Thursday, September 30, 2010

Uranium-mill plan near Naturita raises concerns about toxic waste

By Bruce Finley
The Denver Post
Posted: 09/16/2010 01:00:00 AM MDT

State regulators have raised concerns about toxic waste, radiation and water supply at what would be the nation's first conventional uranium mill opened since the Cold War.

Heavy-metals waste from Energy Fuels Resources Corp.'s proposed uranium-processing in southwest Colorado would include arsenic, lead, molybdenum and cadmium. A failure to fully address handling of this potentially harmful material "is considered to be a major deficiency in the application," Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment regulators said in a recent request for information.

Beaches around waste impoundment ponds would be exposed to birds. "What are the risks to wildlife from exposed tailings beaches?" the request asks.

State regulators asserted that people at fences around Energy Fuels' 880-acre site could be exposed to radiation approaching a 25-millirem limit. "A projected dose that approaches a regulatory limit cannot be considered trivial," a CDPHE document said.

The Colorado Water Conservation Board is opposing Energy Fuels' filings to use water from the Dolores River. Energy Fuels has begun drilling wells to supply enough water to process 500 tons of uranium a day. But company officials say they may need additional water.

The mill near Naturita would supply uranium for an anticipated nuclear-energy renaissance and vanadium for batteries and hardening steel.

The proposed Piñon Ridge mill would crush uranium ore into a powder, then leach concentrated uranium from the ore using sulfuric acid. Most of the material would stay at the site in lined impoundment ponds.

CDPHE officials are required to decide by Jan. 17 whether to issue a permit. "If they need more information to make their decision, we'll give it to them," said Dick White, Energy Fuels' vice president for exploration.

Controlling radiation levels at the fence "may require additional cover" on the ponds," White said.

State natural resources and company officials have launched a mediation process to address concerns about potential harm to Dolores River aquatic life, Filas said.

While the proposed mill has heightened local hopes of a return to Atomic Age prosperity, some residents oppose it.

Farmer Tony Daranyi, who grows vegetables about 45 miles east of the site, said he's "concerned about the impacts to air quality from drifting heavy metals due to operations at the proposed mill."

Uranium mill operations "may contaminate our soils and water, dirty the clean air, and poison high-altitude lakes and watersheds," Daranyi said.

"Once our rich, nutritious soils are harmed, they're gone forever."

Read more: Uranium-mill plan near Naturita raises concerns about toxic waste - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_16087508#ixzz10sxdhiTn

RFP on Socio Economic Study is OUT: Uranium Mining in VA!



COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA HOUSE OF DELEGATES OFFICE OF THE CLERK
RICHMOND

September 30, 2010

PRESS RELEASE

TO: Interested Parties

FROM: The Honorable R. Lee Ware, Chairman

RE: Request for Proposal

Delegate R. Lee Ware, Jr., chairman of the Uranium Mining Subcommittee of the Virginia Coal and Energy Commission, announced today that the Subcommittee is sending out a Request for Proposals (RFP) seeking consultancy services to conduct a socioeconomic study on the impacts of uranium mining.

The Coal and Energy Commission's study of uranium mining and its impacts in the Commonwealth began in the early 1980s after a significant deposit, now estimated at 110 million pounds, was identified outside the town of Chatham in Pittsylvania County. After being asked by the General Assembly to review the issue, the Commission oversaw a series of studies to determine whether to lift the moratorium on uranium mining that had been instituted until such studies were complete. No further action was taken at that time.

In 2008, the Commission created the Uranium Mining Subcommittee to oversee, through the Virginia Center for Coal and Energy Research, a technical study of uranium mining by the National Academy of Sciences and undertake any other study that might assist the full Commission in its determination and recommendation of the appropriate policy on uranium mining and milling in the Commonwealth.

The Subcommittee determined to create parallel studies of the technical and socioeconomic impacts of uranium mining and milling. The technical study, which is being conducted by the National Research Council, will examine the scientific, technical, environmental, human health and safety, and regulatory aspects of uranium mining and milling across the Commonwealth. The results of the technical study are expected December 1, 2011. The RFP is the initiation of the socioeconomic study, which is intended to provide a complementary analysis to the technical study.

The study is being funded through a grant by the Virginia Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission and is not expected to exceed $200,000. Proposals are due on November 15, 2010. Inquiries on the RFP should be directed to Dr. Michael E. Karmis, Director of the Virginia Center for Coal and Energy Research, at (540) 231-7057 or mkarmis@vt.edu.

To view the RFP or for more information on the Commission and the work of the Subcommittee, go to: http://dls.state.va.us/CEC.HTM.

Members:

The Honorable R. Lee Ware, Jr, chairman

The Honorable Charles W. Carrico, Sr.

The Honorable William R. Janis

The Honorable Watkins M. Abbitt, Jr.

The Honorable Clarence E. Phillips

The Homorable Onzlee Ware

The Honorable John C. Watkins

The Honorable Phillip P. Puckett

The Honorable Frank W. Wagner

Harry D. Childress

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Job one: Uranium


By Tom McLaughlin
SoVaNow.com / September 23, 2010

Let’s be honest: The one thing that puts oomph into the campaign to mine uranium in Southside Virginia — aside, that is, from the special-interest pleading, the back-room dealing, and such — is the sad fact that the local economy is a mess, has been for some time, and now along comes a business enterprise that promises to put hundreds of people to work.

