Friday, February 15, 2013

THE CREAKING OF OYSTER CREEK


Hurricane Sandy is not over by any means.  Not for all the folks who lost their homes in one swoop of a wave; and not for tax payers who’ll have to bail out most  homeowners with US govt. guaranteed flood insurance.  And it’s not over for the US’s 104 aging nuclear reactors designed to be decommissioned after their 40-year lifespan. Twenty-three of those reactors are the same model as those that failed at Fukushima on March 11, 2011; and one of them, Exelon’s Oyster Creek, located in Forked River, New Jersey, is 43 years old. It could have become the next Fukushima.

The pincer movement of two weather fronts colliding made Sandy the biggest mega-storm to strike the US as a result of climate collapse. It raised a storm surge that flooded Staten Island, Lower Manhattan, and the Red Hook section of Brooklyn.  And it raised the water level at Oyster Creek to just below 6.5 feet, the level where the water intake structure that pumps water to cool the plant would have been affected.  And then, the water kept kept rising. 

A bulletin issued by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission dated Oct. 20 states that “Oyster Creek was shut down for refueling and maintenance outage prior to the storm and the reactor remains out of service,” implying that the plant status posed no danger. But it fails to say that, shut down or no, a surge over 7 feet could have submerged the service water pump motor that is used to cool the water in the spent fuel pool. In that case, it would have had to rely on an internal fire suppression system to keep all those spent fuel rods from overheating and exploding and there was no power source to run it.

Following the disaster at Fukushima Daiichi, the US Nuclear Regulatory
Commission conducted an investigation, and issued a document outlining its “Lessons Learned.” One was that the explosions of March 12, 14 and 15  were caused by failure of the external power source on which all reactors depend.  Most of the recommendations of that document have yet to be put into place. Oyster Creek's fire suppression system depends on external power availability.  And be cause of the storm that power was unavailable.  The proof:  the plant's warning sirens failed.  Had there been a serious accident, there would have been no way to alert any of the people living within the plant’s 10 mile evacuation zone.

The matter of evacuation zones is of more than passing interest, especially when hundreds of thousands if not millions of people are impacted. At the time of the nuclear explosions and radioactive fires at Fukushima Daiichi, a US government advisory warned US citizens in Japan to evacuate beyond a 50-mile radius. It is troubling to note that in the US however, no one is permitted to evacuate beyond a ten-mile zone.

At Oyster Creek the water continued rising.  It rose a full 7.5 feet before subsiding, but the fuel pools did not overheat, perhaps because as a precaution Exelon had moved a portable pump to the intake structure. And the power driving those pumps held fast because those plumps were fueled by diesel.

Does it seem that we came within 6 inches of another Fukushima?  Should boiling water be that dangerous?  Will the US wait for the next extreme weather event and try to ride out that storm with its fleet of 104 aging reactors, 23 of them the twins of those that failed at Fukushima?












THEIR NAMES WERE NOT BILL


She’s one of the many mentally challenged people that fill our streets courtesy of Ronald Reagan’s medical plan for the homeless.  She lives tucked in. She’s tucked in, in the corner between a bus station kiosks and a wall, or alongside sidewalk-mounted telephone relay boxes where she takes up little room.  She’s not always open to being helped, but today she takes my five dollars happily.

She smiles up at me through squint eyes: “I’m learning Arabic.” She shows me her notebook of neat calligraphic practice.  “And I have a friend who knows Farsi. She tells me if I can read Arabic, I can read Farsi, too.  This little squiggle here, it looks like a cat.  This word says “open.”  I think if we’re going to bomb people, we should at least learn their language.  She sounds more sane than some presidents I know who arrogate to themselves the right to targeted assassination, without judge, jury or trial.

We look now for our moral authority to Desmond Tutu, having assassinated our own Great Prophet when his anti-war message no longer suited our investment portfolios: 
Do the United States and its people really want to tell those of us who live in the rest of the world that our lives are not of the same value as yours? That President Obama can sign off on a decision to kill us with less worry about judicial scrutiny than if the target is an American? Would your Supreme Court really want to tell humankind that we, like the slave Dred Scott in the 19th century, are not as human as you are? I cannot believe it.
I used to say of apartheid that it dehumanized its perpetrators as much as, if not more than, its victims. Your response as a society to Osama bin Laden and his followers threatens to undermine your moral standards and your humanity.

I was raised during the years of World War II.  During my childhood, although I was raised in New York City, I experienced war-related dreams.  One of these dreams I relate directly to Dr. Mengele’s medical experiments on the bodies of children. It was the worse nightmare of my life. Another dream, one that I still experience dates from that time: There is a terrifying buzz coming at me from the sky. My entire body begins to shake. I know that I am the target, because the projectile making that sound has me in its crosshairs. I know I will surely die.  I believe this dream is how a child who is about to be killed experiences a drone strike.

The CIA has killed between 475-891 children in Pakistan between the years 2004-2013; US covert action has killed between 72 and 177 children in Yemen, and 11-57 children in Somalia. 

