mercredi 22 mars 2006

Big Old Cuddly Strontium 90, coming to a water supply near you


Holy shit:

High levels of a radioactive material — nearly three times the amount permitted in drinking water — were found in groundwater near the Hudson River beneath a nuclear plant, the owner said Tuesday.

The groundwater does not intersect drinking supplies, and although the strontium-90 is believed to have reached the Hudson it would be safely diluted in the river, said Jim Steets, spokesman for Entergy Nuclear Northeast.

The strontium — which in high doses can cause cancer — was found in a well dug in a search for the source of a leak of radioactive water at the Indian Point complex, about 30 miles north of New York City.

The test well is among nine dug in an attempt to pinpoint the leak. Contaminated water was first found in August.

Entergy’s finding matched tests by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on the same sample, Steets said.

The sample also yielded tritium, another potential carcinogen, at levels well above the drinking water standard. High levels had been found earlier in another test well. The nuclear commission announced Monday that it would investigate releases of tritium at Indian Point and other plants.

NRC spokesman Neil Sheehan said Tuesday that the commission still believes that radioactivity in the water — given that it is not drinking water — is well below the level that would "pose a risk to public health and safety."


Of course that's what the NRC is going to say, because he's referring to the health and safety of good Republicans in Wyoming.

Ask the residents of Rockland and Westchester counties if they want strontium-90 and tritium in their groundwater. For that matter, ask YOURSELF if you want it in your groundwater? Where do these morons at the NRC think groundwater goes?

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire