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July 15, 2015 by Nukewatch Leave a Comment

Wasting New Mexico: State Invites High-Level Reactor Waste as Energy Department Eyes Carlsbad’s Contaminated WIPP Site for Plutonium Disposal

Nukewatch Quarterly Summer 2015
By Arianne Peterson 

In an April 10 letter, New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez urged the US Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz to move forward with plans to establish a “consolidated interim storage facility in southeastern New Mexico.” The proposed site would hold the nuclear power industry’s ever-growing legacy of reactor fuel rods and other high-level radioactive waste, which the government projects will reach 141,000 metric tons based on current reactor licenses. Since the rise of nuclear energy in the 1970s, the US government has promised to find a permanent, safe solution for disposing of its deadly by-products—but so far, the Energy Department has failed to find a viable option, and decades’ worth of discarded fuel rods have remained at reactor sites throughout the country.

New Mexico’s interim storage proposal would require transporting this dangerous reactor waste from more than 60 sites dispersed across the country to the state’s southeastern corner. The waste would remain at the site for 100 years, or ostensibly until a more permanent solution is found. The global energy company Holtec International and a private regional company called the Eddy Lea Energy Alliance have signed a Memorandum of Agreement to partner in the venture. The site they have identified is near Carlsbad, just 12 miles from the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) radioactive waste repository. WIPP has been closed since February 2014 when an underground barrel explosion there contaminated 22 workers and caused an above-ground release of radioactive particles.

Holtec would be responsible for designing, licensing, building, and operating the new facility using a scaled-up version of its HI-STORM UMAX (for Holtec International Storage Module Underground Maximum Capacity) underground dry-cask storage design. This design has not yet been successfully implemented anywhere in the world; Holtec will hold an “inaugural loading campaign” later this summer at the Callaway nuclear power facility in Missouri, where its first HI-STORM UMAX casks will be filled with radioactive waste. Holtec claims “there is no technical limit on the [planned New Mexico] facility’s storage capacity,” implying that the dump would accommodate all current reactor waste—and encourage the industry to keep producing more.

More plutonium headed to WIPP? 

While Governor Martinez invites waste from the rest of the country’s nuclear power facilities for storage at Holtec’s proposed site (New Mexico doesn’t actually have any commercial reactors of its own), the federal government is considering the contaminated, shuttered WIPP facility just down the road as a final resting place for 34 metric tons of surplus weapons-grade plutonium. On May 9, the Energy Department released a report identifying WIPP as a lower-cost alternative to the proposed mixed oxide (MOX) nuclear program, which was supposed to convert weapons plutonium into commercial reactor fuel. Taxpayers have already spent $4.4 billion on construction of the MOX facility at Savannah River in South Carolina; a division of the French nuclear giant Areva has benefitted from the design contract. Watchdog groups have long derided the project— which is over-budget and behind schedule, suffering from poor management and a lack of oversight.

The May Energy Department report projected the final cost of the MOX program to be at least $47.5 billion, a price government officials admit the country cannot afford. Sending the plutonium to WIPP would be far less expensive—and so far, it’s the only other option they’ve studied. Of course, the WIPP plan would first require that the shuttered site be reopened; it would also necessitate an amendment to the Land Withdrawal Act, which governs WIPP’s operations, to allow for more plutonium disposal. An Energy Department report on further plutonium disposal options is due out in September.

Meanwhile, WIPP remains closed, with clean-up expected to require several years and $550 million. In April, the ad hoc Accident Investigation Board appointed by the Energy Department issued its final report on the barrel explosion, which it termed “preventable.” The report blames the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), where contractors packed the volatile drum, and the Energy Department itself for mismanagement and negligence, including failure to listen to worker concerns—such as reports of foam and neon smoke emanating from drums. The Board’s investigation confirmed that a highly combustible combination of nitrate salts and organic cat litter in the improperly packed, improperly labeled barrel was the direct cause of the explosion.

State settles with Energy Department over violations 

Because of the WIPP disaster, the Energy Department reduced the bonuses (monetary incentives above and beyond operating costs) for its contracted operators at WIPP and LANL in 2014. The New Mexico Environment Department threatened to levy more than $150 million in fines against the federal government for permit violations and other failures that caused the contamination, but the state recently accepted a settlement of just $73 million in federal dollars earmarked for highway improvements and other infrastructure projects around the WIPP and LANL.

