PRESS RELEASE
Crabshell
410-366-1637; mobuszewski at verizon.net
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Max Obuszewski
March 5, 2012 410-366-1637 or mobuszewski at verizon.net
CRABSHELL
The Crabshell
Radiation knows no boundaries. So besides a feeling of empathy for those in
“For nearly 40 years, top U.S. safety officials at the Atomic Energy Commission and later the Nuclear Regulatory Commission have warned about the safety shortcomings of the GE Mark I design,” said Michael Mariotte, executive director of Nuclear Information Research Service. “A 1972 recommendation that the U.S. stop licensing the design was accepted on technical grounds but denied by the AEC’s top safety official, Joseph Hendrie, because it ‘could very well be the end of nuclear power.’ In 1986 Harold Denton, then the top safety official at the NRC, warned that Mark I containments have a 90% probability of failing under accident conditions.”
Despite these warnings, the NRC has not only allowed these reactors to continue operating, 21 of the 23 already have received license renewals to operate an additional 20 years, including the highly controversial Vermont Yankee reactor yesterday. There was no examination of the fundamental design flaws during the renewal application process for any of these 21 reactors, as the issue is considered generic and only site-specific issues are allowed to be heard in the license renewal process.
Thus on Sunday, March 11, 2012, the Crabshell
The Crabshell
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