Wednesday, December 3, 2014

‘Worst Case Scenario’ has happened at US nuclear site

The Rumor Mill News Reading Room 
‘Worst Case Scenario’ has happened at US nuclear site
Posted By: RumorMail [Send E-Mail]
Date: Wednesday, 3-Dec-2014 17:44:02

Sante Fe New Mexican, Nov 30, 2014: [D]ocuments obtained by The New Mexican… raise questions about the stability of dozens of other nuclear waste drums that were in the same chamber as the drum that ruptured [after a] chemical reaction… Radiation leaked into the air, and temperatures in the underground chamber peaked at nearly 1,600 degrees… One internal lab report described the [contents] as similar to plastic explosives… Investigators believe the organic material may be one reason temperatures in the chamber rose so high… Internal emails… detail concerns about the stability of drums… exposed to the extreme temperatures… June 17 draft of a LANL report… suggested the high temperatures may have made other nuclear waste drums in the chamber more unstable than ever…
Albuquerque Journal, guest column by Harish C. Sharma, retired engineer, Nov 30, 2014: Department of Energy’s Office of Inspector General… report mentions that the use of “kitty litter/Zeolite clay”… may have been the cause of the fire and release of radiation… What is the real cause of the incident? No one is sure… What if the real reason for the fire and release of radiation was not the “kitty litter”?… Without finding the real cause, DOE and LANL’s actions only assure that this incident will occur again.
The WIPP Trail, narrated by Robert Redford, 1989 (at 17:00 in):
Robert Redford: We now know that 40% of the [WIPP] hazardous waste is combustible, thus posing a more serious and immediate threat.
Bruce Throne, New Mexico State Attorney: I think the combustible waste is perhaps the most significant because even a layman can understand that when combustible waste is exposed to high levels of heat, there may be some effect inside the TRUPAC [containers].
Redford: Wind is a critical factor that must be considered. The worst case scenario would be if a fire occurs within a breach of a container. The wind could then carry plutonium particles through the atmosphere, traveling considerable distances.
Oxford Dictionary’s definition of fire: “Combustion or burning, in which substances combine chemically with oxygen from the air and typically give out bright light, heat, and smoke”
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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

As an example Brown's gas holds the potential to neutralize radio-active waste and render it harmless. Many other technologies perform the same function. One always gets the impression that the nuclear industry is deliberately creating high risk zones all over the planet and that it is the main reason for the industry's existence. It's greatest value lies in its ability to create fear and harm to mankind and the environment. Usually a tremendous amount of time and effort are expended to approve nuclear installations and related facilities but sadly it is at the political level and usually with the people that understand least about the science and technology that the most important decisions are done. There are other sources of radiation such as produced by cell phones but the notion of perceived profit seems to over-ride all reason. Hell, where profit is involved it even has the ability to mitigate any risks to human life. So, profit is the answer to all human problems, it effectively replaces honest reasoning and thinking.