the Great Lakes community, and possible transportation risks, and linkages to U.S. nuclear waste issues. 

A participatory discussion will follow. 

We are all stakeholders in the long-term protection and conservation of these fresh water seas. You are invited to come hear Brennain Lloyd and John Jackson speak on this important issue.

For more information, please contact:
Kay Cumbow, Blue Water Sierra Club at 810-346-4513 or <kcumbow@greatlakes.net>

The Green Team at St. Clair Community College is a group of faculty, staff, students and community members focused on three key areas: Energy conservation, Green education and Recycling.

Blue Water Sierra Club is part of the SE Michigan Group of the Michigan Chapter of Sierra Club.

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Our speakers:

John Jackson is Interim Executive Director and Director, Clean Production and Toxics, Great Lakes United.  He has worked on industrial hazardous waste, radioactive waste, and municipal waste management issues for the past 35 years, with a special focus on waste siting issues. He has also taught waste management at Trent University for the past 13 years.

Great Lakes United www.glu.org/  is a coalition of citizens' groups representing Canada, the United States, First Nations and Indigenous Peoples in the Great Lakes / St. Lawrence River System. 

Brennain Lloyd is Project Coordinator and community organizer with Northwatch. 

Northwatch www.northwatch.org/ is a coalition of environmental and social justice groups in northeastern Ontario.

Directions to the MTEC building and parking can be found at:
http://www.sc4.edu/maps

Free and open to the public

Friday
Sep282012

Congressman Kucinich objects to whitewash of Davis-Besse containment cracking

U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH)On Thursday, September 20th, U.S. Representative Dennis Kucinch (D-OH, pictured left) sponsored a congressional briefing on Capitol Hill during the Coalition Against Nukes events in Washington, D.C. Rep. Kucinich thanked those gathered for working on an issue "that is bigger than all of us." During his talk, he focused on the whitewash, by FirstEnergy and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, of containment cracking at the Davis-Besse atomic reactor, just upwind of his congressional district on northern Ohio's Lake Erie shoreline, as representative of the dangerous state of decay of the nuclear power industry in the U.S. And he had some kind words for Beyond Nuclear: "...I want to thank my friends at Beyond Nuclear like Kevin Kamps who have been doing a fantastic job at citizen oversight over Davis-Besse."

Later that same night, Rep. Kucinich helped lead the successful effort to block H.R. 5987, which proposed creating a new national park to glorify the Manhattan Project, which culminated with the August 1945 dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Japanese civilians.

At an NRC review meeting in Painesville, OH on Sept. 26 regarding FirstEnergy's entire nuclear fleet, Rep. Kucinich lambasted safety lapses at not only Davis-Besse, but also Perry nuclear power plant northeast of Cleveland. He asked: "Why does the NRC think FirstEnergy’s past record justifies an extension of their current operating licenses at their nuclear power plants?” As he had done at a U.S. House hearing in December 2011, Rep. Kucinich submitted for the record a Beyond Nuclear report documenting Davis-Besse's numerous near-disasters.

Both Davis-Besse and Perry are located in northern Ohio, directly across Lake Erie from Canada. The Citizen Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario has joined with U.S. environmental allies in opposition to FENOC's proposed 20 year license extension at Davis-Besse.

Saturday
Sep152012

SAMA contention defended, international resistance to Davis-Besse license extension continues

Environmental coalition attorney Terry Lodge of Toledo speaks at a press conference held at Oak Harbor High School in Ohio, prior to an NRC meeting about Davis-Besse's severely cracked shield buildingOn Sept. 14th, environmental coalition attorney, Toledo-based Terry Lodge (photo, left), filed a rebuttal against FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Company's (FENOC) Motion for Summary Dismissal (MSD) of an intervention contention challenging the Davis-Besse atomic reactor's Severe Accident Mitigation Alernatives (SAMA) analyses. The coalition includes U.S. and Canadian groups.

FENOC recently admitted that it had made five major errors in its original SAMA analyses, including getting wind directions 180 degrees wrong; undervaluing Ohio farmland and urban property values; and underestimating the amount of hazardous radioactivity that could escape into the environment during a meltdown at Davis-Besse, as well as the land area that could become contaminated.

