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From: owner-abolition-usa-digest@lists.xmission.com (abolition-usa-digest)
To: abolition-usa-digest@lists.xmission.com
Subject: abolition-usa-digest V1 #173
Reply-To: abolition-usa-digest
Sender: owner-abolition-usa-digest@lists.xmission.com
Errors-To: owner-abolition-usa-digest@lists.xmission.com
Precedence: bulk
abolition-usa-digest Tuesday, August 31 1999 Volume 01 : Number 173
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 1999 21:04:32 -0400 (EDT)
From: Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space <globenet@afn.org>
Subject: (abolition-usa) Star Wars Test News Release
Friends: Please help us by copying and sending this news release to your
local media. Thanks. Bruce Gagnon
STAR WARS MISSILE TEST
DRAWS INTERNATIONAL OPPOSITION
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: BRUCE GAGNON (352) 337-9274
The Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space is organizing an
international effort on September 13-15 to oppose the revitalized Star Wars
plans of the Clinton administration and the U.S. Congress. Calling it the
Star Wars International Call-In Days, activists around the world will be
speaking out in opposition to a scheduled Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD)
test planned in September over the Pacific Ocean by the Pentagon.
Congress has voted to allow the BMD system to move forward as "soon as
technically feasible". The Clinton administration is now beginning to
consider circumventing the 1972 ABM Treaty that outlaws the development of
weapons systems like the BMD. Clinton is scheduled to make a final
deployment decision on the BMD in June, 2000.
According to Global Network Coordinator Bruce Gagnon, "With Democrats and
Republicans recently voting to allow early deployment of BMD, the door has
been opened wide for the deployment of space-based weapons. We are talking
about moving the arms race into space! The cost in tax dollars will be
staggering and the threat to world peace will be enormous. People understand
that putting lasers in space is an offensive strategy. We are organizing a
global response to this craziness."
Global Network organizers are calling on the public to contact the White
House and Congress between September 13-15 with the message No BMD, No Star
Wars. Activists in other parts of the world will be contacting the U.S.
Embassy in their country with the same message.
The Star Wars International Call-In Days will mark the beginning of a year
long campaign being organized by the Global Network. Throughout 2000 a
series of events will target the Star Wars issue. Included in these actions
will be a demonstration at the Treasury Department on April 14 highlighting
the $100 billion that has been spent on Star Wars development to date and an
International conference on the subject the following day. On October 7,
2000 an International Day of Protest to Stop the Militarization of Space will
be held.
Check the Global Network website at: http://www.globenet.free-online.co.uk
# #
# #
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with "unsubscribe abolition-usa" in the body of the message.
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 1999 20:09:41 -0700
From: Jackie Cabasso <wslf@earthlink.net>
Subject: (abolition-usa) More Trouble for Livermore Lab; NIF Chief Resigns!
http://www.hotcoco.com/news/alameda/trivalley/stories/bdu08092.htm
Conta Costa Times (California)
Published Saturday, August 28, 1999
NIF head quits amid Ph.D. flap
Acclaimed Lawrence Livermore laser physicist never finished his degree
By David Holbrook and Andrea Widener
LIVERMORE Lawrence Livermore Laboratory's top laser scientist, head of the
project that is building the world's most powerful laser, resigned Friday
after it was revealed he never earned a doctorate from Princeton University.
Michael Campbell, a renowned physicist who was responsible for the $1.2
billion National Ignition Facility project, said this week he failed to
complete his doctoral dissertation after being hired by the lab in 1977. But
he never informed supervisors and colleagues at the lab, where his doctorate
was commonly cited and he was referred in lab literature as Dr. E. Michael
Campbell.
In an interview with the Times this week, a distraught Campbell said
personal issues had prevented him from completing his doctorate 22 years
ago. He also said the need for a doctorate became increasingly insignificant
as he made a rapid rise through the lab's laser fusion programs, an
assertion confirmed by highplaced colleagues.
"It would be a waste of time and talent to continue to pursue a dissertation
in some cases," said David Crandall, the Department of Energy official
overseeing the NIF project. "Michael never got his done, and after a while I
think he stopped resisting being called 'doctor.'"
Campbell's lack of a degree became common knowledge early this week when
anonymous faxes streamed into the office of lab Director Bruce Tarter and
several other departments at the lab. Campbell immediately told Tarter he
didn't hold a doctorate and voluntarily took personal leave, lab officials
said.