These are the names of children killed:                 


PAKISTAN
Noor Aziz | 8 | male
Abdul Wasit | 17 | male
Noor Syed | 8 | male
Wajid Noor | 9 | male
Syed Wali Shah | 7 | male
Ayeesha | 3 | female
Qari Alamzeb | 14| male
Shoaib | 8 | male
Hayatullah KhaMohammad | 16 | male
Tariq Aziz | 16 | male
Sanaullah Jan | 17 | male
Maezol Khan | 8 | female
Nasir Khan | male
Naeem Khan | male
Naeemullah | male
Mohammad Tahir | 16 | male
Azizul Wahab | 15 | male
Fazal Wahab | 16 | male
Ziauddin | 16 | male
Mohammad Yunus | 16 | male
Fazal Hakim | 19 | male
Ilyas | 13 | male
Sohail | 7 | male
Asadullah | 9 | male
khalilullah | 9 | male
Noor Mohammad | 8 | male
Khalid | 12 | male
Saifullah | 9 | male
Mashooq Jan | 15 | male
Nawab | 17 | male
Sultanat Khan | 16 | male
Ziaur Rahman | 13 | male
Noor Mohammad | 15 | male
Mohammad Yaas Khan | 16 | male
Qari Alamzeb | 14 | male
Ziaur Rahman | 17 | male
Abdullah | 18 | male
Ikramullah Zada | 17 | male
Inayatur Rehman | 16 | male
Shahbuddin | 15 | male
Yahya Khan | 16 |male
Rahatullah |17 | male
Mohammad Salim | 11 | male
Shahjehan | 15 | male
Gul Sher Khan | 15 | male
Bakht Muneer | 14 | male
Numair | 14 | male
Mashooq Khan | 16 | male
Ihsanullah | 16 | male
Luqman | 12 | male
Jannatullah | 13 | male
Ismail | 12 | male
Taseel Khan | 18 | male
Zaheeruddin | 16 | male
Qari Ishaq | 19 | male
Jamshed Khan | 14 | male
Alam Nabi | 11 | male
Qari Abdul Karim | 19 | male
Rahmatullah | 14 | male
Abdus Samad | 17 | male
Siraj | 16 | male
Saeedullah | 17 | male
Abdul Waris | 16 | male
Darvesh | 13 | male
Ameer Said | 15 | male
Shaukat | 14 | male
Inayatur Rahman | 17 | male
Salman | 12 | male
Fazal Wahab | 18 | male
Baacha Rahman | 13 | male
Wali-ur-Rahman | 17 | male
Iftikhar | 17 | male
Inayatullah | 15 | male
Mashooq Khan | 16 | male
Ihsanullah | 16 | male
Luqman | 12 | male
Jannatullah | 13 | male
Ismail | 12 | male
Abdul Waris | 16 | male
Darvesh | 13 | male
Ameer Said | 15 | male
Shaukat | 14 | male
Inayatur Rahman | 17 | male
Adnan | 16 | male
Najibullah | 13 | male
Naeemullah | 17 | male
Hizbullah | 10 | male
Kitab Gul | 12 | male
Wilayat Khan | 11 | male
Zabihullah | 16 | male
Shehzad Gul | 11 | male
Shabir | 15 | male
Qari Sharifullah | 17 | male
Shafiullah | 16 | male
Nimatullah | 14 | male
Shakirullah | 16 | male
Talha | 8 | male
YEMEN
Afrah Ali Mohammed Nasser | 9 | female
Zayda Ali Mohammed Nasser | 7 | female
Hoda Ali Mohammed Nasser | 5 | female
Sheikha Ali Mohammed Nasser | 4 | female
Ibrahim Abdullah Mokbel Salem Louqye | 13 | male
Asmaa Abdullah Mokbel Salem Louqye | 9 | male
Salma Abdullah Mokbel Salem Louqye | 4 | female
Fatima Abdullah Mokbel Salem Louqye | 3 | female
Khadije Ali Mokbel Louqye | 1 | female
Hanaa Ali Mokbel Louqye | 6 | female
Mohammed Ali Mokbel Salem Louqye | 4 | male
Jawass Mokbel Salem Louqye | 15 | female
Maryam Hussein Abdullah Awad | 2 | female
Shafiq Hussein Abdullah Awad | 1 | female
Sheikha Nasser Mahdi Ahmad Bouh | 3 | female
Maha Mohammed Saleh Mohammed | 12 | male
Soumaya Mohammed Saleh Mohammed | 9 | female
Shafika Mohammed Saleh Mohammed | 4 | female
Shafiq Mohammed Saleh Mohammed | 2 | male
Mabrook Mouqbal Al Qadari | 13 | male
Daolah Nasser 10 years | 10 | female
AbedalGhani Mohammed Mabkhout | 12 | male
Abdel- Rahman Anwar al Awlaki | 16 | male
Abdel-Rahman al-Awlaki | 17 | male
Nasser Salim | 19