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January
21-2009 The Canadian Press
FREDERICTON New Brunswickers could be on the hook
for $90 million in cost overruns as a result of delays
in the refurbishment of the Point Lepreau nuclear power
plant. The $1.4-billion project began last March but has
been slipping behind schedule.
Much of the extra cost is for the estimated $1
million NB Power is spending each day on replacement
power while Lepreau is shut down for refurbishment.
David Hay, president of NB Power, told a legislature
committee Wednesday that issues that arose in December
have put the project three to four months behind
schedule.
"We are now saying we are getting so far out that the
ability to claw back right to (the original completion
date of) September 30 is getting increasingly
difficult," he told the committee. Hay said that the
main reason for the growing delay is work being done by
Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. to replace feeder tubes. It
is the first time such work has been done on a Candu 6
reactor.
"We've taken a number of steps to deal with this over
time," said Hay. "We've been increasingly seconding NB
Power employees into the AECL team, working very
co-operatively with them. "We have the best staff
working co-operatively to solve this issue and to try to
put this project as close to back to schedule as we
can."
But David Coon, policy director with the Conservation
Council of New Brunswick, said he is certain the
schedule will only fall further behind. "I'd put money
on it," he said. "They haven't reached the toughest part
of the job yet and I figured the delays would occur when
they start removing the calandria tubes. That's going to
be tough work."
Hay admitted that removing the tubes is a difficult
phase of the project, but he remains hopeful it will go
smoothly. "In the future we may have some additional
delays, but we believe we also have some additional
savings that we're going to make," he said. "We're
hopeful to get this done before Christmas."
News of the delays drew pointed questions from
members of the Opposition. Paul Robichaud, the
Conservative's energy critic, said New Brunswickers were
misled by government assurances that the project would
be on time and on budget.
"In December, when the house was sitting, we asked
the premier and the minister of energy to put in place a
committee of the legislative assembly to oversee the
refurbishment of Point Lepreau ... and the minister and
the premier said no to our request, and they said we
were panicking for nothing," Robichaud said. He is again
asking for a non-partisan committee to be formed.
Energy Minister Jack Keir said he is disappointed by
the delays, but has asked both AECL and NB Power to come
up with a plan to get the work done by as close to the
original date as possible. While the additional costs
are high, he said they could have been much higher if
the previous Conservative government had opted for a bid
from a second company that offered a fixed price.
"They had the risk of farming out all the risk at a
$450-million cost or keeping it themselves," Keir said.
"At $90 million, that decision looks good at this
point." Hay said AECL will have to pay penalties if the
target date for completing the refurbishment isn't met.
"About $30 million per month will be our costs, and
that will drop to about $20 million between what we get
from AECL and insurance," he said. Keir said the entire
cost of replacement power while Lepreau is shut down
will be averaged out over the life of the facility -
another 25 to 30 years.
The original cost of that power was estimated at $400
million, if Lepreau was back online by the end of
September.The reactor at Lepreau produces about one
third of New Brunswick's electricity needs AECL is
hoping a successful Lepreau refurbishment will lead to
similar upgrades elsewhere, along with the chance to
build a second reactor in New Brunswick.
An Ontario
company with
plans to build a
$6.2 billion
nuclear power
plant close to
Peace River is
considering an
alternative
location after
hearing concerns
from residents
about its first
choice. Bruce
Power,
headquartered in
Tiverton, Ont.,
withdrew its
application to
the Canadian
Nuclear Safety
Commission this
week. The
company will
wait until it
decides where to
locate before it
seeks the
commission's
permission to
prepare a site
for
construction.
John Peevers, a
spokesman for
Bruce Power,
said the company
is looking at a
second site --
located about 30
kilometres north
of the town of
Peace River --
because concerns
were raised
about the first
site. Residents
have said the
first location
-- situated
approximately 30
kilometres west
of the town --
is too close to
Lac Cardinal and
the Grimshaw
Gravels Aquifer.