Although he resigned as head of the NIF project, Campbell is still employed
as a technical adviser. Lab officials are still investigating whether he
lied about holding a doctorate during the hiring process.
Lab officials said they are unlikely to release the results of their
investigation because it involves a personnel issue. Lab spokeswoman Susan
Houghton said officials have confirmed through Princeton that Campbell
completed his doctoral course work but never finished his dissertation.
In a statement that illustrated the high regard Campbell enjoys at the lab,
Tarter said the Danville resident has "made extraordinary technical
contributions and provided exceptional leadership for laser programs."
"We look forward to his future contributions," Tarter said.
Tarter appointed George Miller, associate director for national security, to
take over temporary leadership of the laser program division.
Campbell's sudden decision to take leave this week spawned widespread
speculation at the lab, including suggestions that it was related to cost
overruns in the construction of NIF. The muchheralded laser is intended to
allow scientists to maintain nuclear weapons without the need for explosives
testing.
However, Campbell said the circumstances that led to his resignation did not
involve any problems with the project.
"This has nothing to do with NIF," he said. "It's to do with me personally."
Houghton confirmed Campbell's comment. She said a meeting scheduled next
week between Campbell and highlevel Department of Energy officials to
discuss NIF's progress was made before the doctorate issue arose.
Stress related to other laser programs under his supervision convinced
Campbell that he should take leave this week, he said.
"I have a young family, and I need to spend some time with them," he said.
"My wife has said the lab has sucked the life out of me."
Campbell said he had no idea why anyone would investigate his background and
leak the results to lab officials.
"I don't know what they did it for," he said. "All my life I've tried not to
hurt anybody."
Campbell is a popular, enthusiastic figure at the lab and has many
defenders, all of whom said it's common to hire doctoral candidates before
they complete their dissertations. Such scholars are referred to as ABDs;
the letters refer to "all but dissertation" status.
Once hired, an ABD's career advancement generally comes through scientific
breakthroughs rather than educational credentials.
"At this point in Michael's career, his accomplishments have far outstripped
any meaning about a doctorate," Crandall said.
Houghton said none of Campbell's jobs at the labs required a doctorate, and
his claim to one played no role in winning the $196,500 position as
associate director of laser programs.
Campbell became head of the lab's laser programs in 1994, and has since
helped win 19 awards from the prominent Research & Development publication.
Among many honors, Campbell has won the American Physical Society's award
for Excellence in Plasma Physics Research, the Edward Teller Medal and a
197273 Guggenheim fellowship.
In 1994, Campbell won the prestigious E.O. Lawrence Award for "distinguished
leadership in helping to propel laserdriven inertial confinement fusion to
the forefront of physics research."
Andrea Widener covers science and the area's national laboratories. You can
reach her at 9258472158 or mail to: awidener@cctimes.com
1999 Contra Costa Newspapers, Inc.
******************************************************
Jacqueline Cabasso, Executive Director
WESTERN STATES LEGAL FOUNDATION
1440 Broadway, Suite 500
Oakland, California USA 94612
Tel: +(510)839-5877
Fax: +(510)839-5397
E-mail: wslf@earthlink.net
******************************************************
Western States Legal Foundation is part of ABOLITION 2000
A GLOBAL NETWORK TO ELIMINATE NUCLEAR WEAPONS
- -
To unsubscribe to abolition-usa, send an email to "majordomo@xmission.com"
with "unsubscribe abolition-usa" in the body of the message.
For information on digests or retrieving files and old messages send
"help" to the same address. Do not use quotes in your message.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 1999 20:27:47 -0700
From: Jackie Cabasso <wslf@earthlink.net>
Subject: (abolition-usa) Lack of data at NTS; even MORE problems for Livermore Lab!
Las Vegas ReviewJournal
Saturday, August 28, 1999
Copyright; Las Vegas ReviewJournal
Report: Test site models flawed
Scientists lack the data to predict radioactive releases from nuclear test
cavities, an independent panel says.
By Keith Rogers
ReviewJournal
Computer models designed to forecast radioactive releases from
cavities
left by nuclear weapons tests in Nevada have serious flaws and lack the data
to support them, according to an independent panel of scientists who
reviewed the models.
