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.
"Nuclear Road Trip: Shipping Uranium A Complex Task"
NPR, 10/11/2010"A shipment of bomb-grade uranium arrived at a secure facility in Russia Monday, sent from a research reactor in Poland as part of a race to secure dangerous radioactive material around the world. There was no way to mistake the shipment for something innocuous like Polish sausage — the trucks were escorted by heavily armed police officers and plastered with large radioactive signs."
"Department of Energy Agrees To Hanford Cleanup Deadline"
Tri-City Herald, 10/08/2010"The Department of Energy and Washington State Department of Ecology have reached agreement on a consent decree that sets new court-enforced deadlines for emptying Hanford tanks of radioactive waste and treating the waste."
"Aid Sought for Nuclear Plants"
NYTimes, 09/24/2010"The federal loan guarantee program and other aid for new nuclear plants may not be enough to induce Constellation Energy to build a third reactor at its Calvert Cliffs site, 40 miles south of Washington, the company’s president and chief executive said on Thursday."
MIT Report Endorses Centralized Interim Storage for Spent Reactor Fuel
ClimateWire, 09/21/2010"A Massachusetts Institute of Technology task force report called yesterday for the United States to create a few centralized storage sites for spent nuclear reactor fuel in the next decades, while researching new reactor designs that could reduce the challenges of permanent geological burial of nuclear wastes."
"Navajos Ask Supreme Court to Protect Drinking Water From Uranium"
ENS, 09/16/2010"The New Mexico Environmental Law Center today appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse a lower court decision that allows uranium mining in the Four Corners region of New Mexico. The appeal claims the mine would contaminate drinking water used by some 15,000 Navajo people."
"Nuclear Waste Shipping on Lakes Protested"
Detroit News, 09/13/2010"A plan to ship 16 steam generators on the Detroit River and Great Lakes has sparked an international outcry. What alarms residents on the U.S. and Canadian sides of the waterways is the material inside the generators -- nuclear waste."
"U.N. Report: Iran Stockpiling Nuclear Materials"
Wash Post, 09/07/2010"Iran is steadily stockpiling enriched uranium, even in the face of toughened international sanctions, according to a U.N. inspection report that raises new concerns about the ability to monitor parts of the Islamic nation's nuclear program that could be used to make a bomb."
"A Nuclear Giant Moves Into Wind"
Green (NYT), 09/02/2010"Exelon, the nuclear giant that recently backed away from building new nuclear plants, is moving into wind."
Enviros Groups' Challenge to Reactor Project Faces Uphill Path at NRC
ClimateWire, 08/30/2010In the debate over how to meet the nation's 'clean energy' goals, the nuclear industry seems to be winning.
"Hot River Forces Costly Cutback For TVA"
Chattanooga Times Free Press, 08/24/2010"The Tennessee Valley Authority has lost nearly $50 million in power generation from its biggest nuclear plant because the Tennessee River in Alabama is too hot."
"Nuclear Plant's Use of River Water Prompts $1.1 Billion Debate"
NYTimes, 08/24/2010"Just beneath the wind-stippled surface of the Hudson River here, huge pipes suck enough water into the Indian Point nuclear plant every second to fill three Olympic swimming pools. And each second they take in dozens of organisms -- fish and crabs, but mostly larvae -- that are at the center of a $1.1 billion debate: should the plant have to put in cooling towers that would vastly reduce the intake of water?"
"Could High Level Nuclear Waste Be on Its Way To Utah?"
ABC 4 News, 08/24/2010"A Federal judge recently struck down a ruling that is keeping high level nuclear waste from being stored on an Indian reservation in Tooele County. It's a judicial move that could make it easier to bring the highly toxic waste into the state of Utah where it will be stored."
"In Superman’s Hometown, a Labor Dispute Over Health"
NYTimes, 08/09/2010"Union workers at the nation’s only uranium conversion plant, in Metropolis, Ill., have erected 42 crosses nearby in memory of workers who died of cancer. Twenty-seven smaller crosses symbolize workers who have survived the disease."
Formers Chemical Workers Still Waiting for Radiation Exposure Payments
Chicago Tribune, 08/04/2010Workers in the Joliet, Illinois, area who are ill because they handled radioactive materials in the production of nuclear bombs are still waiting for compensation promised in 2000.
"Panel Rebuffs Effort To Fund Yucca Mountain Site"
AP, 07/27/2010A Senate committee defeated proposal to revive the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste disposal site.

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