"It would be
pretty arrogant
of us as a
company not to
listen to those
concerns. So
we're just
taking a step
back and
considering this
other site,"
Peevers said.
"It just made
sense from a
procedural
standpoint to
withdraw this
application
until we know
which site is
going to be the
preferred site."
But residents
near the new
location, called
the Whitemud
site, were
shocked to learn
late last year
that a nuclear
power plant
could be located
nearby. "It
would be a mile
to our
doorstep," said
Lorraine Jensen,
who farms
alfalfa with her
husband Stan in
the Weberville
area.
"I'm not in
favour of it. We
have two young
children and I
don't think it's
necessarily the
best place to
raise our
children if a
nuclear plant is
our next-door
neighbour." The
site selection
should be
complete by
mid-2009.
Jensen said the
proposal has
divided her
neighbours,
depending on
whether they
agree on the
development or
not. Already,
some have
tentative deals
to sell their
land to Bruce
Power. News that
the application
was being
withdrawn was
lauded by an
anti-nuclear
activist, who
said at the very
least this means
a delay in
developing
nuclear power in
Alberta.
"It means that
what we've been
saying about the
Lac Cardinal
location being
unsuitable has
been validated,"
said Elena
Schacherl,
co-chair of
Citizens
Advocating the
Use of
Sustainable
Energy. "There
is not enough
water in the
lake. It is a
significant
staging area for
water birds and
is located on a
freshwater
aquifer.
Moreover, there
is growing
opposition to
nuclear power."
Peevers said the
company is also
monitoring the
economic
climate.
However, he said
building a
nuclear power
plant is a long
process. For
instance, he
said an
environmental
assessment is a
three-year
process.
Last April, the
Alberta
government
announced an
expert panel to
review several
thorny issues
associated with
nuclear power --
including
safety, toxic
waste and how
the possible new
supply would
mesh with the
province's
electricity
system. That
report is
expected to be
completed
sometime in the
next month or
two.
"This doesn't
change anything
from our
perspective,"
Alberta Energy
spokesman Derek
Cummings said
Thursday.
"We will
continue to
monitor the
proposal."
Published Thursday January 1st, 2009 By Cole Hobson -
Times & TranscriptStaff
There is
currently
no
uranium
exploration
going on
in New
Brunswick
and if
the
public
furor
over the
past
year is
any
indication,
that's
good
news for
many of
the
province's
citizens.
Local residents look at maps showing where claims have been made at Irishtown community centre earlier this year during a public meeting on uranium mining and exploration.
Department
of
Natural
Resources
Minister
Wally
Stiles,
who took
over
from
Donald
Arseneault
as
minister
in
November,
confirmed
recently
that
those
staunchly
against
uranium
exploration
have
something
to cheer
about.
"Right
now
there
are no
uranium
exploration
activities
taking
place in
the
province.
I don't
think it
is due
to the
weather,
I'm sure
there
are all
kinds of
reasons,
but it's
probably
the
restrictions
that we
put in
place.
That has
had an
effect
on some
exploration,
there's
no
question
about
it,"
Stiles
said in
an
interview.
After
months
of
public
outrage,
public
rallies
and
attempts
to stop
the
exploration
of the
potentially
harmful
substance
in the
province,
the
department
announced
regulations
in July
of 2008
which
banned
uranium
exploration
in all
municipalities,
watersheds
and near
private
wells.
As well,
government
announced
a buffer
zone of
300
metres
(1,000
feet)
around
any
residences
or
institutional
building
where
companies
wouldn't
be able
to stake
claims.
"People
in New
Brunswick
did have
some
concerns,
as a
government
we
listened
to those
concerns
and we
acted
responsibly
on those
concerns,"
Stiles
said.
On
the
surface,
the new,
harsher
regulations
seemed
to do
the
trick --
the
public
got its
wish and
many
uranium
companies
hit the
road.
"We
can't do
uranium
now.