A confidential report prepared by the scientists, a copy of which was
obtained by the ReviewJournal, suggests that more data be collected and more
test wells drilled to monitor key areas at the Nevada Test Site, 65 miles
northwest of Las Vegas.
The report drew strong comment from U.S. Sen. Richard Bryan, DNev.,
who
said he was "greatly bothered" by its conclusions.
The two models were developed as part of a $170 million program to
predict
where radioactive remnants from belowground nuclear weapons blasts would
travel after the materials were injected into aquifers at the test site.
They will be part of a warning mechanism, along with a system of
monitoring
wells, to assure the public can be protected from potential radioactive
releases for centuries to come.
The models and wells are independent of those being developed for the
proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository, on the southwest edge of
the test site, where the federal government wants to entomb the nation's
highlevel radioactive waste.
Given that the contamination stems from nuclear tests, in some cases
going
back more than 40 years, Bryan said he now has even less faith that models
can predict any radioactive leaks that might come from waste in Yucca
Mountain over 10,000 years.
"This is another example of the assurances that Nevadans have been
given
for more than a generation when it comes to matters relating to nuclear
issues," he said. "These assurances we've been given for decades are much
less certain."
"If we contaminate an aquifer or water source, we have a real public
health
crisis," Bryan said.
Allen Biaggi, administrator of the state Environmental Protection
Division,
said the division "has had longstanding concerns with the models that are
being developed for the test site."
Energy Department officials reacted Friday to questions about the
60page
report, which is marked "not for public release." They said one reason the
data doesn't appear complete is because the bulk of the information is
classified and could not be shared with the panel.
"I'm not real surprised with the (panel's) results," said Bob
Bangerter,
manager of the Energy Department's Underground Test Area Project.
"Our next step will be to develop a plan to address the concerns in
the
peer review report. Anytime you do a peer review, you don't expect it to
come out in flying colors," he said, noting, "I believe they did a very
good, thorough evaluation."
ONE MODEL, DEVELOPED BY THE LAWRENCE LIVERMORE NATIONAL LABORATORY IN
CALIFORNIA FOR THE UNDERGROUND TEST AREA PROJECT, WAS SUPPOSED TO ESTIMATE
THE STRENGTH OF RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINANTS IN GROUND WATER. THAT INFORMATION
THEN WOULD BE PLUGGED INTO A GROUND WATER TRANSPORT MODEL DEVELOPED BY IT CORP.
A COPY OF THE PEER REVIEW PANEL'S AUG. 3 DRAFT REPORT SAYS "THE DEGREE
OF
UNCERTAINTY IN THE (LAWRENCE LIVERMORE) MODEL PREDICTIONS IS UNDERESTIMATED"
AND "THERE ARE ALSO CONCERNS THAT THE EXISTING DATA ARE NOT ADEQUATE TO
PREDICT THE RATE OF RELEASE OF RADIONUCLIDES" SUCH AS POTENTIALLY DEADLY
PLUTONIUM239, CESIUM137, STRONTIUM90, NEPTUNIUM237, IODINE129 AND COBALT60.
THE INTENT OF THE LAWRENCE LIVERMORE MODEL WAS TO PREDICT RELEASES
FROM
ABOUT 260 NUCLEAR TEST CAVITIES THAT HAVE THE POTENTIAL OF CONTAMINATING
GROUND WATER THAT COULD MIGRATE OUTSIDE THE BOUNDARY OF THE TEST SITE.
IT Corp.'s ground water transport model was aimed at predicting the
range
beyond which the contaminants would not exceed the safe guideline, a 4
millirem annual dose to humans within 1,000 years. A millirem is
onethousandth of a rem, the dose unit for measuring the effect of radiation
on the body.
The Energy Department, which operates the test site, intends to submit
the
model for approval by the Nevada Environmental Protection Division under a
federal facilities agreement and consent order with the state.
The modeling effort was designed to assure safety of Nevadans for
up to
1,000 years from radioactivity left from 10 belowground nuclear bomb blasts
at the test site's Frenchman Flat. This is the first of six such "corrective
action units," the report says.
The panel found the models are flawed for a number of reasons and they
could not be used to assess the other five corrective action units, which
lump groups of the remaining 250 test cavities. Those are located in other
areas of the test site where the soils and hydrology are different from
Frenchman Flat, according to the consensus report by the sixmember review
panel led by Lynn Gelhar.
Gelhar, a civil and environmental engineering professor at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was not available for comment Friday.