It’s certainly understandable why folks would be tempted by the proposition that Virginia Uranium Inc. is selling at the Coles Hill mine site near Chatham. In normal times, with a reasonably vibrant economy, I doubt many people would be interested in risking Southside’s birthright of open land, clean air and abundant water for the 30 pieces of silver that VUI is offering to the region.

But with jobs scarce, and budgets tight, and everyone wondering what comes next, no wonder you hear peeps of doubt — more than peeps, really — from residents old and new who wonder if fighting the mine lobby is such a swell idea.

The sentiment is hardly unique to Southside. Just last week, The New Yorker magazine published a fascinating account of the southwestern Colorado town of Uravan — strike that, the former Colorado town of Uravan — and the uranium-rich region of Paradox that surrounds it. Uravan was a hub of uranium mining activity in the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s; today the town no longer exists. Due to reckless mining practices, the land upon which Uravan stood has become so toxic “that everything in town — houses, streets, even the trees — had to be shredded and buried,” writes Peter Hessler in his piece, titled, ominously, “The Uranium Widows” (Sept. 13 edition).

So far, so good, if you fear mining here in Southside and are seeking affirmation for the point of view. But wait: The New Yorker article looks at the push to restart uranium mining in Paradox and finds residents there eager to embrace the industry. A company named Energy Fuels in 2007 “arrived with plans to build America’s first new uranium mill in almost thirty years, and the response in the Paradox region has been overwhelmingly positive,” writes Hessler.

The reference to uranium widows is no play on words — untold numbers of miners died or today are suffering from small-cell lung cancer as a result of breathing toxic air from the Uravan mine site half a century ago, and their widows, most still living in the region, don’t bother to deny it. “It was an accepted risk,” says one, “because they were earning a good living for their families.”

 You’ll find much more to ponder in the article, the full version of which unfortunately isn’t posted at The New Yorker website (http://www.newyorker.com/) although the magazine should be available at local libraries.

One recurring theme of the piece is likely familiar to anyone who knows anything about the social makeup of Chatham: The tension that exists near Paradox between working- and middle-class residents who favor the mining project and the environmentally-minded opposition that’s perceived to be, well, snobby, elite and unconcerned by the hard economic hand that’s been dealt to the rest of the region.

Gary Fountain, rector of Chatham Hall, has encountered similar criticism for his outspoken opposition to VUI’s Pittsylvania project; easy for him, say the critics, when Fountain heads up a school that charges $39,000 annual tuition. In The New Yorker article, the actress Darryl Hannah plays the stock role as the (perceived) disinterested voice of the opposition: as owner of a home between Paradox and the Colorado ski community of Telluride, Hannah pops up long enough to describe local support for uranium mining as “mind-boggling.” A Telluride-based environmental group is suing to stop the mine, but “I recognize how patriarchal that can seem,” says Hilary White, director of the Sheep Mountain Alliance, in the article. “When you’re desperate, when you can’t afford to put food on your table, you’ll welcome people who don’t have your best interests at heart.”

The Colorado debate is relevant but hardly revelatory; what raises eyebrows about the piece is the tacit endorsement it offers for uranium mining.

People interested in the Coles Hill project, pro and con, should read the New Yorker for a likely primer on the results of the National Academy of Sciences study of uranium mining that soon will be underway in the area.

Perhaps. But at the same time, if you read closely enough, you may perceive a less flattering observation, a threat actually, snaking its way through his piece: the sense of defeatism that makes Paradox residents so eager to welcome back the industry that literally ruined much of the area. For all his objectivity on matters of science and sociology, the writer makes it clear, albeit subtly, that he wants no part of anything Paradox is selling (or wants to sell). Interviewing George Glasier, founder and CEO of Energy Fuels, Hessler writes:

Now that the industry seemed ready to shift from obsessive cleanup to real production, Glasier hoped to get back in business. He still kept a chunk of ore and yellowcake in his home. “That’s fairly high-grade,” he said, handing me the rock. I didn’t open the jar.

Virginia Uranium wants to open the jar of large-scale mining in Southside Virginia, and it’s difficult to imagine anyone not already living in the region coming here to sample the contents.

There’s a rather ridiculous, somewhat sad moment near the end of the piece in which a local Chamber of Commerce-type testifies at a public hearing that “uranium and tourism can co-exist.” (Hessler writes that such a statement “could only come from a region called Paradox.”) The possibility of tourism is this physically stunning area of Colorado died many years ago, hand-in-hand with the life spans of the men working the mines, while Telluride, an hour away, thrives untouched. Today Paradox’s best hope for prosperity, however fleeting, is to accept and embrace its fate as an environmental ghetto.

Will Southside make the same mistake?

The better question may be, is the decision ours to make?

