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| Clean Energy Groups Submit Formal Petition to NRC to Incorporate Lessons of … eNews Park Forest This is a dangerous game,” said Michel Lee, Steering Committee, Indian Point Safe Energy Coalition. “In lieu of the recent activities around nuclear plants both in the United States and in Japan it had become obvious that a new Emergency Planning Zones … See all stories on this topic » |
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| No More Solyndras: Groups Call on DOE To Force Public Release of Details on … MarketWatch (press release) Lou Zeller, administrator, Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League said: “The nuclear disaster in Japan should have put the brakes on new plants in the United States. But an aggressive industry and a compliant NRC seem to have a lead foot, ignoring the … See all stories on this topic » |
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| Is cyberwar hype fuelling a cybersecurity-industrial complex? RT But is “cyberwar” really a threat? Is the US truly in danger of a catastrophic cyber attack on the scale of a Pearl Harbor? According to a growing number of security experts, the answer is no. “There is no chance whatsoever that nuclear power plants … See all stories on this topic » |
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| Feature: Small modular nuclear reactors – the future of energy? Gizmag By David Szondy This year is an historic one for nuclear power, with the first reactors winning US government approval for construction since 1978. Some have seen the green lighting of two Westinghouse AP1000 reactors to be built in Georgia as the … See all stories on this topic » |
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| Environmental groups sound alarm about nuclear plants Twin Cities Planet She said neither release posed a threat to the public or plant employees, and that the amount of tritium in the released water falls below the US Environmental Protection Agency’s limit for safe drinking water. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission said … See all stories on this topic » |
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| French Nuclear Anxieties Soar After Fukushima Huffington Post (blog) Today, 55 percent of the population consider nuclear power plant risks “high” and only 24 percent “trust the authorities” to protect the public against this danger. More than 80 percent “want the safety assessment of French nuclear facilities to take … See all stories on this topic » |
Category: News
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Nuclear News
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350 org movement
Dear friends,
2012 is heating up fast, and it’s shaping up to be a truly remarkable year for the climate movement.
More than ever, people in the 350 network around the world are leading the way: uniting, mobilizing, and taking action to create the solutions that our planet so desperately needs. As we gear up for a big year of global climate campaigns, we’re counting on all of you to help shape this movement.
Click here to take a quick survey about where the 350 movement should go next.
In the survey, you’ll get a sneak peak at a few ideas for our upcoming projects — and have the chance to weigh in with your own personal comments and campaign ideas. The 350 network truly is people-powered; to turn the tide on the climate crisis we’ll need the collective brilliance and creativity of this global movement.
Please take five minutes to add your voice and help shape this movement: www.350.org/2012poll
With your help, we’ll do incredible things together in 2012 and beyond.
Onwards,
Will Bates for the whole 350.org Team
350.org is building a global movement to solve the climate crisis. Connect with us on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for email alerts. You can help power our work by getting involved locally and donating here.
What is 350? Go to our website to learn about the science behind the movement.
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US Secret Armies and Global War
US Secret Armies and Global War
Those prepared to extol the exploits of elite killing squads abroad as the essence of the “American idea” will not shrink from the use of similar methods in suppressing any challenge to the rule of the financial elite at home. The deepest global economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s once again confronts mankind with the threat of world war and dictatorship.
Granting of extra bases to US Special Forces in Australia is part of this operation.
Read the rest of this here.
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Extrene weather now normal weather
Extreme weather now normal weather
We are warned that heating Gaia will produce extreme weather, catastrophic even. These will be contradictory. Russia was suffering temperatures of -30C while the immediately adjoining Arctic was losing its ice for the first time. There are repeated floods in Asia and Australia, sustained freezing in Eastern Europe, and blizzards in the Balkans and ice on the Danube.
People have been snap-frozen in the streets, left like those woolly mammoths in the Siberian tundra. With polar ice loss quickening seas will rise more quickly.
