THE URANIUM & WEAPONS CONNECTION
Despite the nuclear energy industry's
well-funded efforts to convince the public otherwise, uranium fuel
for atomic power plants is in limited supply. Like coal, oil and
gas, it will soon run out, leaving scores of giant reactors useless
and abandoned.
Also like fossil fuels, the impact of mining and processing fuel
for nuclear power plants involves huge impacts on humans and the
environment. With mines mostly in Australia, the American west,
Canada, and central and southern Africa, atomic power has created
huge ecological crises whose solutions are a long way off and are
already proving to be exceedingly expensive.
When uranium ore is gouged out the ground, it emits radon gas that
fills mine shafts with deadly fumes. Uranium miners throughout the
world have historically suffered from abnormally high lung cancer
rates. They also die in the same kinds of accidents that kill coal
and other ore miners.
When the raw uranium is brought to the surface, it's milled into
fine sands called tailings. Billions of tons of these waste granules
are dumped near milling plants throughout the world, emitting huge
quantities of radioactive radon gas, a well-known cause of lung
cancer. Radon emissions from mills in Colorado and New Mexico have
been tracked as far away as New York City and Washington DC. They
are the number one source of increased background radiation from
the atomic fuel cycle.
Alongside the mills are huge ponds of acid solutions used to separate
the usable uranium isotopes from the waste. These ponds are extremely
lethal to human beings and poisonous to the environment. Periodically
the dams holding them back break, wrecking ghastly havoc on the
regions downstream.
The percentage of uranium usable for fuel is less than 5% of the
total ore dug out of the ground. Those rare isotopes must then be
enriched in giant factories that are extremely inefficient. The
dominant process actually coverts the solid ore into a gas (uranium
hexafluoride), and then back to solids. The plants consume huge
quantities of energy, most of it now generated by fossil fuels.
The biggest enrichment plant in the US, at Paducah, Kentucky, is
powered by two huge coal plants. Though the nuke reactor industry
claims to generate about 18% of the nation's electricity, some 3%
of the nation's electricity is used to refine uranium for those
power plants.
At every stage of the mining, milling and enrichment process, significant
quantities of fossil fuel-generated greenhouse gases are poured
into the atmosphere. The idea that the nuclear fuel cycle “creates
no greenhouse gas emissions” is a deliberately and dangerously
misleading myth.
The spent fuel rods from atomic reactors remain intensely radioactive
for centuries, and are among the most lethal industrial objects
ever created by human beings. Standing within a few feet of a single
rod can result in death in less than five minutes.
In recent years the nuke power industry has tried to revive the
myth of reprocessing, by which spent fuel can be re-formed into
usable fuel. The technology has been tried in a number of nations,
including the US. But it is prohibitively expensive, and makes no
economic sense. It also generates substantial new quantities of
intensely radioactive waste for which no long-term disposal methods
have been discovered.
Reprocessing also creates large quantities of weapons-grade plutonium,
the material used to build the Bomb that destroyed Nagasaki. Making
more plutonium under any circumstances threatens the world with
the production of still more atomic weapons. India, Pakistan, South
Africa and Israel, along with numerous other countries, are known
to have fashioned nuclear weapons from uranium extracted from ostensibly
civilian nuclear power programs. Recently the United States has
threatened war with Iran on the presumption that the civilian enrichment
process would give them the fissionable materials needed to build
their own atomic weapons.
From start to finish, from mining, milling, enrichment, fissioning
and waste disposal to the failed re-use of radioactive fuel, the
nuclear fuel cycle has proven catastrophic for human and ecological
health, for the economy, and for the proliferation of atomic weapons.
But no radioactive windmill wastes will ever be used to destroy
a city. Solar panels will not emit cancer-causing radon gas.
Resources:
Nukefree.org
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