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Rebranding Coal

October 13, 2009 @ 06:00 By Gavin Webber 1 Comment

GetUp! Australia are fighting back with this slick rebuttle to the re-branding effort that the coal lobby are attempting in marginal federal and state seats to change the image of coal to that of a clean energy. 

Once again, what a crock.  There is no such thing as Clean Coal.  Not only is it an oxymoron, you only have to touch the stuff to know that this statement is true, and by simply looking at the pollutants spewing out of the coal fired power stations all around our country.  We cannot sequester the emissions in time to prevent catastrophic climate change, so lets focus our efforts on renewable energy which is available right now, instead of pouring billions into a pipe dream to keep an industry alive that will do us more harm than good in the long run.

This is the information that GetUp! sent me.  They have already reached their campaign target, so I am simply assisting in getting the message out there.  Nothing peeves me more that the coal lobby and vested industries trying to influence our communities and elected officials with lies.  Let the truth be told.  Thanks GetUp! for bringing it to our attention.

Dear Gavin,

Have you seen what the coal lobby is up to? Right now they’re blanketing the airwaves in coal country marginal seats with a new ad campaign, in an attempt to undermine our transition to a clean-energy economy and strong-arm politicians into giving them extra handouts.

We need to expose their ad campaign for what it is: a highly-paid rebranding exercise. The good news is we have just the ad to do it. Once people see it, every time they see the coal lobby’s ad they’ll think of our parody. That means you could make every marketing dollar the coal lobby spends work against them.

In just weeks the Government will decide how much extra tax-payer assistance the coal industry will get – can you chip in to get this ad on air before Parliament resumes next week?

www.getup.org.au/campaign/SameOldCoal

The coal lobby has brought out the big guns – the same man behind ‘Kevin07’ is running their campaign. And there’s already signs it may be working – with key politicians dancing to the coal lobby’s tune. They want to further weaken the Government’s woefully inadequate emissions trading scheme with even more exemptions for the coal lobby.

You can show Labor and Liberal leaders alike that there’s something more powerful than the polluting lobby: everyday Australians, like yourself, who are fed up with weak action on climate change and are willing to do something about it.

If we can raise $50,000 in the next 48 hours we’ll buy ads on TV spots like Meet the Press and Sky News, as well as in the areas that the coal lobby are running their ads, so that Kevin Rudd and Malcolm Turnbull can see that Australians are not buying the coal lobby’s line:

www.getup.org.au/campaign/SameOldCoal

As part of our ReEnergise Australia campaign, GetUp members have been going door by door, block by block in targeted marginal seats across the country. They’ve been telling their friends and neighbours about the importance of renewable energy to Australia’s environmental and economic future.

Don’t let the coal lobby undermine the grassroots efforts of your fellow GetUp members and volunteers with their slick marketing tricks

If you want more details about the campaign that GetUp! are running you can find it at the links above.

Gav

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Filed Under: activisim, brown coal, climate change, greenwash, renewable energy

Wind Turbine Syndrome?

September 2, 2009 @ 20:50 By Gavin Webber 10 Comments

I have heard a few clangers in my time, but now I have heard them all.  A book is about to be released by Dr Nina Pierpont from NY, USA, titled (you guessed it) Wind Turbine Syndrome.  Here is a quote from her website;

“Wind Turbine Syndrome is the clinical name I have given to the constellation of symptoms experienced by many (though not all) people who find themselves living near industrial wind turbines: sleep problems (insomnia), headaches, dizziness, unsteadiness, nausea, exhaustion, anxiety, anger, irritability, depression, memory loss, eye problems, problems with concentration and learning, tinnitus (ringing in the ears). As industrial windplants proliferate close to people’s homes and anywhere else people regularly congregate (schools, nursing homes, places of business, etc.), Wind Turbine Syndrome likely will become an industrial plague.”

Have a look at this report from an extremely credible source (not) on YouTube if you don’t believe me.

Hey, I could be proved wrong, and the good Doctor Nina may have stumbled upon something with her research, but I think I would rather live next to a wind turbine farm, rather than a coal, gas or nuclear power plant, wouldn’t you?  I have a feeling in my water that this research may be subsidised by some vested interest in keeping the fossil fuel industry alive and kicking.  Make up your own mind, I have already!