At home we have lost most of our fruit from an endless cloud cover for the past two months, though the rainfall has been half the average.
The latest scientific reports show that this will continue, and get worse – meaning we should now be calling the situation Catastrophic rather than Extreme.
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Major cities at risk of Brisbane-like flooding
This includes the Nepean Flood Plains
Major cities at risk of Brisbane-like flooding
By David Mark
Updated February 16, 2012 21:33:28
Flood engineers say the huge floods that devastated Brisbane last year could also happen on a similar scale in Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide, the Gold Coast and Newcastle.
They argue that thanks to Australia’s three levels of government, flood planning around the country is patchy at best, allowing for houses to be built where they should not.
On Wednesday, ABC Radio’s PM aired the first of a two-part look at Australia’s flood planning. Now it looks more broadly at how well Australia is prepared for flooding and the battle between development and nature.
Last week Federal Minister for Emergency Services Robert McLelland stood on a levee bank as floods surrounded the southern Queensland town of Charleville. He liked what he saw.
“We’ve literally stood up on the levee bank – dry on one side – looking over the moving water on the other,” Mr McLelland said.
“It unquestionably, unquestionably saved the town and I think from the long-term point of view of resilience, we need to methodically go through these areas that have been effected and look at mitigation steps we can take.”
Talk to any flood engineer and they will tell you that is an admirable proposal, but they want more.
Steve Molino, a consultant who has advised on flood plain planning for 20 years, says places which have not flooded recently also need to be examined.
“You do need to look at the places that have flooded but you also need to look at the places that did not flood,” he said.
“There’s many places in Queensland that got out of the floods this year and got out of the floods last year scot free, but are at just as much risk of flooding as many of the places that flooded last year or this year.
“Those places need to be encompassed in any studies that are done.”
And that is just Queensland.
Mr Molino says the potential flood risk across all of Australia is “huge”.
Hayden Betts, who has a PhD in flood plain management and works for KPR consulting engineers in Brisbane, agrees.
“I’m not sure how many hydrologists and hydro-engineers there are in the country – must be a thousand or two. If they applied their mind to it, I think there’d probably be enough work to keep them going for a decade or three,” he said.
Patchy preparation
But Mr Molino says Australia’s flood preparation is patchy.
“We have places where there are good structural works in place; there are places where structural works are needed,” he said.
“There are places where there is good town planning place; there are many places where better town planning is needed.”
All our major cities have been built for historical reasons around rivers and on flood plains, so there are parts of our cities where we really do need to rethink whether those areas should be vacated and put over to other uses.
Steve MolinoAnd therein lies the big problem – just who is responsible for planning and dealing with floods in Australia?
“The responsibility falls to local, state and federal government but it varies around the country,” Mr Molino said.
Steve Opper, the director of community safety with the New South Wales State Emergency Service, thinks New South Wales has got the balance about right.
“Our situation I believe is extremely robust,” he said.
“The State Emergency Service in New South Wales is unique nationally in that we control the management of floods in an emergency context all the way from state level to local government level.
“In other jurisdictions, quite often it might be just the local council that’s responsible for planning and they may just not have enough expertise to do that.”
Money is also an issue.
Take the problem of levees – the raised banks which can protect towns from floods.
Often state governments might provide the funds to build levees but then leave it to local government to do the maintenance.
“There are levees that have been built, have settled over decades and are now providing a lower level of protection than they were originally designed to provide,” Mr Molino said.
“And there are many levees that have just been left to their own devices; there’s been no maintenance undertaken on them and therefore there’s cracks appearing in them, there’s trees growing in them.”
Then there is the problem of protecting our big cities.
Mr Molino points to the fact that there have been a number of one-in-a-thousand flood events in Australia in the past five years.
Luckily they have been in sparsely-populated areas, but Mr Molino says the damage would be far worse if a rare flood were to occur in a bigger city.