Besides inadequate data, the review panel found errors with
calculations;
cumbersome links between the Frenchman Flat models and a regional model of
the entire 1,350squaremile test site; and a lack of consistency between the
the Lawrence Livermore and IT reports.
"These problems add uncertainty to the results of the model
calculations,"
the draft report says, referring to the "lack of consistency in mass
transport data."
Uncertainty with the computer models "is likely to be much larger than
that
calculated because a number of factors have not been adequately addressed,"
the report said.
The panel was charged with reviewing the strategies and methods of
data
collection, evaluating the results of ground water modeling efforts and
commenting on "omission, shortcomings, errors, or ineffective strategies"
that were used, the report said.
In all, between 1951 and 1992, when fullscale U.S. nuclear weapons
tests
were put on hold indefinitely, government scientists conducted 928 nuclear
tests at the Nevada Test Site, of which all but 100 were conducted below
ground.
With many of the key issues unresolved, the panel recommended that
more
field data be collected, measurements that reflect the data be made in the
laboratory and more appropriate models be developed.
That means monitoring wells should be drilled into plumes of
contaminants
migrating from test cavities so scientists can determine where and how large
the plumes are, and how far radionuclides are spreading based on samples
collected and analyzed over a period of years.
While the models of the Frenchman Flat detonations and ground water
flows
parallel sound science, the panel says they can't be applied because no data
exist to validate them and work has not been completed to determine where
the contamination plumes are located.
This story is located at:
http://www.lvrj.com/lvrj_home/1999/Aug28Sat1999/news/11831803.html
For comment or questions, please email to:webmaster@lvrj.com
Copyright Las Vegas ReviewJournal, 1997, 1998, 1999
******************************************************
Jacqueline Cabasso, Executive Director
WESTERN STATES LEGAL FOUNDATION
1440 Broadway, Suite 500
Oakland, California USA 94612
Tel: +(510)839-5877
Fax: +(510)839-5397
E-mail: wslf@earthlink.net
******************************************************
Western States Legal Foundation is part of ABOLITION 2000
A GLOBAL NETWORK TO ELIMINATE NUCLEAR WEAPONS
- -
To unsubscribe to abolition-usa, send an email to "majordomo@xmission.com"
with "unsubscribe abolition-usa" in the body of the message.
For information on digests or retrieving files and old messages send
"help" to the same address. Do not use quotes in your message.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 1999 17:28:21 +1000
From: FoE Sydney - Nuclear Campaign <nonukes@foesyd.org.au>
Subject: (abolition-usa) Y2K AND ENERGY
Excerpt from "The Millennium Reckoning", September 1999 Update (Free
copyright with attribution). Go to: http://www.trendmonitor.com for full
report
RISKS / ENERGY
IMPLICATIONS
If the Russian natural gas pipeline supplying both Eastern and Western
Europe is interrupted, as Russian experts say it almost certainly will be,
it will be a very difficult to start the gas flowing again with an
uncertain electricity supply and sub-zero temperatures. Oil stops flowing
at freezing temperatures which means that pipelines and refineries are at
risk, even if there are relatively short power outages. In the US, which is
far ahead of Russia in its preparations for the energy sector, "major" oil
companies are reported adopting a fix on fail (FOF) policy on wells,
pipelines and refineries.
Another reported implication is that if the electricity fails, some nuclear
plants may have difficulty cooling their cores if they are to be shut down,
creating a real danger of accidental melt-downs.
The economic, environmental and social implications of the failure of the
Russian gas and oil pipeline network are so enormous - for Europe and the
rest of the world - that the necessary resources must be made available on
an international level to ensure that:
i. the operation of the Siberian gas pipeline network is made secure,
ii. nuclear reactors everywhere have sustainable back up electrical systems
which do not depend on national grids,
iii. as many alternative local electricity sources are built as possible.
All the countries of Europe and all the people of Europe are at risk of
having to deal with the consequences of severe energy shortages and
consequent energy price increases.
Although it is not certain that this scenario will come true, even if no
remedial action is taken, the seriousness of the multiple risks warrants
emergency action now on a "just in case" basis. A huge investment in
sustainable energy systems is required, both for deployment around nuclear
sites and within communities. The task could be doable in the time
remaining if an international crash programme were to be implemented in the
next few weeks. It is a question of mobilising people and money to secure
the future very quickly. Not only would the short-term problem be solved,
but also the implementation of an economical long-term solution could be
accomplished at the same time. A first step would be a comprehensive
upgrade and support programme for Emergency Diesel Generators worldwide.
