How Many Lives Is the Plant's Energy Worth?

Current plans require a 10-mile-radius evacuation around Indian Point if a meltdown were ever to occur;  brand shoesbut some Westchester lawmakers are proposing the radius be increased to 50 miles.

"Six legislators have joined together to establish a 50-mile evacuation zone around Indian Point," said Joy Haber, legislative aide to Democrat MaryJane Shimsky. "Indian Point is the number-one public safety issue in the area."

Expert panelists invited to speak were doctors, officials, scientists and concerned citizens—but all had one thing in common: the desire to close Indian Point.

"There is no such thing as safe exposure to radiation," said Dr. Andrew Kenter, president of the New York Chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility. "Doctors are asked to treat and fix people when they're broken; when we're unable to do that, we have to prevent those things from happening."

Former State Assemblyman Richard Brodsky said: "If there were to be a meltdown at Indian Point there would not be enough money in the world to save this community, this economy and the lives, health and safety of the people who live here."

John Armbruster has been studying earthquakes in the metropolitan area. "We are asking for a thorough, modern re-evaluation brand shoes of the preparedness of Indian Point to the occurrence of earthquakes using up-to-date evaluation methods that were not available when Indian Point was originally licensed," he said.  

Operating licenses for Indian Points' two units expire in 2013 and 2015.  The state Department of Environmental Conservation declined last April to give Entergy—the plant's operating company— the water quality certification it needs for relicensing. But the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), whose approval is also required, recently said that no environmental impact exists to prevent the power plant from getting relicensed for another 20 years.  

"You have to be suspicious of what you hear from the NRC," cautioned Mark Jacobs, co-founder of IPSEC. "Their job is both to promote and regulate nuclear energy. Obviously, both can't be done."

According to Marilyn Elie, co-founder of the Westchester Citizens Awareness Network, only five percent of energy in the Hudson Valley is generated from nuclear power from Indian Point.

"We know that Indian Point and Fukishima had different reactors and were on different ground," Elie said. "But what they share are regulators who feel they can predict and plan for everything. What we have to ask is how many lives is that five percent of energy worth?"

In the wake of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan, a group of peace walkers walked about 15 brand shoes miles from Peekskill to Yorktown along Route 202 Monday. They plan to reach Yankee nuclear plant in Vermont by April 26, the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster. 

They hoped to raise awareness of the dangers of nuclear energy call for eco-friendly alternatvies. They suggest solar, geo, and hydro power electricity. They are also walking in solidarity with those affected by the disaster and in an effort to close Indian Point and the Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant in Vermont.

Par birdzws le mercredi 13 avril 2011

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