“If a flood of that frequency were to occur somewhere like the Gold Coast, on the Hawkesbury Nepean river or on the Georges River – they’re major rivers running through Sydney – floods of that type of frequency, and they do occur around the world all the time, were they to occur in one of those areas, we’re talking about tens of thousands of houses under water and many of those homes washed away,” he said.
“And Melbourne is not immune. Melbourne has the Yarra and the Maribyrnong River and other rivers – as Melbourne expands – going into other catchment areas.
“The Torrens through Adelaide hardly ever flows, but it can flood.
“The Swan River in Western Australia.
The balance between how much development we put in an area and the flood risk is a very complex one; between what you can achieve to create housing and places for people to live against the risk that you place when you live almost anywhere.
Steve Opper“All our major cities have been built for historical reasons around rivers and on flood plains, so there are parts of our cities where we really do need to rethink whether those areas should be vacated and put over to other uses.”
National leadership
For Mr Opper, who has drawn up the plan for evacuating tens of thousands of houses in western Sydney, proper town planning is part of flood preparation.
“The balance between how much development we put in an area and the flood risk is a very complex one; between what you can achieve to create housing and places for people to live against the risk that you place when you live almost anywhere,” he said.
Last year, the state and federal governments signed off on a national strategy for disaster resilience, which deals with floods.
It makes note that all levels of government must share the responsibility.
But some people believe that system does not work.
Dr Anthony Bergin, the director of research at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, says the federal government should be taking the lead.
“Now’s the time for the Commonwealth to take a leadership role in natural disaster planning, particularly flood plain planning,” he said.
“The new Federal Emergency Management Minister Robert McLelland needs to be arguing an economic case for disaster mitigation around micro-economic reform, because a dollar spent in mitigation – flood mitigation – does save somewhere between two and $10 in reduced disaster response and recovery costs.
“And this could be the opportunity for him to leave a legacy of national leadership around disaster management.”
Topics:floods, emergency-planning, federal-government, states-and-territories, local-government, australia, sydney-2000, surfers-paradise-4217, adelaide-5000, melbourne-3000
First posted February 16, 2012 20:44:15
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Science daily:Severe Weather news
ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News
- Time of year important in projections of climate change effects on ecosystems
- Extreme summer temperatures occur more frequently in U.S. now, analysis shows
- NASA science aircraft to travel the globe in 2012
- Research yields better seasonal climate forecasts
Time of year important in projections of climate change effects on ecosystems
Posted: 15 Feb 2012 12:53 PM PST
Based on more than 25 years of data, ecologists looked at how droughts and heat waves affect grass growth during different months of the year.Extreme summer temperatures occur more frequently in U.S. now, analysis shows
Posted: 15 Feb 2012 11:31 AM PST
Extreme summer temperatures are already occurring more frequently in the United States, and will become normal by mid-century if the world continues on a business as usual schedule of emitting greenhouse gases. By analyzing observations and results obtained from climate models, a new study has shown that previously rare high summertime (June, July and August) temperatures are already occurring more frequently in some regions of the 48 contiguous United States.NASA science aircraft to travel the globe in 2012
Posted: 15 Feb 2012 06:58 AM PST
With missions scheduled throughout the year, 2012 is shaping up to be an extraordinary time for NASA’s Airborne Science Program and Earth system science research. Multiple aircraft and specialized instruments will operate in the United States, Europe, Asia and South America this year in support of studies conducted by NASA and the Earth science community, improving scientists’ understanding of our planet.Research yields better seasonal climate forecasts
Posted: 13 Feb 2012 10:30 AM PST
Arctic sea ice is rapidly retreating. Within a few decades the North Pole could be completely ice-free in summer. How will that affect our weather? In the research project “Seasonal Predictability over the Arctic Region” (SPAR), scientists in Norway have made some discoveries that may lead to more reliable seasonal forecasts.You are subscribed to email updates from ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News