Continuing denial by governments and the media of the possible magnitude of
the risk to key energy systems is the greatest danger at the moment because
it is preventing people and companies from making appropriate contingency
preparations.
STORIES
Oil and Gas
An April 1999, article in Computer Business Review quotes Professor Andrey
Terekhov, a Russian Y2K expert, saying "the gas and electricity started
work so late that their systems simply will not be ready in time". The
article concludes that this news has "ominous implications", not just for
Russia, "but also for the countries in Europe which are dependent on
Russian gas". [1] In August 1999, it is reported in Computer Weekly that
the total money spent "so far" in Russia was $80 million (=A348 million).
[11] Yet, a report published in a French industry publication Enerpresse in
March 1999 quotes a Gazprom executive saying that his company had virtually
solved the "probleme du bogue" with new control software. [No mention was
made of embedded chip systems.] [12]
In March 1999, UK energy companies are seen as well prepared, according
both to their own spokesmen and to Action 2000's colour coding scheme. [2]
However, in June 1999, the Financial Times reports that the energy industry
is still "spending heavily to ensure that their complex computer systems
suffer no ill effects" from the millennium change over. The article warns
that "anticipation of chaos" is liable to push up the price of oil as the
end of the year approaches. The article also questions the well publicised
confidence of the energy sector citing Chevron which said "it could not
tell whether it would suffer significant business interruptions, including
the shut down of its entire oil and gas production", although the company
expected disruptions to be "localised". [3]
Sources within the US oil industry are quoted in an Editorial appearing on
the Golden Eagle Website saying: "Overall, these sources estimate that
based on prior limited testing, they are expecting a 10 to 20% ratio of
failure, or multiple embedded systems going down on each oil well. There
will be no parts to fix them and no replacement systems available for quite
a long while. These sources tell me that the major oil companies have
adopted a FOF policy (fix on fail), because it is the only affordable and
practical approach."
"The bottom line: Most oil well embedded systems were never, and are never
going to be checked or tested for Y2K compliance. Its a virtual
impossibility PLUS... And even if they did, most likely the parts to
replace them will no longer be available. It's now become very difficult to
find anyone who can supply a replacement system before 1/1/2000. Some
easier testing was done on more accessible systems, which are usually
newer. Understandably, fail rates have soared 25% in some areas. On the
subject of oil and gas pipelines, the author says, "The same that was said
about the well heads and embedded systems is true for the pipelines. It's
just too complicated - and the major companies decided to adopt the FOF
policy - and wait to see what breaks down and to subsequently try to fix
it. Another consideration is loss of electricity for any significant length
of time." The other point made in the article is that the oil industry --
like so many others -- works on the basis of a just in time supply
principle. Consequently stocks of oil and natural gas are very low. [4]
This perception is confirmed by the International Energy Authority which
says in a July 1999 report, "One of the most important findings is that
just-in-time energy supplies present the greatest risk of failure. These
energy supplies, electricity and gas, are dependent on a complex delivery
infrastructure". The report says "Vulnerabilities still exist at all levels
of the oil supply chain".
Specifically, "Oil and gas pipelines have been identified as an area of
ongoing concern. Most potential problems lie in pipeline control and
monitoring systems and a vulnerability to disruptions in the electricity
supply." Offshore production is seen to be "generally at greater risk" than
onshore production "because of the accessibility problems encountered when
testing subsea equipment". [10]
Electricity
In both the US and the UK, there has been very little press concern about
the readiness of the electrical generation and distribution grid utilities.
However, a draft report by the US Army entitled Y2K Analyses for Complex
Systems of Systems, published in January 1999, provides a critical view.
The report concludes that the possibility of serious electrical power
disruption is very real despite what it describes as the growing optimism
of the North American Electric Reliability Council (NERC). Some of the
reasons given for this conclusion are that "industry deregulation since
1996 may have made the electrical power grid more vulnerable to Y2K", as
"competition produces far more inter-grid power wheeling, stressing
transmission stability beyond industry modeling and planning". The report
argues that the "unbundling of generation, transmission, distribution and
brokering makes coordinated exchange of information and action more
difficult" and large scale testing impossible.