(Uranium
exploration)
is going
to be
suspended
until
the
government
changes
its
regulations,"
Edward
Thompson,
chairman
of
Toronto-based
Sparton,
said in
an
August
interview.
Ucore
Uranium
of New
Brunswick
also
ceased
New
Brunswick
uranium
operations
in the
summer
and a
Department
of
Natural
Resources
spokesperson
said the
most
recent
exploration
work was
finished
by
Toronto-based
Vale
Inco in
November.
Left
behind
were 40
uranium
exploration
drillholes,
which
Stiles
says
have all
been
"capped
off and
looked
after
completely."
"All
those
holes
have
been
inspected
and
there's
no
problems
that
have
been
identified
whatsoever,"
Stiles
said.
Despite
the
current
lack of
activity,
the
province's
main
uranium
detractors
argue
there
should
still be
a
complete
moratorium
put in
place.
Stiles
says he
doesn't
believe
any
uranium-related
legislative
changes
are
upcoming
for the
province,
but
confirms
that he
believes
the
current
regulations
are
strict
enough
to
ensure
the
safety
of New
Brunswickers.
"Yes,
I do
think
(the
regulations
are
strict
enough)
and I'll
qualify
that.
I'm a
landowner
myself;
I feel
the
restrictions
we've
put in
place
have
protected
me and I
believe
New
Brunswickers
are
protected
as
well,"
he said.
The
minister
adds
that New
Brunswick
is still
"open
for
business"
for any
companies
who wish
to
explore
--
within
the
regulations.
"It's
the
climate
I guess
of the
global
economy
we have
right
now, it
has an
effect.
If
(companies)
come
back
then we
still
have
those
restrictions
in
place.
We want
to make
sure we
are open
for
business,
there's
no
question
about
that,
but we
have
reacted
very
responsibly
in
dealing
with
citizen
concerns,"
he said.
Whether
it was
letters
or calls
to the
department
of
natural
resources,
petitions,
or
yellow
signs
admonishing
uranium
mines,
the
outrage
over the
issue
manifested
itself
in many
ways in
the
province.
A
coalition
group
against
uranium
mining,
led by
Yvonne
Devine
of the
southeastern
chapter
of the
Conservation
Council
of New
Brunswick,
staged
public
information
sessions
and
protests
in
various
communities
around
the
province.
The
biggest
took
place at
Moncton's
Capitol
Theatre
in June
when
more
than 800
protesters
showed
up to
voice
their
displeasure.
The
government
also
held
information
sessions
throughout
the
province
in the
summer,
in what
was
perhaps
a
hopeless
attempt
to
convince
concerned
citizens
there
were no
great
risks to
the
practice.
Finally,
in July,
the
government
moved
from a
defensive
approach
to an
accommodating
one as
they
unveiled
the new
regulations,
which
put an
end to
most of
the
public
outcry
against
uranium.
"Our
government
heard
the
concerns
of the
people
of New
Brunswick
and we
have
responded,"
said
former
natural
resources
minister
Arseneault
at the
time of
the July
announcement.
"These
changes
are
consistent
with New
Brunswick's
public
policy
approach
of being
proactive
in
protecting
designated
drinking
water
supplies,
and they
address
the
issues
of
access
to
private
landowners'
property."
As
part of
the
changes,
all
mineral-claims
staking
activity
in the
province
were
suspended
until a
new
electronic
map-staking
system
could be
implemented,
which
would
replace
previous
on-site
staking.
The
system
was
brought
online
in
November
and is
expected
to be
fully
operational
by
November
of 2009.
It can
be
accessed
through
the
Department
of
Natural
Resources
website.
What
is in
store
for the
future
of
uranium
in New
Brunswick
remains
unclear.
While
there is
currently
no
uranium
activity
in the
province,
it's
anyone's
guess
what
2009
holds
for the
controversial
radioactive
material.
"We
are open
for
business
and
we're
committed
to
further
exploration,
but it
has to
be
responsible
development,
of any
resources
in the
province
of New
Brunswick,
not just
uranium,"
Stiles
said.
"We have
to be
responsible
as a
government
and we
will
continue
to be
responsible.
It's
part of
our
self-sufficiency
plan and
we have
to have
the best
interests
of all
New
Brunswickers
in
mind."
Energy Department Fined
for Failing to Clean
Groundwater at Livermore
Lab
SAN FRANCISCO,
California,
January 7, 2009 (ENS)
--
Groundwater on and
around the site of
the U.S. Energy
Department's
Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
is contaminated with
volatile organic
compounds and
chromium from
activities at the
nuclear weapons
research site, yet
the DOE has halted
cleanup, putting the
drinking water
supply of local
communities at risk.
The shutdown began
early in 2008 when
Congress cut funding
to the DOE, and
although full
funding was restored
last July, the
cleanup has not
resumed. There are
50,000 people living
within a two-mile
radius of the lab,
and groundwater in
downtown Livermore,
about two miles west
of the site, is used
as a municipal
drinking water
source.
Today, the U.S.
Environmental
Protection Agency
ordered the Energy
Department to
immediately resume
cleanup activities
at the lab or face
escalating financial
penalties. The EPA
says the Energy
Department has
failed to operate
numerous groundwater
and soil vapor
treatment facilities
and associated wells
-- an integral part
of cleanup
activities at the
site.
"The shutdown of the
treatment systems
puts the community
and the environment
at risk," said
Michael Montgomery,
assistant director
for the EPAs
Superfund Division
in the Pacific
Southwest region.
"The taxpayers have
already paid for the
construction of the
treatment systems --
its DOE's
responsibility to
operate them,"
Montgomery said.
The laboratory,
about 45 miles east
of San Francisco, is
operated by a five
member team
including Bechtel
National, University
of California,
Babcock and Wilcox,
the Washington
Division of URS
Corporation, and
Battelle for the
Department of
Energy.
Research and support
activities at the lab
handle, generate, or
manage hazardous
materials that include
radioactive wastes. The
lab is a Superfund site,
listed as one of the
most contaminated sites
in the country.
The EPA says the recent
failure of a large
treatment unit on the
perimeter of the site
has resulted in a loss
of contaminated
groundwater plume
control off-site, where
it may spread beneath
adjacent local
neighborhoods.
Fuel hydrocarbons
including benzene and
ethylene dibromide, the
heavy metal lead, and
radioactive tritium
appear in wells on the
lab site. Soil excavated
from the site was
contaminated with
solvents, radioactive
wastes, heavy metals,
polychlorinated
biphenyls, and fuel
hydrocarbons. Soils
remaining on-site
contain volatile organic
compounds, tritium,
PCBs, fuel hydrocarbons,
and inorganic
substances.
The EPA warned in a
statement today that
people may face a health
threat if they ingest or
come in direct contact
with contaminated water
or soil. The EPA, the
Energy Department and
California state
agencies first signed an
agreement to clean up
the lab in 1988.
In 2007, the EPA
certified that the
Energy Department had
built the necessary
groundwater and soil
vapor treatment systems
needed to clean up the
site. The intention was
for DOE to operate the
systems until the
cleanup standards
selected by both federal
agencies were met - a
time period estimated in
decades.
In early 2008, the
Energy Department
informed the EPA that
Congress had reduced
funding for the cleanup
and that DOE would need
to start shutting down
the treatment systems.
The EPA advised the
Energy Department to
seek reprogramming of
funds from Congress. By
the time this was
accomplished, 28
treatment systems had
been shut down and 60
percent of the technical
support staff had been
laid off.
Despite receiving full
funding in July 2008,
the Energy Department
has still not restored
operation of most of the
systems. While
pump-and-treat systems
have been shut down,
site contamination has
spread both laterally
and vertically,
resulting in a larger
volume of contaminated
groundwater and
increasing timeframes
for completing the
overall cleanup.