 I took away two things from The New Yorker article: one, business interests with the strong desire to mine uranium will be able to marshal evidence that it can be done safely; and two, the future of mining communities rest just as much with subjective opinion, which can be hard as a rock, as objective reality, which often gives way to changing assessments of what’s dangerous and what’s not. In the end, the woeful fate of Colorado’s Paradox region, with its plowed-under past and hardscrabble present — what might otherwise be called its socio-economic profile — speaks volumes about the wisdom of relying on a dirty, perception-challenged industry for a livelihood.

The debate over uranium mining in Southside isn’t just about jobs and income for the next 20 years, it’s about the potential of changing the region forever.

Read more:
http://www.thenewsrecord.com/index.php?%2Fopinion%2Farticle%2Fjob_one%2F

Friday, September 24, 2010

Radon and Drinking Water from Private Wells

What is radon?

Radon is a colorless, tasteless, odorless, radioactive gas. It occurs naturally and is produced by the breakdown of uranium in soil, rock, and water. It can also dissolve into our water supply.

Where and how does radon get into drinking water?

While most radon-related deaths are due to radon gas accumulated in houses from seepage through cracks in the foundation, 30 to 1,800 deaths per year are attributed to radon from household water. High levels of dissolved radon are found in the groundwater in some areas flowing through granite or granitic sand and gravel formations. If you live in an area with high radon in groundwater it can get into your private well. Showering, washing dishes, and laundering can disturb the water and release radon gas into the air you breathe.

How can I find out whether there is radon in my drinking water?

If you suspect a problem and your drinking water comes from a private well, you may contact your state certification officer for a list of laboratories in your area that will perform tests on drinking water for a fee.

How do I remove radon from my drinking water?

Radon can be removed from water by using one of two methods:

•Aeration treatment - spraying water or mixing it with air and then venting the air from the water before use, or
•GAC treatment - filtering water through granular activated carbon. Radon attaches to the carbon and leaves the water free of radon. Disposing of the carbon may require special handling if it is used at a high radon level or if it has been used for a long time.

In either treatment, it is important to treat the water where it enters your home (point-of-entry device) so that all the water will be treated. Point-of-use devices such as those installed on a tap or under the sink will only treat a small portion of your water and are not effective in reducing radon in your water. It is important to maintain home water treatment units properly because failure to do so can lead to other water contamination problems. Some homeowners use a service contract from the installer to provide carbon replacement and general system maintenance.

 Remember to have your well water tested regularly, at least once a year, after installing a treatment system to make sure the problem is controlled.

Read more:
http://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/drinking/private/wells/disease/radon.html

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Sauer Energy Unveils Prototype Vertical-Axis Wind Turbine



by Timothy B. Hurst on September 17, 2010

The image most people have in their minds when they think of wind turbines are the big, white horizontal-axis wind turbines with their massive blades spinning slowly on a wind-swept plain. But the clean energy revolution--if, in fact, it is a revolution--has room for more than just one design of wind turbine.


But vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs) are poised to change the image most people have of wind turbines, mostly because they have started to pop up in places where people never thought wind turbines possible, like on suburban rooftops.

And a new VAWT design from Sauer Energy (SEI) will likely turn even more heads, as its dimpled design could make it more efficient at capturing and converting wind into usable electricity.

Officials from Sauer believes its unique aerodynamics and advanced design features will distinguish its wind turbine system in the residential and micro wind-turbine market.

"We are confident in our plan for commercialization so that we can fulfill our goal of offering a cost effective, green energy solution that lowers the cost of energy bills and replaces the use of hydrocarbons," said Dieter Sauer, President and CEO of SEI,

Sauer also says the turbine was designed to make it extremely easy to assemble with few tools required, making it "practically plug and play" -- a feature that should definitely help the turbine break into the residential wind turbine market.


Read more:
http://earthandindustry.com/2010/09/sauer-energy-unveils-prototype-vertical-axis-wind-turbine/

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Uranium-mill plan near Naturita raises concerns about toxic waste



By Bruce Finley
The Denver Post
Posted: 09/16/2010 01:00:00 AM MDT

State regulators have raised concerns about toxic waste, radiation and water supply at what would be the nation's first conventional uranium mill opened since the Cold War.

Heavy-metals waste from Energy Fuels Resources Corp.'s proposed uranium-processing in southwest Colorado would include arsenic, lead, molybdenum and cadmium. A failure to fully address handling of this potentially harmful material "is considered to be a major deficiency in the application," Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment regulators said in a recent request for information.

Beaches around waste impoundment ponds would be exposed to birds. "What are the risks to wildlife from exposed tailings beaches?" the request asks.

State regulators asserted that people at fences around Energy Fuels' 880-acre site could be exposed to radiation approaching a 25-millirem limit. "A projected dose that approaches a regulatory limit cannot be considered trivial," a CDPHE document said.

The Colorado Water Conservation Board is opposing Energy Fuels' filings to use water from the Dolores River. Energy Fuels has begun drilling wells to supply enough water to process 500 tons of uranium a day.

But company officials say they may need additional water.

The proposed Piñon Ridge mill would crush uranium ore into a powder, then leach concentrated uranium from the ore using sulfuric acid. Most of the material would stay at the site in lined impoundment ponds.

CDPHE officials are required to decide by Jan. 17 whether to issue a permit. "If they need more information to make their decision, we'll give it to them," said Dick White, Energy Fuels' vice president for exploration.

State natural resources and company officials have launched a mediation process to address concerns about potential harm to Dolores River aquatic life, Filas said.

While the proposed mill has heightened local hopes of a return to Atomic Age prosperity, some residents oppose it.

Farmer Tony Daranyi, who grows vegetables about 45 miles east of the site, said he's "concerned about the impacts to air quality from drifting heavy metals due to operations at the proposed mill."

Uranium mill operations "may contaminate our soils and water, dirty the clean air, and poison high-altitude lakes and watersheds," Daranyi said.

"Once our rich, nutritious soils are harmed, they're gone forever."

Read more: Uranium-mill plan near Naturita raises concerns about toxic waste - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_16087508#ixzz10Dp0FrP7

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Nader shares locals concerns about uranium



By Tara Bozick
Published: September 18, 2010

Consumer advocate Ralph Nader, a four-time presidential candidate, was always a hero for Deborah Dix of Danville.

Dix and three other local women made the trip to the University of Virginia on Monday to hear Nader’s take on energy policy in his talk titled “Megawatts, Negawatts and You.” Event sponsors included the People’s Alliance for Clean Energy and Donal Day, a U.Va. research professor of experimental nuclear and particle physics.

Nader pushed for more energy efficiency and conservation and clean energy, which he said didn’t include more nuclear reactors or uranium mining.

“We don’t believe the country needs nuclear power,” Nader said in a Thursday interview. “It’s too costly. The opportunities for energy efficiency and electric generation to the consumer are far greater.”

Nader said money should be invested in solar, wind and other forms of renewable energy rather than nuclear power, which he called a “gigantic technological lemon.”

Nuclear plant projects can’t go forward without federal loan guarantees, he said, because Wall Street won’t invest in them without that backing.

Additionally, nuclear plants have the problem of radioactive waste, he said. The enrichment of uranium to concentrate it for use in fuel rods for nuclear reactors also takes coal-fired power, Nader said.

“Why do we need uranium mines?” Nader said. “They are extremely dirty.”

Nader said not all types of energy are alike and it’s a “fallacy” that all need to be included in the energy portfolio. Some carry risks or are not cost effective while others like wind and solar reduce greenhouse gases.

“Where are you going to put your dollar?” Nader asked.

Dix also got up to speak in front of the crowd to let Charlottesville know that the possibility of uranium mining isn’t relegated to Pittsylvania County.

“It will not stop in Pittsylvania County if the (statewide) moratorium is lifted,” Dix said.

Dix let event attendees know that the study is for Virginia and not site-specific to Pittsylvania County.

“This is a statewide issue,” said Deborah Lovelace of Gretna, who accompanied Dix.

Lovelace’s position is that uranium mining can’t be done safely in Virginia, but advises everyone to research the issues.

Donal Day remembers speaking against uranium mining, including in Danville and Southside, before the moratorium began in 1982. He didn’t want to risk Virginia’s assets of agriculture, scenery and tourism.

“For me, it’s like a bad dream. I thought we had settled this once and for all,” Day said.

Read more:

http://www2.godanriver.com/news/2010/sep/18/nader-shares-locals-concerns-about-uranium-ar-512004/#comments

Monday, September 20, 2010

Studies: Can uranium be safely mined in Virginia?



The above waters flows to VA Beach!

DAILY PRESS, NEWPORT NEWS, VA.
CORY NEALON
Sun, Sep 19, 7:58 AM

Sept. 19--The effort to determine if uranium can be safely mined in Virginia is underway and the stakes are high.

Yet if not properly managed, uranium mining might contaminate Lake Gaston, the principle water supply for about 400,000 Virginia Beach residents.

The topic was one of several -- including Chesapeake Bay restoration and offshore wind development -- covered Saturday at Environmental Assembly 2010. Held at the Virginia Beach Convention Center, the event is an annual fundraiser for Virginia Conservation Network, an umbrella organization of 125 environmental and community groups.

Thomas Leahy, the Virginia Beach director of public utilities, led the uranium mining discussion.

"There's going to be some increase in radioactive levels," he told 45 or so people at the convention center. "The only question is if it's going to be significant or not."

Virginia lawmakers banned uranium mining in 1983, the fallout from the nuclear accident four years earlier at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania. Public distaste for nuclear energy has since waned, especially as the U.S. imports energy from unstable countries.

That, coupled with a spike in uranium prices, has refueled the debate whether to reverse the 27-year-old ban.

Most of Virginia's uranium is located on the Chatham farm of one man, Walter Coles Sr., who created Virginia Uranium, Inc.

The studies, expected to cost Virginia Uranium $1.4 million, are being arranged by Virginia Tech. The National Research Council, an independent scientists' organization, agreed to finish the studies by December 2011.

Virginia Beach officials, like Leahy, say the studies fail to consider the impact mining could have upon Lake Gaston. As a result, the city ordered its own study -- at a cost of $440,000 -- that should be finished by December.

Depending on the results, the city might order a more detailed report that will cost a few million dollars and take two to three years to complete, he said. The cities of Norfolk and Chesapeake might participate should it go that far, he said.

"We want to see a worst case analysis, a BP event," he said, alluding to the recent Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Read more:
http://dailyme.com/story/2010091900002163/studies-uranium-safely-mined-virginia.html

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Enviro leaders gather in Va. Beach: Topics include bay restoration, offshore wind, uranium



By Cory Nealon
2:04 PM EDT, September 16, 2010

A broad spectrum of environmental advocates will gather in Virginia Beach Friday and Saturday to discuss everything from uranium mining to oyster restoration.

The event, dubbed Environmental Assembly 2010, centers on issues affecting Hampton Roads, according to its organizer, the Virginia Conservation Network. The network is a coalition of 125 environmental and community groups, such the James River Association and the Nature Conservancy.

Anthony Moore, appointed in July as Virginia's assistant secretary for Chesapeake Bay Restoration, will speak about state programs to restore the bay. Gov. Bob McDonnell and his surrogates recently criticized the federal government's effort to intensify the process.

Virginia Beach officials will give an update on a proposed uranium mine in Pittsylvania County.
But it also could foul the city's water supply at Lake Gaston.

Other topics include offshore wind development and the impact of global warming on Virginia's wetlands.

The event starts at 4 p.m. Friday at the Virginia Beach Convention Center.  For more details, visit http://www.vcnva.org/
 or call the network at (804) 644-0283.

Read more:
http://www.dailypress.com/news/newport-news/dp-nws-environment-virginia-20100916,0,3765622,print.story

Friday, September 17, 2010

VDOF needs your acorns and seeds


Acorns

By RappNews
September 16

Virginians can help preserve native tree species by collecting acorns and seeds from nine species and delivering them to the nearest office of the Virginia Department of Forestry (VDOF).


Chestnuts
“Generally, the best time to collect acorns is the last week in September through the first week of October,” said VDOF nursery forester Josh McLaughlin.



White Oak

 “Every bag of acorns and seed collected by citizens will help us keep Virginia beautiful.”


Chestnut Leaves

The species most needed are: Black Oak*; Chestnut Oak*; Chinese Chestnut*; Northern Red Oak*;
Pin Oak*;


Swamp White Oak


Northern Red Oak

Sawtooth Oak*; Swamp Chestnut Oak; Swamp White Oak*; Willow Oak* and White Oak*.


Black Oak

Sawtooth Oak

“Lawns or paved areas are ideal collection sites,” McLaughlin said. “A single tree located in these areas makes identifying the acorns easier.”


Swamp Chestnut Oak

McLaughlin reminds anyone who is interested in collecting acorns or seed to: not use plastic bags to hold the acorns or seed;


Willow Oak

identify the tree species on the non-plastic bag, and do not combine acorn or seed from different species in the same bag.


Pin Oak

To learn more about acorn collection, visit dof.virginia.gov:  http://www.dof.virginia.gov/google/search?q=seeds+and+acorns&btnG=Search+dof.virginia.gov&proxystylesheet=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.dof.virginia.gov%2Fsearch%2Fvdof.sxsl&client=vipnet&site=vipnet&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&sort=date%3AD%3AL%3Ad1&entqr=0
.
http://www.rappnews.com/2010/09/16/vdof-needs-your-acorns-and-seeds/6920/


Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Uranium study group to meet in Danville in December (NAS meeting)

By TIM DAVIS/Star-Tribune Editor
Wednesday, September 15, 2010 9:41 AM EDT

The National Research Council's provisional committee conducting a scientific study of uranium mining in Virginia will hold its first meeting Oct. 26 and 27 in Washington, D.C.

The group also will meet Nov. 15 and 16 in Washington before meeting in Danville Dec. 13-15.

The Washington meetings will be held at the Keck Center at 500 5th Street, NW. A location for the Danville meeting has not been announced.

The National Research Council named a 13-member provisional committee for the study in July.

Proposed members include Dr. Joaquin Ruiz, University of Arizona; Dr. Corby G. Anderson, Colorado School of Mines; Dr. Lawrence W. Barnthouse, LWB Environmental Services Inc.; Dr. Scott C. Brooks, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Dr. Patricia A. Buffler, University of California, Berkeley; Dr. Michel Cuney, National Center for Scientific Research; and Dr. Peter L. deFur, Environmental Stewardship Concept.

Other members are Dr. Mary R. English, University of Tennessee, Knoxville; Dr. R. William Field, University of Iowa College of Public Health; Dr. Jill Lipoti, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection; Dr. Paul A. Locke, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; Henry Schnell, Areva Inc.; and Dr. Jeffrey J. Wong, California Environmental Protection Agency.

Jennifer Walsh, a spokesman for the National Research Council in Washington, D.C., said the committee won't be finalized until a thorough balance and conflict of interest discussion is held at its first meeting, and any issues raised in that discussion or by the public are investigated and addressed.

Committee members, who all volunteer their time, are required to complete background information and conflict of interest disclosure forms, and are screened for conflict of interest throughout the life of the study, she said.

The committee's conflict of interest discussion will be closed to the public and press, but its information gathering session will be open, Walsh said.

The Danville meeting also will include time for community input, the spokesman said.

The National Research Council signed a contract for the long-awaited study with Virginia Tech in February.