According to the study, "the industry systems for modeling and analyzing
contingencies emphasize continued operation in spite of the "most severe
single contingency" making them inherently "far less capable of dealing
with multiple and dispersed contingencies". However, Y2K failures are
liable to be "multiple and geographically dispersed - even if not
catastrophic individually". Industry strategy is said to "to assume that
all required fixes or workarounds to the initial failure - can be made
quickly, thus allowing the system to reconstitute itself in hours or days".
The question is asked: "What if the Y2K fixes take weeks?" [19]
Nuclear
In May 1999 The Financial Times reports, "The French Institute of Nuclear
Safety reported that safety at France's nuclear power stations could be
jeopardised by the millennium computer bug. The institute said the plants
were threatened by failures from both their own computer systems and
problems with the French electricity grid. It found that between 45 per
cent and 80 per cent of internal systems "could be sensitive" to the Y2K
problem." [18]
On August 22, 1999, the Observer reports a study by nuclear engineer, John
Large, commissioned by Greenpeace, which suggests that "the millennium bug
could jeopardise the safety of Britains nuclear power plants" and "raises
alarming questions over the international nuclear industry's preparedness
for year 2000 computer problems". According to the report, "One of the
major concerns is that facilities linked to the nuclear plants, such as the
national grid and local telecommunications networks may fail at the time
when the plants need them most." The article quotes Frank Barnaby, a
nuclear physicist working for the independent Oxford Research Group, "There
seems to be a very strange complacency about the who Y2K issue within the
UK nuclear industry". Spokesperson for the UK's Nuclear Installations
Inspectorate is also quoted saying "They have nothing to worry about." [14]
On the same day, The Independent on Sunday reports that "Britain's nuclear
watchdog has issued a warning to atomic power stations about the dangers of
a millennium-like computer bug which is due to strike on 9 September." [15]
An article by Helen Caldicott is published in The Los Angeles Times on
August 17, 1999 which says that "at a White House meeting I attended
recently with John Koskenin, the head of the president's Y2K committee,
representatives of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and the
Department of Defense and four independent experts, the government
representatives dismissed concerns that were raised while providing no
substantive basis for confidence that we do not face potentially irregular,
and possibly serious, nuclear accidents on or after Jan.1, 2000".
According to the article, "Nuclear power plants are dependent upon an
intact external electricity supply to maintain the circulation of about 1
million gallons of water per minute to cool the radioactive core and also
to keep the spent fuel pools cool. If a section of the grid goes down, the
approximately 100-ton fissioning uranium core in the affected reactor will
melt within two hours if the two back up diesel generators--whose
reliability has been estimated at 85%--fail." The point is also made that "
Unlike the reactor cores, most of the spent fuel pools, which hold four to
five times more radioactivity than the core, have no back up power supply
nor containment vessel, and thus could melt within 48 hours if the reactor
has been recently refueled; if not, they would melt within two weeks
without cooling water. Twenty-six U.S. reactors are scheduled for refueling
before Jan. 1."
While Koskenin is reported admitting the possibility of "random power
outages" in the US, "he did not address the issue of the precarious back-up
generators nor the fact that the NRC requires only one week of diesel fuel
at each reactor site, even though local power outages could last longer."
[17]
According to a database called "Diesel Generator Defects at US Nuclear
Plants" compiled by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, reports from
January 1, 1999 to the present "show that defects and problems occur on a
weekly basis in the US nuclear power industry. There are 27 reports
affecting 41 plants; or 40% of all US commercial nuclear plants so far this
year." Scott D. Portzline of Three Mile Island Alert comments in "The
Weakest Link: Emergency Diesel Generators (EDGs)" that during a "station
blackout" (loss of offsite power) these generators "supply the electricity
needed to bring the plant to a safe shutdown". If they fail, it is said
that the chance of an accident "approaches certainty". Former NRC Chairman
Dr. Shirley Jackson is also quoted saying, "NRC reviews in recent years
have left no doubt that a station blackout at a nuclear power station is a
major contributor to reactor core damage frequency." Although the NRC is
reported to be claiming a 97.5 per cent reliability, "watchdogs say it is
lower". [9]
Reuters reported from the US on June 18, 1999 in an article entitled "US
proposes stock piling radiation antidote", that the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) had proposed the stockpiling of potassium iodide, which
helps "prevent radioactive iodine from being lodged in the thyroid gland,
where it could lead to thyroid cancer or other illness". [5]
A report in The Times, on August 25, 1999, says "US nuclear power industry
regulators have discovered that around one-third of the nation's 103
nuclear power stations have yet to resolve all of their Y2K problems".
