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ARTICLE ARCHIVE
Thursday
Sep172020

New cancelations and shutdowns signal time's up for nuclear power

We watch this week as Hitachi announces it is abandoning its two reactor project at Wylfa-B in Wales. And Exelon admits to "severe economic challenges" prompting the premature shutdown of its Byron and Dresden nuclear plants in Illinois. Meanwhile, as Amory Lovins points out on Beyond Nuclear International, we could reduce greater amounts of carbon emissions faster and cheaper by investing money squandered on nuclear subsidies (and especially new reactors) in renewables and energy efficiency instead. Nuclear power, he says, simply makes climate change worse.

Wednesday
Sep162020

Hitachi pulls out of Welsh new nuclear project

Press release from People Against Wylfa B (PAWB)

PAWB (People Against Wylfa B) welcomes the news that Hitachi is to abandon its plans to build a nuclear power station at Wylfa.

A nuclear power station would have endangered lives on Anglesey and beyond, not just for our own generation but for generations to come. It would have created tons of radioactive waste, with no solution to the problem of getting rid of the poison. It would have ruined the environment over an area which is ten times greater than the current site.

The only job of the nuclear industry should be to deal with the complex problems that exist because the industry is so dangerous.

We call on Hitachi to ensure that no nuclear scheme can happen on the site in the future, should it be sold to another developer. We would welcome a discussion between Hitachi and the Island's residents about site restoration, including the demolished houses, to its former state, for community benefit. Proposals to develop green energy schemes would be an area where Hitachi's expertise could create many jobs here.

Isle of Anglesey County Council, Gwynedd Council and Welsh Government

Well over a decade has been wasted by our politicians in supporting Wylfa B. For years, PAWB has agreed with experts around the world who warned that massive nuclear projects are unlikely to be commercially successful. All of the nuclear industry’s arguments have been negated by the growth of sustainable methods of energy production for continually falling costs. This is the reality that has been ignored, while still believing in the promises of jobs.

Anglesey's economic future has been put in the hands of a few people in a room in Tokyo.

The hopes of a generation of young people for work in their home area were shattered.

The Gwynedd and Anglesey Joint Local Development Plan, and the North Wales Growth Plan, assumed that Wylfa B would happen, and that it would be a good thing.

We call on the Councils and the Welsh Government to start from scratch with these plans.

Westminster government and political parties

There is no clarity in the Westminster Government's energy policy. There should be an urgent move to a nuclear-free, renewable energy policy. It's technically possible -- but it requires the political will. This should be one area where there can be party collaboration -- but this time against nuclear!

An alternative future?

It is possible to build a different economy, especially as new ways of looking at work have been forced upon us by coronavirus. We can also use some of the facilities intended to support Wylfa for an alternative economy. Coleg Menai in Llangefni, M-Sparc in Gaerwen, and some Bangor University departments offer themselves to such uses.

But you can't build differently without changing the builders. Those who advised Councils and Government in support of Wylfa and other nuclear schemes need to be replaced. It will not be possible to build a new economy without changing the architects -- architects who have been employed for years while failing to provide employment for our young people.

Viable and innovative ideas are available in our local communities. These have received only crumbs of support compared to Wylfa. Members of PAWB have been working with some of the people who do such excellent work in their communities. We can cite as examples Bro Môn, Cwmni Bro, Dolan, Partneriaeth Ogwen, Antur Aelhaearn, SAIL –- which all include a number of other ventures.

We call on the Councils and the Welsh Government to prioritize discussions with, and support for, people like this to see what can be done locally. The time to rely on capitalist giants has to end if we are to create a better future. (Photo of PAWB protest in Llangegni by Huw P)

Tuesday
Sep082020

2020 Nuclear-Free Future Award winners announced

Russians who risk freedom to oppose nuclear sector rewarded

Fedor Maryasov and Andrey Talevlin, four others, win 2020 Nuclear Free Future Award

Munich, Germany, September 8, 2020—Fedor Maryasov and Andrey Talevlin know how risky it is to oppose the Russian government. Now, with the apparent poisoning of Russian political opposition leader, Alexey Navalny, they have been reminded again. 

However, the pair remain resolute in calling out the dangers posed by the Russian nuclear state, no matter the personal risk. 

Their activities  — Maryasov as a journalist, Talevlin as a lawyer — have led to harassment and being labeled as “extremists” and a “foreign agent.”  

This week they were also finally rewarded for their courage. The pair received the Nuclear Free Future Award in the category of Resistance, chosen by an international jury of activists and scientists.

The Munich-based Nuclear Free Future Foundation holds the awards event each year to honor the largely unsung heroes of the worldwide anti-nuclear movement for the work they do to end both the military and civil use of nuclear energy.

An international jury of activists and scientists selects the winners in the categories of resistance, education and solution. Each of the three prizes comes with $5,000. 

In addition to Maryasov and Talevlin, the 2020 winners are Americans Felice and Jack Cohen-Joppa (pictured above headline) of The Nuclear Resister in Education; and Canadian peace activist and feminist, Ray Acheson, the director of Reaching Critical Willin the Solution category. An honorary award for Special Recognition goes to Native American activist and New Mexico Democrat, U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland. 

Maryasov has published more than one hundred investigative articles on accidents, leaks, and waste scandals within the Russian nuclear sector.  He made public the secret plans of the state-owned nuclear company Rosatom to build an underground repository for nuclear waste in Zheleznogorsk, a closed nuclear city in Siberia. 

