EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
Flirting With Nuclear Disaster
Newsweek, 01/06/2011"Every few years the defenses of the nation’s nuclear plants are tested. What’s scary is how often they fail."
Texas Welcomes Low-Level Nuclear Waste from 36 Other States
Wall St. Journal, 01/05/2011"A Texas commission Tuesday set in motion the importation of low-level radioactive-waste from 36 other states, a move long sought by the nuclear-energy industry and long opposed by environmentalists."
"A Battle Over Uranium Bodes Ill for U.S. Debate"
NYTimes, 12/31/2010Proposals for re-opening uranium mills and mines in Colorado are re-igniting bitter old debates -- and may foretell how divisive a national debate over restarting nuclear energy development may prove to be.
"Nuclear Waste Cleanup At N.Y. Site Nears Completion"
NPR, 12/29/2010A nuclear waste disaster in New York is leading to a new understanding of how to deal with nuclear waste.
"Nuclear Builders Keep Their Options Open"
NYTimes, 12/29/2010"The nuclear construction business looks highly uncertain at the moment, but companies that are interested in building are still keeping their options open, and spending money to do so."
Chernobyl Opens for Post-Apocalyptic Tourism
Guardian, 12/14/2010"Already been to North Korea? Hiking in Afghanistan a little bit too last year? Fear not. Tourism has a new frontier: the site of the world's biggest civilian nuclear disaster."
"Obama Decision To Close Yucca Nuclear Dump Back in Court"
Tri-City Herald, 12/14/2010"A federal appeals court has decided to move ahead with lawsuits challenging the Department of Energy's authority to scrap plans to make Yucca Mountain, Nev., a national repository for nuclear waste."
"Oyster Creek Reactor to Close by 2019"
NYTimes, 12/10/2010"The Oyster Creek nuclear reactor in New Jersey will be shut down by 2019, at least 10 years before its license expires, in a deal with state environmental regulators that will allow it to operate until then without building costly cooling towers, its owner said on Wednesday."
House Slips Nuclear Subsidy into Continuing Resolution
Reports, 12/09/2010The House late Wednesday passed a stopgap omnibus appropriations measure that included $7 billion in new loan guarantee authority for commercial nuclear power plants -- as well as the food safety bill.
"States Pursue Radon Limits in Drinking Water as EPA Action Lags"
Greenwire, 12/08/2010"States are taking the lead with studying levels of radon in drinking water and air even as federal regulators lag, as a coincidence of geology and population density leaves some more at risk than others of suffering from the naturally occurring radioactive [contaminant]."
"Great Lakes Mayors Sound Alarm Over Radioactive Shipment"
ENS, 12/03/2010"A binational coalition of over 70 mayors from Quebec, Ontario and the eight Great Lake States fear that the proposed maritime shipment of 16 giant radioactive steam generators from Ontario's Bruce Power to Sweden for recycling could release radioactivity into the water in the event of an accident during shipment."
"Pennsylvania Gas Drillers Dumping Radioactive Waste in New York"
DC Bureau, 11/24/2010Thanks to money and loopholes, gas drillers can dump radioactive waste from their Pennsylvania operations in a New York landfill.
Probe Finds 'Alcohol Incidents' Among DOE Agents on Nuke-Transport Duty
Greenwire, 11/24/2010"Several Department of Energy agents tasked with transporting nuclear weapons got drunk while on duty, according to the agency's inspector general office."
"Radiation Worries for Children in Dentists’ Chairs"
NYTimes, 11/23/2010"Not only do most dentists continue to use outmoded X-ray film requiring higher amounts of radiation, but orthodontists and other specialists are embracing a new scanning device that emits significantly more radiation than conventional methods, an examination by The New York Times has found."
US, Kazakhstan Secure Weapons-Grade Plutonium From Soviet-era Reactor
ENS, 11/19/2010"Enough plutonium and uranium to make 775 nuclear weapons has been removed from the BN-350 fast reactor in Kazakhstan, built to breed plutonium for the Soviet Union's nuclear weapons program, and placed in a secure storage facility to keep terrorists from acquiring nuclear weapons."

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