Although safety systems are said to be 100 bug free, 15 stations are
reported to be "still working on systems that might shut down power
generation". [16]
In an article entitled, "The accidental Armageddon" in The Australian,
Helen Caldicott, an anti-nuclear energy campaigner, warns that the
circulation of coolant water is "dependent on an external electricity
supply and an intact telecommunications system. If the millennium bug
causes power failures and/or telecommunication malfunctions, reactors will
be vulnerable. Because of this possibility, each US reactor has been
equipped with two back-up diesel generators. But at best these are only 85
per cent reliable. So, in the event of a prolonged power failure, the
back-up diesel generators will not necessarily prevent a nuclear
catastrophe. And 67 Russian-built reactors are even more vulnerable,
because they have no back-up generators.
"What is more, the Russian electricity grid is itself at great risk
because, as one might expect, the political and economic turmoil in that
country means the Y2K problem has hardly been examined. There are 70 old
nuclear reactors on old Russian submarines moored at dock in the Barents
Sea. If they were to lose the electricity grid powering their cooling
systems, they would melt."
The article advocates a crash program to provide all the world's nuclear
reactors with Wind and Solar electricity generators in order to insure that
enough electricity is always available for cooling necessary to prevent
meltdowns. [6]
An article in the Independent on July 4, 1999 cites an internal memo
circulated in the British Embassy in Moscow, which says that Russia is "one
of the countries most vulnerable to Y2K problems". Among the concerns
listed in the article is "back up generators for nuclear power stations".
[7]
"Midnight Crossing" published in the July 1999 issue of the US Airforce
Magazine, says: "US officials are very concerned that a computer failure in
Russia's interconnected power grid could cascade through the entire nuclear
system and lead to a massive power outage. Such an event could easily end
in catastrophe at one of the 65 Soviet-made nuclear reactors." Human error
by "an undermanned and unmotivated" (and often unpaid) nuclear work force
is increasing "the possibility that a power outage at a nuclear reactor
could lead to a catastrophe". Even if the nuclear reactors are managed
well, the article says, "loss of power and cooling at the numerous waste
pools where atomic fuel rods are kept could cause the water to boil away
and permit the release, into the local atmosphere, of lethal levels of
radioactivity. Recently loaded rods -- those placed in the waste pools
within the past two years -- could begin to melt down within 48 hours of a
loss of power". [8]
Russian experts are quoted in a July 1999 Enerpresse saying that it is very
unlikely that the bug will have serious consequences for Russian nuclear
reactors. An official is quoted saying Russia hoped to commence work on
remediation "in a couple of weeks". [13]
REFERENCES
[1] Russian bug threatens cold winter of discontent - Computer Business
Review, Apr 1999
[2] Questions linger on energy - Financial Times, Mar 3, 1999
[3] Industry tries to avoid hazardous flare-ups - Financial Times, Jun 22, 1=
999
[4] Oil and Natural Gas: Are They the Real Problems in Y2K? - Jun 21, 1999
http://www.gold- eagle.com/editorials_99/rc062199.html
[5] US proposes stockpiling radiation antidote, By Tom Doggett - Reuters
WASHINGTON, Jun 18, 1999
[6] Accidental Armageddon - The Age (Australia), Jun 20, 1999
http://www.theage.com.au/daily/
990620/news/news22.html
[7] Diplomats warned off Y2K Russia - Independent, July 4, 1999
[8] Midnight crossing - Airforce Magazine, July 1999
[9] Emergency Diesel Generators: The Weakest Link - Three Mile Island
Alert, July 1999 http://www.tmia.com/EDGs.html
[10] Update on the IEA's Y2K Activities - International Energy Authority,
July 1999 http://www.iea.org/ieay2k/homepage.htm
[11] Russia dances to the date bug's tune - Computer Weekly, Aug 5, 1999
[12] Gazprom rejette tout problem lie au bogue de l'an 2000 - Enerpresse,
Mar 12, 1999
[13] Le bogue ne devrait pas avoir de consequences graves en Russie -
Enerpresse, Jul 6, 1999
[14] Nuclear alert over millennium bug - Observer, Aug 22, 1999
[15] Nuclear plants on alert over computer bug - Independent on Sunday, Aug
22, 1999
[16] It's safe we hope - The Times, Aug 25, 1999
[17] Perspective on the Y2K problem: The sky indeed may be falling - Los
Angeles Times, Aug 17, 1999
[18] French nuclear plants threatened by Y2K bug - Financial Times, May 4, 1=
999
[19] Y2K analysis for complex systems of systems: Electric power systems in
North America - US Army Report, Jan 1999
http://cr-iiacfs1.army.mil/army-y2k/y2kelectric90224/tsld001.htm
************************************************
Jan Wyllie
Trend Monitor "The Information Refinery"
3 Tower Street, Portsmouth
Hants. PO1 2JR, UK
Tel: 44 (0)1363 881017
Email: mailto:jan@trendmonitor.com
Web: http://www.trendmonitor.com
"only what you need to know"
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<<...>> CIS: Russia, US defence chiefs to meet Sept 13 - agency
Tuesday, 31 Aug 1999 at 01:52am; Category: Overseas News; Low priority;
Story No. 9551.