Greg Mello of the watchdog Los Alamos Study Group expressed concern that the settlement does not actually address the problems that led to the leak. “I’m a little flabbergasted … that the state would negotiate what the money is used for. … What does that have to do with [the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act] violations? It seems like an entirely different sphere.” Mello argues that the projects, which are directly related to maintenance and operations of the federal Energy Department facilities, should be part of a regular budget rather than the result of a settlement for environmental permit violations. New Mexico’s Environment Department Secretary Ryan Flynn reported that lobby groups for local contractors, who will benefit from the projects, “heavily influenced the settlement.”

New Mexico’s radioactive burden 

Radioactive contamination is not a new problem for New Mexico. In addition to the Los Alamos facility, the state is also home to the Sandia National Laboratories; both labs were established in the 1940s to develop the first atomic bombs and are still active in nuclear weapons research. The White Sands Missile Range, including the site of the first nuclear bomb test, occupies over 3,000 square miles in the southern part of the state. Uranium mining has left a terrible radioactive legacy on the western New Mexico portion of the Navajo Nation, with 450 abandoned mines and eight former mills—three of which are designated Superfund sites—contaminating countless acres and tens of millions of gallons of groundwater.

On the east side of the state, Urenco USA opened a uranium enrichment facility in 2010. Just yards away from the Urenco facility, on the Texas side of the border, Waste Control Specialists (WCS) operates the nation’s only private low-level radioactive waste dump. In a February bid that could put it in competition with Holtec and WIPP, WCS announced plans to apply for a permit to store high-level waste, including reactor fuel rods and plutonium-contaminated military waste. No matter which company or government contractor ends up profiting from the nation’s nuclear legacy, odds seem good that New Mexico will bear the brunt of the country’s nuclear waste burden.

—Aiken Standard, May 20; Santa Fe New Mexican, May 1; Holtec Highlights, Apr. 30 & May 4; Albuquerque Journal, Apr. 17; Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Jan. 18, 2015; Truthout, Feb. 20, 2014

Filed Under: Newsletter Archives, Nuclear Power, Quarterly Newsletter, Radioactive Waste

July 15, 2015 by Nukewatch Leave a Comment

Nuclear Resisters Released, Sabotage Convictions Overturned —Appeals Court Says Jury Verdict Was “Not Rational”

Nukewatch Quarterly Summer 2015
By John LaForge 

A federal appeals court has vacated the sabotage convictions of peace activists Greg Boertje-Obed of Duluth, Minnesota; Michael Walli of Washington, DC; and Sister Megan Rice of New York City. On May 8, a three-judge panel of the Sixth US Circuit Court of Appeals found that federal prosecutors had failed to prove—and “no rational jury could find”—that the protesters had intended to damage “national defense.”

In July 2012, Greg, Michael, and Megan clipped through four fences and walked right up to the “Fort Knox” of weapons-grade uranium, the Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility inside the Y-12 complex in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. In the hour before they were confronted, the nuclear abolitionists painted “Woe to an Empire of Blood” and other slogans on several structures, strung banners, poured blood on the building, and enjoyed their surprise in catching the nuclear weapons system asleep at the wheel. When a guard finally approached them, they offered him some bread.

The three have been imprisoned since they were convicted in May 2013 of damage to property and sabotage. Boertje-Obed, 60, and Walli, 66, were both sentenced to 62 months on each conviction, to run concurrently; Sister Rice, now 85, was given 35 months on each count, also running concurrently.

Following the appeals court reversal, a motion for immediate release was filed and granted—unopposed by the government—on May 15. All three activists were hastily allowed to return to their respective homes.

The appeal did not address questions about the legal status of nuclear weapons, but rather focused on whether the Sabotage Act applies to nonviolent protesters. During the appeal’s oral argument, the prosecutor insisted that the three senior citizens had “interfered with defense.” Circuit Judge Raymond Kethledge asked pointedly, “With a loaf of bread?”