The EPA is seeking
$105,000 in penalties
for the period from July
to September 2008 for
the Energy Department's
failure to resume
cleanup and also is
continuing to assess
penalties of $10,000 per
week from October 1
until the DOE resumes
the cleanup.
Silence on
geothermal
deafening
(for use in
oilsands)
By Tyler
Hamilton May
2007 - The Star
-
Three months
ago, the
Toronto Star
ran a
lengthy story
about an
oil-industry
consortium that
is quietly
exploring the
use of
geothermal heat
as an
alternative to
using natural
gas in the oil
sands.
Today, natural
gas is burned to
produce the hot
steam that's
needed to
extract bitumen
from the tar
sands. Alberta's
world-famous
sands are
already the
fastest-growing
source of
greenhouse gases
in the country,
and on the
current growth
path, emissions
are expected to
jump more than
four-fold over
the next 10
years.
Replacing much
of this natural
gas with clean,
emission-free
heat under the
Earth's crust, a
completely
feasible option
according to a
recent research
report out of
the
Massachusetts
Institute of
Technology,
would go an
enormous way
toward achieving
a halt, and
eventually a
decline, in
Canada's carbon
emissions.
The problem is,
nobody is making
noise about it.
Not Ottawa. Not
the provinces.
Not even
environmental
groups.
When the Harper
government
released its
much-anticipated
"green plan" in
late April,
there was no
mention of
geothermal in
the oil sands.
Gary Lunn,
federal minister
of Natural
Resources
Canada, has
never publicly
touted the
option.
The situation is
perplexing, to
say the least.
On the other
hand, Lunn has
been quite vocal
in pushing
nuclear power
and its
potential as a
source of energy
in the oil
sands. The
federal
government has
also been a big
supporter, both
financially and
politically, of
carbon capture
and
sequestration
technologies.
The idea here is
that the oil
sands operators
can continue
along their
current path as
long as they
capture their
carbon dioxide
emissions and
pump it
underground into
permanent
storage.
But it would be,
at best, eight
years before a
nuclear plant is
built in
Alberta.
Similarly,
carbon capture
and storage
(CCS) technology
is years away
and would
require billions
of dollars in
research and
development
before
meaningful
commercial
deployment.
How, in good
conscience, can
our political
leaders be
talking about
nuclear or CCS
without giving
equal
consideration to
a less complex,
and possibly
more affordable,
"clean" option
like geothermal?
Not only is
geothermal a
baseload
resource
meaning it can
provide power or
heat at a
predictable
level 24 hours a
day but it
doesn't leave
behind toxic
nuclear waste or
carry the risk
of meltdown. It
also doesn't
come with the
uncertainty
associated with
carbon storage
and the
long-term
monitoring
that's required
to make sure
CO{-2} doesn't
leak out over
time, or escape
in a single
suffocating
burst.
A geothermal
plant is also
dead simple to
operate, needing
relatively few
staff compared
to a complicated
beast like a
nuclear
generating
station."The
fact they
haven't looked
at geothermal
and are looking
at nuclear, it's
very frustrating
to me," says
Craig Dunn,
president of
Calgary-based
WellDunn
Consulting,
which works on
geological and
environmental
projects
throughout
Alberta's oil
patch. "The
geothermal side
of it, for the
most part, has
been missed."
Geothermal
plants work by
pumping water
into deep wells
and exposing it
to hot rock
below. The water
absorbs the heat
and is pumped
back to the
surface. Heat is
then extracted
from the water
to produce steam
that can be used
on its own or,
if hot enough,
to generate
electricity.
To tap extreme
temperatures in
the bedrock
somewhere
between 150C to
200C would
require drilling
five to eight
kilometres deep.
But many of the
processes in the
oil sands only
require
temperatures
around 80C,
meaning the job
could be done at
much shallower
depths.
"We drill three-
to
four-kilometre
wells in the
foothills by the
thousands," says
Dunn. "It's not
like we can't do
this. The
technology is
there, it's
available. It's
not a cheap
option, but when
you're looking
at it in terms
of cost, time to
build and energy
compared to a
nuclear plant,
it looks
attractive."