CIS: Russia, US defence chiefs to meet Sept 13 - agency
RUSSIA US DEFENCE
MOSCOW, Aug 30 Reuters - The defence ministers of Russia and the
United States will meet in Moscow on September 13 to discuss
Kosovo, arms control and other pressing problems, Interfax news
agency said today.
The Defence Ministry confirmed that Igor Sergeyev would meet his
US counterpart William Cohen next month but said a final date had
still to be fixed.
Interfax, quoting Leonid Ivashov, who heads the Russian Defence
Ministry's international cooperation division, said the problems of
Russian peacekeepers in Kosovo would top the agenda.
Kosovo Albanians have been barring Russian peacekeepers from the
town of Orahovac saying they are biased in favour of the Serbs.
Washington has urged them to stop their blockade and allow the
Russians to carry out their duties.
Ivashov said Cohen and Sergeyev would also discuss cooperation
on arms control and tackling the millennium computer bug.
The Kremlin is still trying to persaude the Communist-dominated
parliament to ratify the 1993 START-2 strategic arms reduction
treaty and wants to start talks on a START-3 treaty which would
impose further cuts in nuclear arsenals.
But Moscow is also concerned about US plans to develop an
anti-ballistic missile defence shield to protect its own troops and
allies in the Far East like Japan against attack from "rogue
states" such as North Korea.
Russia says such a shield would violate the 1972 anti-ballistic
missile (ABM) treaty which it regards as a central pillar of
international arms control.
The arms control issue, along with the Kosovo crisis, has soured
relations between Moscow and Washington. Russia fiercely opposed
NATO's bombing campaign against Yugoslavia but played an active
role in mediating between the alliance and Belgrade.
REUTER was
31-08 0152
<<...>>
Thought you should know about the following report in the Christchurch
Press today:
"Glitch hits Aust Navy
Almost the entire Australian patrol-boat fleet was affected by a satellite
navigation glitch akin to the millennium computer bug, the Defence
Department said. A Defence spokesman said yesterday that the global
positioning systems aboard 14 of the navy's Fremantle class patrol boats
failed at the weekend when the calendars on a ring of 24 satellites
orbiting the earth were reset."
This was one of the preview kick-in dates. In Michael Kraig's oped piece in
the March/April issue of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, he wrote:
"These systems may go down earlier than 2000, or they may fail months or
years later than the turn of the century. For example, the internal clock
of the Global Positioning System will 'roll over' on August 22, 1999, with
calamitous results for any GPS user who does not have properly configured
satellite receivers."
Now, I wonder if this might also have been a contributory cause of the
collision in the English Channel in clear calm weather (but at night)
between the cruise liner 'Norwegian Dream' and a container ship? Bear in
mind that the GPS system is in thousands of ships, fishing boats, yachts
etc
The next big date is 9/9/99.
Best wishes,
Rob
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Commander Robert D Green, Royal Navy (Retired)
Chair, World Court Project UK
Disarmament & Security Centre
PO Box 8390
Christchurch
Aotearoa/New Zealand
Tel/Fax: (+64) 3 348 1353
Email: robwcpuk@chch.planet.org.nz
[The DSC is a specialist branch of the NZ Peace Foundation]
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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