The court’s written opinion, also by Judge Kethledge, ridiculed the idea of depicting peaceful protesters as saboteurs, saying. “It is not enough for the government to speak in terms of cut fences…” To apply the Sabotage Act, the government must prove that the defendant’s actions were “consciously meant or practically certain to” interfere with “the nation’s capacity to wage war or defend against attack.” The court found that Greg, Megan, and Michael “did nothing of the sort”; thus, “the government did not prove the defendants guilty of sabotage.” The opinion went so far as to say, “No rational jury could find that the defendants had that intent when they cut the fences.” The opinion is uncharacteristically blunt in its direct implication of prosecutorial overreach and judicial manipulation of the jury.

Another reason the appeals court vacated the sabotage conviction was that the Supreme Court’s legal definition of “national defense” is unclear and imprecise, “a generic concept of broad connotations…” The appeals court said it needed “a more concrete” definition because “vague platitudes about a facility’s ‘crucial role in national defense’ are not enough to convict a defendant of sabotage. And that is all the government offers here.” The definition is so general and vague, the court said, that it barely applies to the Sabotage Act, since, “It is hard to determine what amounts to ‘interference with’ a ‘generic concept.’”

Re-sentencing may result in “time served” 

The appeals court took the unusual additional step of voiding the prison sentences for both the sabotage and damage-to-property convictions, even though the second conviction still stands. This was because the harsh prison terms given for property damage were heavily weighted in view of the (ill-gotten) sabotage conviction. The result is that the three radical pacifists were released until their re-sentencing, which is scheduled for July 8. As the appeals court said: “It appears that the [sentencing] … for their [damage to property] conviction will be substantially less than their time already served in federal custody.”

The high-profile nature of uranium enrichment at Oak Ridge, and the vulnerability of the site to the entrance of three senior citizens, brought enormous media attention to the case, which has been featured in lengthy investigations by the Washington Post, the New Yorker, and others. The action, known as “Transform Now Plowshares,” also helped uncover scandalous misconduct and malfeasance among security contractors at the Y-12/Oak Ridge complex.

What remains unaddressed is the White House’s plan to spend $1 trillion on new weapons production facilities over the next 30 years—$35 billion a year for three decades. The role of the Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility in nuclear bomb production—a clear violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty—was named with blood by the Transform Now Plowshares action, but H-bomb business marches on. Protesters will converge on the site again August 6, the 70th anniversary of the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

For more on Y-12 and the weapons build-up, see the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, OREPA.org.

Ill-Informed Distinction in Appeals Court Order 

The appeals court opinion made one apparently ill-informed distinction between this case and two other Plowshares actions. In symbolic protest actions taken on top of Minuteman nuclear missile silos, the Silo Pruning Hooks (Carl Kabat, Helen Woodson, Paul Kabat, and Larry Cloud Morgan) hammered on silo N-5 in Missouri in 1985, and the Sacred Earth and Space Plowshares (Sisters Ardeth Platte, Carol Gilbert, and Jackie Husdon) did symbolic damage to silo N-8 in Colorado in 2002.

The appeals court opinion declares that unlike actions taken at weapons manufacturing sites, protests against sites with armed nuclear weapons on alert could still be characterized as sabotage because, “… even a brief disruption of [the Minuteman III’s] operations would have grievously impaired the nation’s ability to attack and defend. (Imagine, for example, if Soviet [sic] infiltrators had similarly disrupted the facilities’ operations in the minutes before a Soviet first strike.)”

This claim betrays profound ignorance of the US nuclear arsenal’s diversity, size, and destructive capacity—and of geopolitical events including the long-past dissolution of the Soviet Union.

A computer glitch at Wyoming’s FE Warren Air Force Base in 2010 took 50 Minuteman missiles off-line but had, according to Lt. Gen. Dirk Jameson (USAF, Ret.), “no real bearing on the capabilities of our nuclear forces.” Gen. Jameson was a Deputy Commander in Chief and Chief of Staff of Strategic Command, which controls all 450 Minuteman III land-based ICBMs. Lt. Col. John Thomas, a spokesman for the Air Force’s Global Strike Command, said at the time, “The wartime capability of that squadron [of missiles] was never significantly affected.”

Additionally, the US has 14 Trident ballistic missile submarines, each armed with 24 missiles that carry at least five warheads apiece. If only four of these submarines are on patrol at any given time, their 480 thermonuclear warheads could incinerate all the major cities of the world, not merely those in “Soviet” [sic] territory.