The heart of the environmental coalition's defense of its contention involves the severe cracking of Davis-Besse's outer concrete, steel reinforced shield building, as well as significant corrosion of its inner steel containment vessel. The environmental Intervenors charge that FENOC's SAMA analyses are fatally flawed, for they ignore the questionable structural integrity of Davis-Besse's containment structures, which could fail under even small loads, such as mild earthquakes, or meltdown conditions (high temperatures and pressures, which the shield building was never even designed to withstand when brand new, let alone severely cracked).

The ASLB has indicated it will hold oral argument pre-hearings in the vicinity of Davis-Besse in early November, at which the environmental coalition will defend not only its SAMA contention, but also its shield building cracking contention. More.

Thursday
Sep062012

'Nuclear Labyrinth on the Great Lakes,' Oct. 4-6, BGSU/Firelands College, Huron, OH

The Great Lakes, comprising 20% of the world's surface fresh water, serves as the drinking water supply for 40 million people in the U.S., Canada, and a large number of Native American/First Nations.BGSU Firelands Community Enrichment Series Announces

‘Nuclear Labyrinth on the Great Lakes’

October 4th-6th, 2012

on the Lake Erie shoreline at Bowling Green State University's Firelands College,

Cedar Point Center Auditorium, Huron, Ohio

(see the full color flyer for this event here, with graphic design by Kathryn Barnes)

(see the BGSU/Firelands College poster here)

Albert Einstein noted in 1946 that "The splitting of the atom has changed everything except the way we think. Thus we drift toward unparalleled catastrophe. We shall require a substantially new manner of thinking if mankind is to survive. To the Village Square...we must carry the facts of atomic energy, from there must come America's voice."

Today there are seven major nuclear threats on Lake Erie that historically have had chronic and acute problems that continue to this day. This October 4th - 6th a conference will convene bringing focus on these nuclear threats. Noted scholars, activist practitioners, and impacted community members will engage with dialogue about the immediate threats and potential impacts on the Great Lakes bio-region. Impacted communities will be invited to explore the historical, psychological, economic, political, health, safety, security and environmental ramifications of these nuclear power plants. These are the hidden subsidies that have been excluded from the cost equation of nuclear power.  This conference seeks the inclusion of various area constituencies to dialogue and work toward the alleviation of the nuclear perils now faced by Lake Erie. 

Gordon Edwards, Ph.D., President, Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility will be the keynote presenter Thursday, October 4th at 7:00 p.m. in the Cedar Point Center Auditorium. Dr. Edwards will also anchor the workshops Friday held at the same location.  To view his life's work, visit Dr. Edwards' website. You can also listen to a recent radio podcast featuring Gordon.

Friday Registration 8:30  to 9:30 am

Welcome and Introductions 9:30  to 10:00 am

Workshops begin at 10:00 am.  Activist Practitioners will serve as presenters and facilitators for the following set of sequential workshops on Friday, October 5 in the Cedar Point Center Auditorium. Each workshop will be 75 minutes including Q/A with 15 minute breaks between workshops.

Nukespeak in the Great Lakes Basin - An Overview - 10:00 to 11:15 am

The Great Lakes basin hosts every aspect of the nuclear fuel chain, from uranium mining and refining, to nuclear reactors, waste facilities and nuclear weapons production facilities. Radioactive materials are regularly shipped between these sites.  Each stage of the nuclear fuel chain has its own enormous radioactive waste problems.  In addition, routine emissions of radioactivity from these sites add to the degradation of the world's largest surface freshwater ecosystem. A major accident at any one facility could have a devastating impact on the entire Great Lakes basin. Even if a catastrophic accident is avoided, these nuclear hot spots must be isolated and monitored for many generations to come. This workshop will provide an Overview and the History of Nuclear Power / Nuclear Weapons in the Great Lakes basin.