Talevlin has represented Russian NGOs in court on several occasions and, in 2002, on his initiative, the Russian Supreme Court revoked the import permit for 370 tons of nuclear waste from the Pak nuclear power plant in Hungary. Talvelin has organized and participated in non-violent actions against the import and reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel at the Mayak reprocessing facility and was arrested several times for these actions.

Since 1980, Jack and Felice Cohen-Joppa, under the mantel of their newsletter and charitable organization — The Nuclear Resister — have provided comprehensive reporting on thousands of anti-nuclear activists, and especially those subsequently jailed for their actions. In 1990, they expanded their work to include reporting on anti-war resisters, with the same emphasis on prisoner support. 

“The words of resisters and accounts of their actions do a great deal in encouraging others to strengthen their own commitment,” said Felice Cohen-Joppa. “We remember with gratitude all of the people who have received the NFFA in past years and are honored to join the list of recipients.”

Acheson has been working on the intergovernmental disarmament process since 2005 and was an instrumental voice for feminism in the campaign to secure the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, now nearing the 50 ratifications needed to see it become international law. 

“The Nuclear Free Future Award is meaningful not just in its recognition of the work of individuals around the world, but in honoring the collective and intergenerational spirit of antinuclear activism,” said Acheson on learning of her win. “It’s an honor to be included among those who have resisted the bomb and all of its various violences, and to hopefully pass some of that spirit along to those who will continue this work until nuclear weapons are abolished for all time.” 

A focus of Acheson’s activities and research is on the war economy and the patriarchal and racist structures of war and armed violence. As director of Reaching Critical Will, the disarmament program of the oldest women's peace organization in the world, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, she connects  and strengthens civil society organizations through extensive networking.

Haaland, a Native American from Laguna Pueblo, was elected to the US House of Representatives in 2018. She is helping lead efforts in Congress to get the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) expanded to include uranium miners who were working after 1971, as well as the Trinity Downwinders, exposed during the world’s first nuclear test on July 16, 1945 in Haaland’s home state of New Mexico.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Nuclear Free Future Award will be presented this year in the form of an online dossier. Detailed information about this year’s and past prizewinners can be found on the NFFA Website. Webinars with the prizewinners will also be offered in the coming months.  

Greenpeace Germany, IPPNW Germany and Beyond Nuclear USA are supporting partners of the 2020 Nuclear Free Future Award. 

Monday
Sep072020

The Dangers of Transporting Nuclear Waste/Stop Environmentally Unjust Nuclear Dumps

Video presentation recorded on July 8, 2020, published on Sept. 7, 2020, on "The Dangers of Transporting High-Level Radioactive Waste." Beyond Nuclear's radioactive waste specialist, Kevin Kamps, presents from the beginning to the 22 minute mark in the recording, followed by Tim Judson, Ex. Dir. of NIRS.

A big focus was the transport risk associated with consolidated interim storage facilities (de facto permanent, surface storage, parking lots dumps) for irradiated nuclear fuel, targeted at New Mexico and Texas, but also the permanent dump-site targeted at Western Shoshone land at Yucca Mountain, Nevada.

Catherine Skopic was a lead organizer of the event, and the Manhattan Sierra Club Chapter a primary sponsor.

View the recording here.

Environment TV (ETV) provided this write up:

This video is an excerpt from a ZOOM event entitled: STOP ENVIRONMENTALLY UNJUST NUCLEAR DUMPS.
To view the full version go to: @ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0RwuG... which is on the You Tube Channel: PeaceActionNewYorkSt and they have given ETV permission to edit their event for our various communications platforms.
This excerpt was edited for the Westchester public access TV station of Altice, for our sister show, Environmental News and Views with Host/producer Marilyn Elie.
The original event had this program:
Speakers;
KAREN CAMPBLIN - NAACP Environment & Climate Justice Committee Chair
LEONA MORGAN - Dine, Navajo Organizer; Co-Founder, Nuclear Issues Study Group
KEVIN KAMPS - Beyond Nuclear; Nuclear Waste Watchdog
ROSE GARDNER - Alliance for Environmental Strategies, New Mexico
Support Speakers:
MICHEL LEE, Esq. - Sr. Analyst, Promoting Health and Sustainable Energy (PHASE)
MARI INOUE, Esq. - Co-Founder, Manhattan Project for A Nuclear-Free World
TIM JUDSON - Executive Director, Nuclear Information Resource Service (NIRS)
Our Goals:
1. Inform organizations/individuals about the proposed nuclear landfills & nuclear dumps
2. Inspire people to submit comments to NRC before [Sept. 22, Oct., and Nov. 3 deadlines]; write letters to editors
3. We Can Stop This - encourage actions to prevent the EJ violation of nuclear landfills & dumps

View the recording here.

Sunday
Aug302020

A message from the most bombed nation on earth

Ian Zabarte speaking at a press conference at a Nuclear Forum event he organized at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas in 2016.More than 900 nuclear tests were conducted on Shoshone territory in the US. Residents still live with the consequences.

A videotaped interview with, and written column by, Ian Zabarte, Principal Man of the Western Bands of the Shoshone Nation of Indians, published by Al Jazeera.

Learn more about the Western Shoshone, nuclear weapons testing on their land, high-level radioactive waste dumping targeted at their land, and more, at the Native Community Action Council website. Ian Zabarte serves as NCAC secretary.