The university will serve as a conduit for funding from Virginia Uranium Inc., which has agreed to pay for the $1.4 million study.

The study will take about 18 months. A final report is due Dec. 1, 2011.

The report will go to the Virginia Commission on Energy and Coal's Uranium Mining Subcommittee.

Residents who would like to attend portions of the committee meetings that are open to the public or need more information may contact Courtney Gibbs at cgibbs@nas.edu or (202) 334-2744.

Read more:
http://www.wpcva.com/articles/2010/09/15/chatham/news/news50.txt

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Consumer Advocate Ralph Nader Visits UVA


Nader argued that now is the time to make a major push towards alternative energies like wind and solar power.

Posted: Sep 13, 2010 9:32 PM EDT
Updated: Sep 14, 2010 9:50 AM EDT
Reported by Keith McGilvery

Former presidential candidate Ralph Nader brought his push for clean, green energy to the University of Virginia Monday night. He spoke about trouble with big business and the power of third parties.

Nader said, "Practical, renewable and efficient energy has reached critical mass." He also said it is "time for victory," to the hundreds of UVA students that attended the presentation.

In between signing books and speaking to a packed crowd, Nader argued that now is the time to make a major push towards alternative energies like wind and solar power. "That's what we've got to do to move to displace fossil fuels and nuclear," said Nader.  They're better for the environment, better for small business, they're better for our descendents."

Nader believes that future could become a reality with young people leading the charge. "That's what these gathering are all about. To build a grass roots force, for safe, clean efficient energy," said Nader.

The People's Alliance for Clean Energy sponsored Monday's lecture. The group works to promote environmentally friendly energy solutions across central Virginia.

Read more:
http://www.nbc29.com/Global/story.asp?S=13147550
Please look at the Featured Videos:

Monday, September 13, 2010

Go Green! 50 Actions You Can Take Today


What can you and your family do to be kind to the environment TODAY? Here are simple, earth-friendly actions.

  • Buy eco! Super cool and environmentally friendly shoes, purses, skateboard earrings, platters, picture frames, batteries, cars, and more are readily available these days
  • Recycle electronics, including computers, printers, cd players, and toys
  • Build a garden using native plants
  • Incorporate Integrated Pest Management practices into your garden
  • Buy groceries in bulk
  • Take a reusable bag to the grocery store
  • Ride a bicycle to work or to take care of errands around town
  • Watch environmentally themed movies such as Sacred Planet
  • Carry a reusable mug, everywhere
  • Use recycled-content copy paper
  • Purchase remanufactured toner cartridges
  • Research ways you can help the environment
  • Practice Environmentality with your family
  • Buy recycled office products
  • Unplug electronics when they are not in use
  • Use a dry erase board instead of paper
  • Reuse the backside of discarded paper for scratch pads
  • Recycle as much as possible
  • Purchase clothes made from recycled materials, such as plastic bottles
  • Buy products that contain natural or organic ingredients
  • Use energy conserving light bulbs
  • Buy in bulk
  • Use a reusable lunch tote
  • Limit your use of polystyrene (Styrofoam)
  • Rideshare
  • Celebrate Earth Day
  • Build a backyard habitat
  • Learn more about the Disney Wildlife Conservation Fund
  • Recycle Tyvek envelopes
  • Recycle your soda can tabs
  • Recycle batteries
  • Check your tire pressure
  • Reward people who practice Environmentality
  • Donate or recycle cell phones
  • Visit Environmentality.com
  • Read Disney's Enviroport
  • Recycle six-pack rings
  • Recycle old greeting cards
  • Host your own recycled art contest
  • Use recycled construction materials, such as plastic lumber
  • Reduce your junk mail
  • Compost
  • Recycle old eye glasses
  • Participate in an environmental volunteers event
  • Purchase or rent an alternative fuel vehicle
  • Use a low-flow shower head
  • Use a dry erase board instead of paper to share notes with your family
  • Check out an environmental blog online
  • Buy water in bulk so you don't have to use individual water bottles

 Read more:
  

Friday, September 10, 2010

Remembering 9/11 - Keep it Sacred!




9-11

by Lois

My whole world is falling down
Nine one one, nine one one.
In smoke and debris our loved ones drown
Nine one one, we say.

Husbands, brothers, sons, and dads
Nine one one, nine one one,
Wives and sisters, daughters, moms,
All come to help that day.

Senseless deaths from hate and war,
Nine one one, nine one one,
In our homeland or yonder shore,
When will it go away?

Our children need us to be there,
Nine one, one, nine one, one,
To give them tender love and care
that drives their fears away.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Get a home energy audit


David Saum / Infiltec via NREL

The first step to improving home energy efficiency is as simple as logging onto the Internet or picking up the phone to set up a home energy audit.

An energy auditor helps you identify ways to make your home more energy-efficient.
People interested in an audit with a live person can call up one of the nearly 2,000 professional home energy auditors recommended the U.S. Green Building Council, a trade group.

A directory is available on the council's Green Home Guide. "They can help you pinpoint exactly what you need to be doing and in many instances give you a laundry list of measures from the least expensive to more expensive," says Nate Kredich, a vice president with the council.

