FRENCH NUCLEAR “FLAGSHIP” HOLED BELOW THE WATER LINE


Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2008


27 May 2008 - France — France’s nuclear safety agency today took the commendable step of ordering construction work to be halted on the concrete base slab of the new European Pressurised Reactor, Flamanville 3, in northern France. Over recent months, the agency’s inspectors have uncovered a string of chronic faults in construction -- which only began in December 2007.

Issues seem to have come to a head on 21 May. Maybe that explains why Anne Lauvergeon, Chief Executive Officer of AREVA, the French nuclear company aggressively backing the European Pressurised Reactor (EPR), ‘exploded’ when we handed her a copy of the Greenpeace ‘EPR Survival Kit’ during the European Nuclear Energy Forum on the 22nd.

Apparently, for nuclear regulators in France, enough is enough. We can only hope that their move is not merely a temporary setback to construction but the beginning of the end of a failed experiment in building the world’s largest nuclear reactors.

And as we pointed out to Europe’s energy policymakers at the last week’s European Nuclear Energy Forum, “Nuclear power? Non, merci!” is the correct response to anyone approaching you to buy an EPR.
French letters

The regulators' call to halt construction follows a series of letters from the agency to Flamanville’s construction manager. In the letters, inspectors highlighted a range of problems including non-conformities in the pinning of the steel framework of the concrete base slab, incorrectly positioned reinforcements, inadequacy of technical inspection by both the construction companies and Electricité de France. Inspectors also uncovered inconsistencies between the blueprint for reinforcement work and the plan for its practical implementation. The incorrect composition of concrete had been used, that may lead to cracks and rapid deterioration in sea air conditions. Samples of concrete were also not collected properly, according to inspectors. Cracks have already been observed in part of the base slab beneath the reactor building. The supplier of the steel containment liner reportedly lacks the necessary qualifications. Fabrication of the liner was continuing despite quality failures demonstrating the lack of competence of the supplier. As a result, one-quarter of the welds of the steel liner of the reactor containment building were deficient.
Déjà vu all over again

The new reactors Flamanville 3 and Olkiluoto 3, in Finland, are supposedly the vanguard of a ‘renaissance’ in nuclear power, leading to a whole series of these type of reactors being built around the world. (It certainly seems to be a renaissance in the kinds of problems we hoped would be relegated to history as the number of a new nuclear builds declined in the 11000s).

Problems at Flamanville echo those with the first EPR, Olkiluoto 3, which has been under construction for three years but has been blighted ever since the concrete was poured. Poor quality concrete, bad welds on the containment liner and low-quality reactor components are among its problems. The schedule for completion has been put back by more than two years and estimated costs have nearly doubled to over Euro 5 billion.

Flamanville 3 is the umpteenth example of the nuclear industry failing to learn the lessons of history.
Cradle to grave

And if the problems of an unbuilt reactor aren't enough of a headache for the nuclear industry, the BBC reports that in the UK the cost of cleaning up old nuclear sites, including some deemed "dangerous" will soar beyond 144 billion Euros (US$ 91 billion).

Greenpeace has consistently argued that nuclear power is an unnecessarily complex, risky and expensive way to boil water, to raise steam, to generate power. James Watt will be turning in his grave. In defiance of all logic, enormous sums of public money have been devoted to unsuccessfully overcoming the technical obstacles inherent to nuclear power.

It is time policymakers and power companies realised that businesses and citizens want clean reliable power at an affordable price rather than new monuments to the pursuit of technological folly. What’s more, preventing dangerous climate change means halving global carbon dioxide emissions by mid-century. Energy efficiency improvements and expansion of clean energy supply – not more nuclear capacity – are the key to delivering this energy revolution.

+ More

World's largest tuna destroyer - caught!

27 May 2008 - Kiribati — We chased it for 5 days, but as dawn broke over the Pacific this morning we finally confronted the biggest tuna fishing vessel in the world. The Spanish-owned and flagged tuna purse seiner "Albatun Tres" is known as a 'super, super seiner' and can net 3,000 tonnes of tuna in a single fishing trip. This is almost double the entire annual catch of some Pacific island countries.

We caught this monstrous tuna catcher deploying its net close to the Phoenix Islands of Kiribati and witnessed many tonnes of tuna being taken out of the Pacific. We laid a 25-metre floating banner reading "No Fish, No Future"’ across the inside of the net as it was being hauled in.

We first found the Albatun Tres on May 22nd and tracked her across more than 1,000 nautical miles. Her crew must have noticed us when we came within visual range as they immediately steamed away at high speed.

We managed to catch up with them when they stopped to fish, and as they pulled in their catch we showed up in inflatable boats, a jet ski and helicopter in order to expose their plunderous activities to the world.

Purse seine vessels surround schools of fish with curtain-like nets to catch tuna. A rope along the bottom of the net is pulled like a drawstring and the whole catch is hauled onboard. These vessels have increased their efficiency enormously in the last decade through a variety of technological innovations. While targeting skipjack tuna, these vessels also catch juvenile bigeye and yellowfin tuna, as we witnessed this morning. This bycatch is seriously threatening the already vulnerable stocks of bigeye and yellowfin tuna.

Foreign fishing nations including those of the European Union (EU) are fishing unsustainably where Pacific island countries depend on tuna for income and food. The Albatun Tres arrived in the Pacific from the Indian Ocean earlier this year. It is owned by the Spanish tuna company Albacora, which is part of OPAGAC, a powerful association of Spanish tuna boat owners, processors and traders.

No more fish at home

The Western and Central Pacific tuna fishery, the world's biggest, has been subjected to intense fishing by fleets from Asia and the United States since the 1960s. With declining tuna stocks in the Atlantic and Indian Ocean, the European Union has gained access to this Pacific fishing ground as a reciprocal benefit for giving aid to Pacific countries. With their own waters fished out, the EU and other foreign fishing fleets including Japan, Korea, Taiwan and the US, are literally sailing across the world to take vital fish and income from people whose lives depend on it.

The super seiners of OPAGAC have a questionable history in the region and some of the vessels which they currently represent were pirate fishing in the area last year. Just when the Pacific fishing fleets need to be reduced we have found evidence to show that OPAGAC is trying to expand their fishing capacity here. This group of companies has no shame and targets the poorest and most vulnerable countries in order to gain access to Pacific waters. Greenpeace is urging Pacific island countries to cease any future dealings with OPAGAC. Vessels of this size need to be taken off the water and scrapped immediately in order to address the overcapacity of the world's tuna fleets.

Our ship Esperanza has been in the region for the last eight weeks highlighting the overfishing of tuna. During this time we have taken action against fishing fleets from Taiwan, Korea, the US, the Philippines and now Spain. At the same time, our ship Arctic Sunrise has been taking action against overfishing of tuna in the Mediterranean as well.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
Press consultantship
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