One Alberta
politician is
beginning to ask
questions. Dan
Backs, an MLA
for the riding
of
Edmonton-Manning,
tabled four
articles last
Thursday in the
Alberta
legislature to
draw more
attention to the
geothermal
option. One of
those articles
was the
Star
piece published
in February.
He told me in an
interview that
nuclear power
doesn't sit well
with his riding,
which has a
large Ukrainian
community. For
many, memories
of Chernobyl are
still vivid and
the idea of
putting reactors
in the oil sands
raises a stiff
eyebrow. "A lot
of people get
pretty antsy
about that," he
says.
Backs says
geothermal
should be a
"slam dunk" and
that he plans to
nurture the idea
in political and
local industry
circles. "I'll
be making the
rounds," he
says. "I'll
continue to push
this issue."
Talk of putting
nukes in the oil
sands may,
however, be
overblown. Only
a couple of oil
sand developers,
Husky Energy
Inc. and
France's Total
SA, are
exploring the
option. Most of
the noise is
coming from
Calgary-based
Alberta Energy
Corp., which in
partnership with
Atomic Energy of
Canada Ltd.
wants to build a
$5.5 billion
nuclear plant in
the oil sands by
2016.
In March, a
natural
resources
parliamentary
committee
advised in a
report that any
decision to put
a nuclear plant
in the oil sands
should be put on
hold until the
impact can be
assessed and
other options
are studied.
Meanwhile, major
players in the
sands Shell
Canada, Suncor
Energy and Nexen,
to name a few
are doing just
that. As members
of the GeoPower
In The Oil Sands
consortium, they
are doing their
homework,
consulting with
geologists and
engineers,
analyzing the
business case in
a quiet effort
to understand
geothermal's
potential.
One project
underway in Fort
MacMurray, in
partnership with
the Centre for
Environmental
Research in
Minerals, Metals
and Materials at
the University
of British
Columbia, seeks
to tap 80C
temperatures two
to five
kilometres under
the surface of
the oil sands
deposits.
"Although the
capital costs to
drill wells to
that depth are
high, the
long-term impact
on energy use
can be
substantial on a
permanent
basis,"
according to a
description of
the project.
In other words,
like a nuclear
plant, a
geothermal setup
would cost a lot
upfront but
would pay off
over 20 or 30
years because of
lower operating
costs. The only
difference is
that geothermal
doesn't require
a fuel like
uranium, which
is skyrocketing
in price.
Mory Ghomshei, a
UBC professor
leading the
project, says
another
advantage of
geothermal is
that a number of
smaller,
medium-temperature
plants can be
scattered around
the oil sands
where
low-quality heat
is directly
needed at well
depths of just 3
kilometres. The
heat from a big
central nuclear
plant, on the
other hand, can
only be
transported 10
kilometres by
pipeline before
losing its
energy.
"Geothermal can
also be
developed much
faster than
nuclear," says
Ghomshei. "A
comprehensive
study, of
course, is
needed to
evaluate and
validate the
application."
Another
geothermal
project in
Alberta, which
could add
momentum to the
cause, seeks to
tap 100C-plus
temperatures in
old oil wells
that have been
abandoned no
digging
required.
This is all good
news. So why
does nuclear
keep capturing
the headlines?
Perhaps it's
because the
geothermal
industry doesn't
have a public
relations
machine behind
it that's
subsidized by
the federal
government. And,
not
surprisingly,
the oil
companies are
historically and
understandably
reluctant to
show their
cards.
This leaves it
to the public to
make some noise,
and with 2,000
scientists on
the
Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate
Change calling
for the
stabilization of
greenhouse gases
in the
atmosphere by
2015, now is the
time to bang the
drum.
"Political
acceptance comes
out of public
awareness," says
Ghomshei.
Consider
yourself aware.
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