Read more:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38871452/ns/technology_and_science-innovation/


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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Conservation Weekend




September 8, 2010 E-Newsletter


Dear Deborah,

It is not too late to register to attend next weekend’s Virginia Environmental Assembly: register now: http://vcn.citizen-networks.org/site/Calendar/1339920617?view=Detail&id=100442

Please join the Virginia Conservation Network for a “Conservation Weekend” September 17-18th at the Virginia Beach Convention Center. Experience the region's natural beauty first-hand, and learn more about the people and nonprofits helping to preserve it. Mingle with other conservationists at a Friday night reception, and get your sea legs on a special Saturday cruise aboard the Virginia Aquarium's new research vessel.

Friday evening silent auction highlights include a Colonial Williamsburg Destination Package, One Year of Free Organic Milk from Organic Valley, Standup Paddleboard Lesson for Two, Fly-Fishing Package, Virginia Is For Lovers Gift Sets, Tickets to Seal Splash at the Virginia Aquarium, Private Guided Tour at the National Zoo and more.

Confirmed workshops include "A New Era for Chesapeake Bay," which will explore what a new cleanup plan means for Virginia rivers; "Rising Seas: Myth or Menace", which will examine the effect of climate change on Hampton Roads; and "Winds of Change," which looks at the region's potential for offshore wind energy and green jobs. Thomas Leahy, Virginia Beach Director of Public Utilities, will discuss the potential risk that uranium mining poses to the city's main water source, Lake Gaston, and explain the major study underway to asses that risk.

We hope you take advantage of the networking opportunities in our exhibitor area. This year’s exhibitors include Appalachian Voices, Back Bay Restoration Foundation, Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Chesapeake Climate Action Network, Choose Clean Water Coalition, Virginia Coastal Zone Management Program, Coastal Canoeists, Dan River Basin Association, Energized Fauquier, Hampton Roads Green Jobs Alliance, Hampton Roads Solar Group, Partnership for Smarter Growth, Public Policy Virginia, Sierra Club, Solar Services, Teaming With Wildlife Coalition, Virginia League of Conservation Voters and Wetlands Watch.

Friday, September 3, 2010

15 Ways to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint


By Millie Jefferson, producer
Weekend America

But there are simple, constructive ways to reduce your carbon shoe size without the big price tag. Lisa Wise, executive director of the Center for a New American Dream, says everyday choices and actions can make a huge difference:

•1.
Buy organic and local.
When possible, buy organic or "fair trade." There's a better chance the food was grown in an eco-friendly way, and if it's locally grown, it didn't have to travel that far. This also goes for those double lattes — coffee often has a large carbon footprint because of the distance those beans had to travel to get here, and how they were produced. Also, try eating at restaurants that serve locally produced or seasonal foods.
•2.
Pay attention to packaging.
When out shopping, try to go to stores or co-ops that keep packaging to a minimum. For example, you may chose to buy the loose tomatoes rather than boxed or plastic-wrapped tomatoes. Also, take reusable bags to the grocery store. When it comes to resources, plastic is better than paper — but a reusable cloth tote-style bag is better still.
•3.
Ditch bottled water.
Bottled water has a huge carbon footprint — it's bottled at one location in small plastic bottles and shipped all over. Try buying a reusable water bottle or canteen for your water.
•4.
Energy-proof your home.
Make sure all of your windows close properly and that the attic in your home is properly insulated. This can save you big bucks on your energy bill. Also, keep your heating and cooling systems properly maintained, and switch to reusable filters when possible. Try switching from incandescent to compact florescent light bulbs. Compact florescent light bulbs use about 75 percent less energy than our normal light bulbs and last much longer. Compared to regular bulbs, the fluorescents are more expensive, but they will eventually pay for themselves due to lower energy costs.
•5.
Go native.
Use native plant species to landscape around your home or business. The plants will probably grow better in a familiar environment, and the plants may also get shipped a shorter distance to get to your local nursery. Also, use organic soil when planting — it's made using more eco-friendly methods, and uses less resources. And remember, green plants are a good way to offset carbon. So plant something, anything — it helps.
•6.
Window shop.
If you have the urge to spend, try window shopping or browsing first. This helps ensure you are only buying things you really need, or really want, and you're not just impulse buying. Remember, every item in a store, no matter how small, has a footprint — so if we are conscious consumers, we can reduce our own footprint and the overall footprint of our nation.
•7.
Take a direct flight.
If you need to travel by airplane, try taking a direct flight when at all possible. Your impact is reduced when you take one flight, as opposed to hopping on a couple or more passenger jets to reach your final destination. You might also feel a little less harried when you arrive, because changing planes can be a real hassle.
•8.
Switch water heaters to vacation mode.
Most water heaters have a "vacation" setting for when you are away from home for an extended period of time. Switching to that "away" mode still keeps the water warm, but will not use the energy it takes to keep a tank full of piping-hot water. Enjoy your vacation even more, knowing that you're saving money and reducing your footprint.
•9.
Unplug it!
Unplug appliances that you don't use frequently. Most electronics have a standby mode that siphons energy even when not in use. Cell phone chargers, laptops, televisions, stereos — there's a whole list of items that should be unplugged when not in use. Try using a power strip for groups of electronic items. One flick of the switch and it's all off.
•10.
Keep your car.
With gas prices seemingly always on the rise, it's tempting to buy a hybrid or electric vehicle. But if your older-model car is in good condition, you're better off keeping it in good running condition. Even hybrids create a big footprint when they're built, so consider driving that old clunker for a little while longer. Also, try more eco-friendly modes of transport when possible, like buses, trains, a bicycle, telecommuting or even walking.
#11
Use cold water.
No, not in the shower... but maybe in the washer. Try using cold water to launder things that don't need to be cleaned in hot or warm water. It takes a lot of energy to heat up water — multiply that by the number of loads, and that's a big footprint. Most major detergent makers sell detergents designed to have the same cleaning power as with regular soap. Try washing mixed loads in cold water, too.
•15.
The Three Rs: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.
It seems like something from a kid's sing-a-long, but sometimes we lose sight of just how much we buy. Try buying less, and reusing and fixing things when you can instead of buying new. And for a lot of people, recycling is as easy as rolling the trash bin to the curb. Just remember to do it at work, too.