Uranium Mining Impacts on the Great Lakes & Beyond - 11:30 to 12:45 pm

This workshop will examine the contamination and chronic threat posed to indigenous peoples by mining, milling, and processing of uranium. This workshop focuses on uranium mining and refining. On the North Shore of Lake Huron, Elliot Lake uranium mines and tailings, Blind River refinery, and Espanola uranium tailings threaten Lake Huron. Uranium refineries at Port Hope on Lake Ontario have caused the harbor to be contaminated at high levels. There are proposed uranium mining operations in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan that will threaten streams and Lake Superior. Around the world indigenous peoples have been displaced from their ancestral lands and contaminated by uranium mining. This workshop will work to inform and then to empower people to take action to stop uranium mining and refining in the Great Lakes basin and beyond.

Lunch in provided - Pizza & Salad - 1:00 pm

Speaking of Nuclear Reactors in the Great Lakes Basin - 2:00 to 3:15 pm

This workshop will examine the health, environmental and economic threat of nuclear power while pointing the way to alternative and renewable energy. The Great Lakes basin is ringed with nuclear power plants.  On Lake Erie there are several operating nuclear reactors including Perry, Davis-Besse and Fermi 2. These existing reactors chronically pollute the watershed and air-shed with radioactive isotopes and with other chemical releases under NPDES permits.  Beyond this chronic slow contamination is the potential for a catastrophic nuclear disaster threatening 20% of the world's surface fresh water. The Great Lakes are threatened again with plans to build additional reactors on both the U.S. and Canadian side of the border. This workshop will examine the dire consequence of a nuclear accident and will empower the audience to act to prevent additional reactors and to shut down the existing reactors. 

Nuclear Waste - Forevermore - Now What? - 3:30 to 4:45 pm 

 Dirty, dangerous and expensive nuclear power and its fuel chain threaten our environment, economy and democracy with nuclear waste, long lasting and deadly. We have no way to isolate it for as long as it is hazardous/radioactively dangerous. This workshop will examine the ways that making, processing, dumping and transporting high and “low-level" nuclear waste in the Great Lakes threaten us, and what to do about it.  Emphasis will be on Lake Erie.  This session will include overviews of the Canadian nuclear dump proposals on Lake Huron and shipments of radioactive waste on the Great Lakes.  How to strengthen Canadian and US environmental policy will be discussed.

Music and Wrap-up 4:45 to 5:00 pm

Lake Erie specific concerns will be woven into the above workshops including: high level nuclear waste reprocessing and burial at West Valley, New York; Perry nuclear reactor at Perry, Ohio; NewGreen nuclear waste transport and processing on Great Lakes at Perry, Ohio; Plum Brook decommissioned nuclear reactors - Huron, Ohio; Davis-Besse nuclear reactor at Oak Harbor, Ohio; Fermi nuclear reactor complex, Newport, Michigan.

 

Saturday Registration 8:30 to 9:30 am

Welcome, Re-cap, Introduction 9:30 to 10:00 am

Saturday workshops begin at 10:00 am and will provide ‘How To’ tools for productive engagement concerning environmental threats.

 

Barefoot Epidemiology - 10:00 am

Accessing Public Documents - 11:00 am

Social Media Utilization - 12:00 pm

Demos of Improvisational Performing Arts - 1:00 pm

Lunch in provided - Pizza, Veggie Subs and Salad at 2:00 pm


Registration from 8:30 to 9:30 am with coffee & pastry for both Friday & Saturday. Registration in advance will reserve limited program packets and help in planning.

Friday begins at 8:30 am, lunch will be @ 1:00 pm then reconvene until 5:00 pm.

Saturday begins at 8:30 am, lunch @ 2:00 pm with closing music and conference wrap-up.

 

Firelands College is located in Huron, Ohio fifteen minutes east of Sandusky. Please see link to Firelands College maps webpage here.

 

 Scheduled workshop speakers and presenters to include:

Angela Bischoff - Outreach Director, Ontario Clean Air Alliance will share Social Media skills and help to Emcee.

Diane D’Arrigo – Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Sierra Club No Nukes Activist Team will review West Valley Reprocessing, Radioactive Metal ‘Recycling’ Threat.

Dr. Gordon Edwards - President of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility will address the radioactive contamination of the Earth and its Waters - accidental or deliberate? He will also speak on reactor waste policy in Canada.