The court also appeared ignorant of the fact that the Air Force regularly takes dozens of Minuteman III missiles off alert for repairs or replacement, meaning they are often “disrupted” without any consequent impairment of the government’s nuclear war readiness.

The appeals court cited testimony of an Air Force Lt. Col. who said, regarding missile protests, that “it would be unwise to launch the missile in those circumstances.”

Of course, thousands of authorities the world over have said it would be unwise to launch such missiles under any circumstances. Former Reagan Administration Presidential Adviser and Cold War hawk Paul Nitze said, “I can think of no circumstances under which it would be wise for the United States to use nuclear weapons, even in retaliation for their prior use against us.”

Filed Under: Direct Action, Newsletter Archives, Quarterly Newsletter, Uranium Mining

July 15, 2015 by Nukewatch Leave a Comment

Nukewatch Welcomes New Staff Member 

Nukewatch Quarterly Summer 2015
By Kelly Lundeen

Hello Nukewatch community! My name is Kelly Lundeen. I am a mother, organizer, and teacher, and I recently become a staff member at Nukewatch. I first learned about Nukewatch in the late 1990s and I became radicalized by the work to end the sanctions and environmental movement in Earth First. Since then, I have been working to end corporate rule and build people power in Wisconsin, Colombia, South America, Minnesota and back home in rural Shell Lake, Wisconsin, not far from Nukewatch, where I now live with my partner and two-year-old daughter.

Kelly holds a trespass citation after a 2004 direct action at the Navy’s ELF antenna.

For three years I was a live-in volunteer at Casa Maria Catholic Worker in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where I helped provide shelter to homeless women and children while fighting the systemic causes of that poverty and working for immigrant rights. From 2002–2005, I lived in Colombia doing accompaniment with International Peace Observatory, an organization that accompanied peasant human rights organizations defending their lands from takeover by multinational companies through the use of the paramilitary and government army. I have been arrested six times in direct action against the military–industrial complex and corporate globalization, one of those arrests being at Project ELF, the nuclear submarine communication system in northern Wisconsin that Nukewatch worked for 15 years to close.

At Nukewatch I am thrilled to be a part of decades-long civil resistance to advance the mission of abolishing nuclear power and weapons, which I view as tools of US military and economic imperialism that deny the legitimacy of the human needs here in the US and around the world and prioritizes economic interests. I look forward to being part of a larger community—you all—that shares these concerns and is willing to take action for change!

Filed Under: Newsletter Archives, Office News, On The Bright Side, Quarterly Newsletter

July 15, 2015 by Nukewatch Leave a Comment

65-Day Protest at Germany’s Nuclear-Armed Büchel Air Base

Nukewatch Quarterly Summer 2015

A 65-day-long series of protests at the Büchel Air Force Base in west-central Germany—home to 20 US nuclear bombs—culminated on May 29. Thirty-five different organizations began their string of blockades on March 26, commemorating the Bundestag’s (Parliament’s) 2010 call to the German government to advocate for removal of US nuclear weapons in Germany. The occupations ended May 29, marking the conclusion of the UN’s 2015 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference. (See “Nuclear Weapons Proliferation,” Page 1.)

The actions against Germany’s Nuclear-Armed Büchel Air Base included a die-in staged to dramatize Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream by the French group Stop Nuclear Weapons. Photo by Büchel Atomwaffenfrei.

Over the course of the 65 days, over 400 people participated in 31 blockades through a wide variety of demonstrations. Local, national and international organizations came to present lively opposition to nuclear weapons and the base’s role in the US–German “nuclear sharing” agreement. The actions ranged from an orchestra concert to tripod blockades, a red carpet roll-out of peace flags, a die-in staged to dramatize Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream, and a Maypole dance. Banners galore punctuated the actions and constantly decorated the peace encampment. Birthdays and a Good Friday service were observed at the gates, contributing to what became disruption of traffic three to four days a week, preventing personnel from accessing the base, and often closing it. On the last day alone, 35 people were taken into custody as they blocked seven gates to the base. A total of 60 protestors arrived armed with toothbrushes to symbolize their willingness to remain at the blockade until there is a commitment to withdraw the weapons. The US removed its nuclear weapons from England and Greece prior to 2010. The US B61s at Büchel include 20 of the 180 bombs remaining in five European allied states. The stationing and potential use of the weapons violate the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which prohibits signatories like the United States from transferring nuclear

weapons to non-nuclear states like Germany; Büchel is charged with the nuclear missions of NATO and the B61 bombs would be delivered by German Tornado aircraft. Contrary to a move toward fulfilling international obligations under the NPT, there are plans to upgrade the B61s to “smart” bombs, giving them the embarrassing distinction of being the only such nuclear weapons on European soil. In a move that some have called a “new arms race,” the upgrade plan will further endanger Russia’s trust in disarmament talks with NATO.

