I have been telling readers since I started SR 33 years ago that we should stop any development of civilian nuclear energy. After serious research at both a classified and unclassified level I became convinced that the network of nuclear waste sites was going to become a major crisis at some point because of the level of maintenance required. Not only are the reactors dangerous, as Chernobyl and Fukushima have shown, but that nuclear waste issue was, and is, a constant danger. Well, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, has now issued its warning, and I think we should take what these scientists are saying very seriously. These are the men and women who have specialized in this area of research and understand it best.
Irradiated fuel assemblies—essentially bundles of fuel rods with zirconium alloy cladding sheathing uranium dioxide fuel pellets—that have been removed from a nuclear reactor (spent fuel) generate a great deal of heat from the radioactive decay of the nuclear fuel’s unstable fission products. This heat source is termed decay heat. Spent fuel is so thermally hot and radioactive that it must be submerged in circulating water and cooled in a storage pool (spent fuel pool) for several years before it can be moved to dry storage.
The dangers of reactor meltdowns are well known. But spent fuel can also overheat and burn in a storage pool if its coolant water is lost, thereby potentially releasing large amounts of radioactive material into the air. This type of accident is known as a spent fuel pool fire or zirconium fire, named after the fuel cladding. All commercial nuclear power plants in the United States—and nearly all in the world—have at least one spent fuel pool on site. A fire at an overloaded pool […]
Sasha Chavkin, Caitlin Gilbert, Anjali Tsui and Anahad O’Connor, Reporters - The Washingtdon Post
Stephan:
I went to the pharmacy today and had to stand in a line for over 30 minutes. While there I noticed something that has become ever more prevalent: the number of obese people, particularly women. I counted 27 people, a lot for the rural area in which I live, and 19 of them were obese. Most alarming to me were two girls about 15 or 16, maybe 5’4″, each weighing I would guess over 200 pounds, thighs nearly as big as my wife’s waist. When you travel to Europe or Asia you can always spot the Americans because of their obesity. When you look at the data you also see that Americans have a life span about five years shorter than people in other developed countries. We have the highest obesity percentage of any developed nation, and more people proportionally die from obesity than any other developed country. As this report describes, the food companies love this obesity and spend millions of dollars promoting anti-diet schemes through “nutritionists” and social apps.
Jaye Rochon struggled to lose weight for years. But she felt as if a burden had lifted when she discovered YouTube influencers advocating “health at every size” — urging her to stop dieting and start listening to her “mental hunger.”
She stopped avoiding favorite foods such as cupcakes and Nutella. “They made me feel like I was safe eating whatever the hell I wanted,” said Rochon, 51, a video editor in Wausau, Wisc. In two months, she regained 50 pounds. As her weight neared 300 pounds, she began to worry about her health.
The videos that Rochon encountered are part of the “anti-diet” movement, a social media juggernaut that began as an effort to combat weight stigma […]
Here is some good news. We are making real progress in converting to renewable energy sources. The problem I see is that the national energy grid is aging and increasingly vulnerable to failure. My hope is that in the U.S. we develop regional and local grids.
When you live far from the sprawling fields befitting utility-scale solar and wind farms, it’s easy to feel like clean energy isn’t coming online fast enough. But renewables have grown at a staggering rate since 2014 and now account for 22 percent of the nation’s electricity. Solar alone has grown an impressive eightfold in 10 years.
The sun and the wind have been the country’s fastest growing sources of energy over the past decade, according to a report released by the nonprofit Climate Central on Wednesday. Meanwhile, coal power has declined sharply, and methane use all but leveled off. With the Inflation Reduction Act poised to kick that growth curve higher with expanded tax credits for manufacturing and installing photovoltaic panels and wind turbines, the most optimistic projections suggest that the country is getting ever closer to achieving its 2030 and 2035 clean energy goals.
“I think the rate at which renewables have been able to grow is just something that most people don’t recognize,” said Amanda […]
Robert Reich, Carmel P. Friesen Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and a Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies - Robert Reich Substack
Stephan:
Robert Reich, I think, lays out what criminal Trump is up to very well. What continues to surprise me is that with the news filled with one story after another of Trump’s criminality, and utter lack of integrity, millions still follow this loathsome man.
On Friday, Trump posted a video featuring an image of President Biden hog-tied —with hands and feet bound together.
Trump has previously posted doctored photos and videos depicting him physically attacking Biden, such as hitting Mr. Biden with golf balls.
It’s all part of Trump’s 5-step fascist plan.
In a previous post, I laid out the defining traits of fascism and how MAGA Republicans embody them, and I suggested that Trump and his lackeys shouldn’t be seen as simply “authoritarian.” They need to be understood as fascist.
But how could Trump actually turn America into a fascist state?
In five steps, which he’s already signaled he plans to take. Here they are:
Step 1: Use threats of violence to gain power.
Hitler and Mussolinirelied on their vigilante militias to intimidate voters and local officials. We watched Trump try to do the same in 2020. Even before he incited the attack on the U.S. Capitol, he said on national television: “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by.”
Here is the best recent update of coastal subsidence and submergence I have found. This is what is going to happen in the next 26 years. Get it? Twenty-six years. So these changes are already underway. Plan accordingly.
Two dozen US cities are at risk of going underwater as sea level rises and land sinks.
A new map by Virginia Tech researchers reveals the cities in danger zones along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and the Gulf of Mexico.
The study published in Nature examined the flooding potential for 32 cities across the coasts using sea level rise projections, tide charts and sinking land measurements obtained via satellite.
It projects that up to 500,000 Americans could be affected and one in 35 private properties could experience flood damage over the next 30 years.
‘One of the challenges we have with communicating the issue of sea-level rise and land subsidence broadly is it often seems like a long-term problem, like something whose impacts will only manifest at the end of the century, which many people may not care about,’ stated the study’s lead author, graduate student Leonard Ohenhen.