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Filed Under: greenwash, Wind Turbine

Nuclear Power is not CO2 Free.

August 6, 2009 @ 23:11 By Gavin Webber 13 Comments

There have been quite a few articles in the press from the nuclear lobby and the opposition party touting the climate change benefits of Nuclear Power. Besides the harmful nuclear waste that the process leaves behind, the claim that nuclear power generation is CO2 free is simply a myth. In my search to find proof, I stumbled upon this great post. I cannot claim the words in this post. They belong to Dave Kimble from http://www.peakoil.org.au/ and they are wise and well researched words as well.


Proponents of nuclear power always say that one of the big benefits of nuclear power is that it produces no Carbon dioxide (CO2).
This is completely untrue, as a moment’s consideration will demonstrate that fossil fuels, especially oil in the form of gasoline and diesel, are essential to every stage of the nuclear cycle, and CO2 is given off whenever these are used.

clip_image002[4]
This is Ranger Uranium Mine’s Pit Number 1.
All of the material removed from this hole, over-burden and ore, was moved by truck.

clip_image003 These trucks run on diesel. It would be interesting to know how much diesel is used for how much ore in a year at Ranger.
If we are to increase the number of nuclear power stations, we also need to increase the number of these trucks (which obviously take a lot of fossil fuel energy to build), and the volume of diesel fuel. Currently Australia imports 26% of its diesel consumption, and this figure is rising as our oil production falls.
The tyres on these trucks are also particularly energy-intensive to make, and there is a world-wide short of these tyres.
clip_image005 The ore is taken to a mill, usually nearby to keep trucking costs down. The mill crushes the rock to powder. The powder is then treated with sulphuric acid to dissolve the uranium, leaving the rock (depleted ore) behind.
clip_image006 The depleted ore is washed and neutralised using lime, and the slurry is pumped to the tailings ponds.
clip_image007 Maintaining the tailings ponds, with more diesel powered machinery.
clip_image008 Hard rock ores, such as quartz conglomerates and granites, are approximately 3 to 4 times more energy-intensive than soft rock ores (limestones and shales) to crush.
clip_image009 The dissolved uranium solution, including other metals, is then treated with amines dissolved in kerosene to selectively separate the uranium, which is then precipitated out of solution using ammonia, forming Ammonium di-uranate, or “yellowcake”.
All of these chemicals, sulphuric acid, lime, amines, kerosene and ammonia are energy-intensive to make, and the energy required is in the form of fossil fuels, that produce CO2 when used.
clip_image010 In the final stage, the yellowcake is roasted at 800°C in an oil-fired furnace called a calciner. The Ammonium di-uranate is converted to 98% pure Uranium oxide (U3O8), which is a dark green powder that is packed into 44-gallon drums for shipment.
clip_image011 Drums of Uranium oxide are stacked by forklifts, while they await shipment, sometimes to the other side of the world.
clip_image012 The next stage involves dissolving the Uranium oxide in Hydrofluoric Acid and excess Fluorine gas to form Uranium hexafluoride gas :

U3O8 + 16HF + F2 => 3UF6 + 8H2O

Hydrofluoric Acid is one of the most corrosive and poisonous compounds known to man.

clip_image013 The Uranium hexafluoride gas is then transported in cylinders to be enriched.
clip_image014
Naturally occurring Uranium consists of three isotopes:
U-238 = 99.2745% ; U-235 = 0.7200% ; U-234 = 0.0055%
Despite its tiny proportion of the total by weight, U-234 produces ~49% of the radioactive emissions, due to its very short half-life.