—Atomwaffenfrei, May 30; Büchel Atomwaffenfrei, May 26; Rheinische Post, Mar. 24, 2015 —KL

Filed Under: Direct Action, Newsletter Archives, Nuclear Weapons, On The Bright Side, Quarterly Newsletter, US Bombs Out of Germany

July 15, 2015 by Nukewatch Leave a Comment

45,000 Rally Against  Nuclear Power in Taiwan

Nukewatch Quarterly Summer 2015
By Kelly Lundeen 

On March 14, around 45,000 activists gathered across major cities in Taiwan to oppose nuclear power, marking the fourth anniversary of the Fukushima-Daiichi triple reactor disaster. The island-wide mobilization marked the third year in a row that tens of thousands of anti-nuclear activists have taken to the streets in a movement that has been galvanized by the Fukushima meltdown. Like Japan, Taiwan is located near the tectonically-active “Ring of Fire.” Concerned about a similar disaster, environmental, human rights, aboriginal, student, labor, workers’ and farmers’ organizations are demanding green energy and a Taiwan free of nuclear reactors. Pieces of this dream could become reality if the government follows through on its pledge to phase-out nuclear power by letting licenses expire on the three operating reactor complexes and abandoning construction on a fourth.

Anti-nuclear protesters rally in Taipei, Taiwan on March 14. Their signs include the message “stop the nuclear power and start the green power.” Photo by Sam Yeh, AFP.

Of the existing reactors, the oldest are scheduled for decommissioning by 2019 and 2023. The fourth reactor has been in planning stages since the 1980s, but its construction has run into continual setbacks. Last year, it was brought to a complete standstill and the reactor was sealed off as the government was forced to respond to strong public opposition. The reactor’s completion now depends on a public referendum expected within the next few years.

A 2014 World Nuclear Association report found that 55 percent of Taiwan’s population supported terminating construction and closing the reactor permanently. Taiwan’s government appears to be taking public opinion into account in view of its claims to have plans to put an end to nuclear power.

Every year since the Fukushima disaster, the size of nationwide protests has grown from thousands to tens of thousands, reaching 68,000 in March 2013. Activists have employed hunger strikes, sit-ins on high-traffic boulevards and railway stations, marches and other tactics. In the 2012 presidential elections, the popular opposition candidate made ending reliance on nuclear power a central issue. Even though the president—whose party had previously backed nuclear power—was re-elected, he recently backed away from his support of the nuclear industry. The halt to construction on the fourth reactor has been largely due to public pressure, exemplified again by the enormous outcry heard on March 14—although regionally this has not been the case.

Asia is considered to be the emerging market for investment in new nuclear power, and 11 countries in the region have or are developing plans to build new power reactors. Nuclear power promoters like the World Nuclear Association forecast that by 2030, 266 new reactors could be built across Asia. Of the projected $1.2 trillion to be invested in nuclear power worldwide, almost $800 billion of that could be in Asia.

Amidst multi-national corporate momentum toward more nuclear power in Asia, Taiwan is one of the few countries in which politicians have been responsive to the movements against it. And if millions of Taiwanese get their way, the country will join the ranks of Switzerland, Belgium and Germany and make a good-faith commitment to truly rid their home of nuclear power.

—Agence France Presse, Mar. 14, 2015 & Mar. 20, 2011; World Nuclear Association, Mar. 2015; World Nuclear News, Jan. 8, 2015; Green Citizen’s Action Alliance, 2015; Straits Times, Jul. 31, 2014; Reuters, Apr. 27, 2014; Bloomberg Business, Mar. 3, 2013; New York Times, Jan. 12, 2012; Taipei Times, May 1, 2011

Filed Under: Fukushima, Newsletter Archives, Nuclear Power, On The Bright Side, Quarterly Newsletter

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