Dr. Timothy Jurkovac - Associate Professor of Sociology at BGSU Firelands, Conference Organizer, Host and Emcee can be reached at: (419) 372-0661 / tjohnj@bgnet.bgsu.edu 

Michael Keegan - Coalition for a Nuclear Free Great Lakes, Don’t Waste Michigan, Conference Organizer and Registrant can be reached at (734) 770-1441 / mkeeganj@comcast.net 

Kevin Kamps - Radioactive Waste Watchdog, Beyond Nuclear will discuss high-level radioactive waste policy in the Great Lakes, and Davis-Besse reactor license extension proceedings.

Terry Lodge, Attorney - Longtime representative of antinuclear intervenors in Ohio and Michigan, will present legal perspectives on intervening in NRC licensing cases. 

Pat Marida - Chair, Nuclear Free Ohio (Sierra Club) to discuss NewGreen and radioactive waste shipments on Lake Erie and beyond. 

Victor McManemy - Great Lakes songwriter, troubadour, historian, musician and advocate for Indigenous Peoples will perform.

Invited Speaker - Seasoned nuclear dump intervenor will present concerns about the ‘Deep Geologic Repository’ and ‘High Level Waste’ in Canada that impact the Great Lakes. Learn more about the proposal to bury "low" and "intermediate" level radioactive waste at Bruce Nuclear Complex on Ontario's Lake Huron shore, as well as about Canada's search for a high-level radioactive waste dump (several communities on the Ontario shores of Lake Huron near Bruce, as well as the Ontario shore of Lake Superior, have volunteered to be considered as candidate "host" sites for Canada's high-level radioactive waste's permanent burial).

 

Registration Information

Please RSVP early to reserve conference package.  This would be most helpful for Conference planning.  Registrant is Michael Keegan: mkeeganj@comcast.net  On site check-in and registration begins at 8:30 am both Friday and Saturday.  Registration is free, morning pastry and coffee provided, lunch will be provided.  

 For updates on ‘Nuclear Labyrinth on the Great Lakes’ and subject related materials please see the following webpages: Beyond NuclearDon’t Waste Michigan; Firelands CollegeGreat Lakes United; Greenpeace CanadaNorthwatch; NuclearFreePlanet.orgNuclear Information and Resource Service; Sierra Club Nuclear Free Campaign; Sierra Club Ohio Chapter Nuclear Issues Committee.

 

Lodging Information

Lodging is on your own. Recommended lodging is Motel 6 at 601 Rye Beach Road, off Interstate 2, Huron, Ohio 44839. Motel 6 is very close to Firelands. (419)-433-7829, Reservations 800-466-8356 we have been quoted rates of $46 Thursday / Friday and $60 Saturday for a room with double Queens. Please visit the Motel 6 website. 

Also, Comfort Inn is nearby Firelands College. Please visit the Comfort Inn website.

Many other lodging options can be found six miles west (Cedar Point). Please be informed that lodging will be hard to obtain October weekends because Cedar Point runs Halloween Theme specials. This is the peak attendance period for Cedar Point. Please do not hesitate to secure accommodations. We are four weeks out.

Contributions to defray conference costs for ‘Nuclear Labyrinth on the Great Lakes’ are most welcome and most appreciated.  Contributions should be made out to "Beyond Nuclear" and earmarked on the note line "Don't Waste MI/Great Lakes Conference" at mailed to the following address: Attn. Cindy Folkers, Beyond Nuclear, 6930 Carroll Avenue, Suite 400, Takoma Park, MD 20912.

For more info on how to contribute please contact Michael Keegan (734) 770-1441mkeeganj@comcast.net

Registration is Free!  Coffee, Pastry, Lunch Free!  But Please RSVP

In addition to Firelands College, 'Nuclear Labyrinth on the Great Lakes’ has been endorsed and sponsored by the following organizations: Beyond Nuclear, Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility, Coalition for a Nuclear Free Great Lakes, The Culture Club: Cultural Studies Scholars' Association - BGSU, Don’t Waste Michigan, Great Lakes United, Greenpeace Canada, NuclearFreePlanet.org, Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Sierra Club Ohio Chapter, Sierra Club Nuclear Free Campaign, Toledo Coalition for Safe Energy.

Additional Endorsements and Sponsorships are Welcome contact: mkeeganj@comcast.net 

Please help spread the word!