The standard enrichment process for pressurised water reactor (PWR) fuel converts this mix to:
fuel stream : U-238 = 96.4% ; U-235 = 3.6%
tailings stream : U-238 = 99.7% ; U-235 = 0.3%
The centrifuges are powered by electricity, so this stage can be powered by nuclear power. However building the centrifuge cascades requires lots of fossil fuels.

clip_image015 Low-enriched (3.6%) Uranium hexafluoride gas is then transported to the fuel fabrication plant.
clip_image016 The UF6 gas is converted to Uranium dioxide (UO2) powder, pressed into pellets, and baked in an oil-fired furnace to form a ceramic material. These are then loaded into a tube made of a zirconium alloy. Several of these tubes form one fuel assembly.
Zirconium is a metallic element derived from zircon, an ore of Zirconium silicate (ZrSiO4), which is a by-product of rutile sand mining (another energy-intensive business). Naturally occurring Zirconium is always found with Hafnium, which has to be removed (with difficulty) for nuclear uses.
For every tonne of Uranium in the fuel, up to 2 tonnes of Zirconium alloy are needed.
clip_image018
clip_image019 Fresh fuel is only mildly radioactive and can be handled without shielding. The fuel assemblies are then transported to the reactor by truck or train.
A 1000 MW(e) nuclear reactor contains about 100 – 130 tonnes of Uranium dioxide, and usually one third of that is replaced in rotation each year.
clip_image020 If you ignore the vehicles that the workers use to get to work, the reactor does not produce any CO2. But it does use electricity, as well as produce it, and to the extent that electricity is largely produced by fossil fuels, this needs to be counted in the energy balance.
clip_image021 It takes a lot of steel to build a nuclear power station, and steel is made by smelting iron ore with coking coal.
clip_image022 And a nuclear power station uses lots of concrete, which is made from cement. Cement is made by crushing limestone and roasting it, using fossil fuels, to drive off Carbon dioxide. So cement is particularly CO2-intensive.
clip_image023 Spent fuel rods ‘normally’ spend six months in cooling ponds located within the reactor building, so that short-lived radio-activity can decay, making the material easier to handle. In the US and many other places, these spent fuel rods stay at the reactor a lot longer than that, while politicians argue over what to do with it next.
clip_image025clip_image024
Reactor waste moved by road and rail.

clip_image027
Spent fuel is kept under water until it is reprocessed. This keeps it cool and acts as a radiation shield. In the ‘once through’ process, the fuel rods are dissolved in acid, and the Plutonium is extracted, and the remainder including the Uranium becomes high-level waste. In the ‘recycling’ process, Uranium is also recovered.

clip_image028 Recovered Plutonium and Mixtures of Plutonium and Uranium oxides (MOX) are sent by road back to the fuel fabrication facility to be used in new fuel rods.
clip_image029 This is not really a waste repository, (it is the NORAD military bunker at Cheyenne Mountain) but this is what one might look like if one was ever to be built.
clip_image030 This is a security policeman, well , it does say POLICE on his bag. I do hope everything is alright.
clip_image031 Ah, that’s more like it.
How many miles per gallon do you get out of one of those ?
clip_image033 Security surveillance is needed to prevent terrorists from getting access to radio-active materials.
clip_image034 And increasingly these days, one also has to defend ones nuclear facilities against attack by an increasingly sophisticated enemy. This is the Tor-M1 – a fully integrated combat vehicle with anti-missile/anti-aircraft missiles, that the Iranians are getting from Russia to protect themselves from the peace-makers.

As you can see, every step of the nuclear power cycle involves the expenditure of energy derived from fossil fuels, which nuclear electricity cannot replace. Thus it is untrue to say that nuclear energy is greenhouse friendly.

In the paper “Nuclear Power : the energy balance” by J.W. Storm and P. Smith (2005) download here, the authors calculate that with high quality ores, the CO2 produced by the full nuclear life cycle is about one half to one third of an equivalent sized gas-fired power station.

For low quality ores (less than 0.02% of U3O8 per tonne of ore),
the CO2 produced by the full nuclear life cycle is EQUAL TO
that produced by the equivalent gas-fired power station.

So the question is :
Given that the greenhouse claims for nuclear power are false, and if the only way the nuclear industry can operate is with massive amounts of cheap fossil fuels, especially diesel derived from oil, and with oil going to be very much scarcer in the future, is this a good time to be thinking of increasing the nuclear industry ?

I think not!

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Filed Under: climate change, greenwash

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An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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