Read more:
http://sustainability.publicradio.org/consumed/tips.html

Thursday, September 2, 2010

9 Of The Most Polluted Places In The World

Metal mining and smelting company, Doe Run Peru* has contaminated La Oroya, Peru. Over 35,000 of La Oroya residents have been affected by lead, zinc, copper and sulfur dioxide pollution from the company's metal mining and processing. According to Time, 99 percent of the mining town's children have blood levels that surpass suitable limits of exposure. Since 1922, the town in Peru's Andes Mountains has been polluted by mining missions.

Huffington Post
Barbara Fenig First
09- 1-10 06:09 PM

From the highways of Los Angeles to the Citarum River of Bandung, Indonesia, earth's most polluted city of Linfen, China to the streets of London, the world is laden with man-made pollution.

Chemical, air, water and oil pollution ruin the environment, cause premature deaths, spoil the world's resources and worsen climate change.

Check out our slideshow of nine places that top lists for pollution both nationally and sometimes throughout the whole world.

See the pictures and read more, click on the link below:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/08/31/photos-most-polluted-plac_n_693008.html#s130953

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Couple build zero-energy home in Chesterfield County


By Holly Prestidge | TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
Published: August 28, 2010

The running joke around Randy Thomas and Diane Lewis' old Hanover County neighborhood was that the couple must have been from Vermont or Minnesota -- anywhere cold.

That rationale would help explain why they installed solar panels, south-facing windows to catch the sunlight and warmth, and extra thick walls with added insulation in their home when it was built in the early 1990s.

If just a few environmentally friendly elements were enough to make people talk, just think what their new neighbors will say.

Thomas and Lewis, along with Mark Waring, vice president of Richmond-based Bain-Waring Builders, are building a home in Chesterfield County that's so energy-efficient it's among the first to be certified as such in Virginia.

Thomas and Lewis are building a zero-energy home, one that produces as much energy as its uses, therefore canceling out monthly heating and cooling bills. Through the use of solar panels, geothermal heating and cooling systems, a tightly sealed shell, energy-saving appliances -- not to mention turning off lights when they leave a room -- they're looking forward to living in a home that's not only cheaper for them, but better for the environment.

The timing, Thomas said, was just right for them to build.

"The technology has finally gotten to the point where you can reasonably do this kind of a home without a whole lot of extra work," he said this month as he walked through what will soon be his new home. The house is approximately 2,900 square feet. From their front yard they can see the horses of nearby Keswick Farms.

"The materials are there, the technology is out there [and] the prices are coming down," Thomas said, citing federal rebates and state grant money for solar panels and geothermal systems that cut their costs for those items by one-third.

On top of that, "if I don't have to pay utility bills for the rest of my life, that really lightens the load," he said.

Thomas and Lewis knew what they wanted, though finding information on zero-energy homes wasn't easy. For that reason he started a blog so others could learn from their experiences.

"When I did Internet searches to try to get some guidance, there's just nothing there," he said. "I had to go through hundreds of entries before I'd find little nuggets that were actually helpful."

They also needed a builder. Lewis and Waring knew each other from an eco-brokerage conference a few years earlier.

"We started talking about the kind of house we were looking to build, [and] I could see his eyes start to light up," Thomas said. "The light bulb went on there. It really was a nice partnership."

Every decision -- from the type of paint to sorting through options for energy-efficient windows and appliances -- was done within the larger scope of how it would affect the home's efficiency, Thomas said.

Their new home is tightly sealed and well-insulated. It sits on a conditioned crawl space, meaning that the underbelly of the home is insulated exactly as the house itself, right down to the ground. There's no insulation in the floor joists, and the air is blown into the crawl space so that it's always the same temperature and humidity as inside the house.

Most homes built nowadays refresh air every one to two hours, but this home will do it every seven hours, Waring said. And while most homes leak air from ducts all over the house, at a national average of about 28 percent, this home's ductwork is so tight that a fraction of that -- about 2.5 percent -- leaks out, he said.

Combine that with a geothermal heat pump, which uses the ground as its heating and cooling source, energy-efficient windows, ceiling fans and appliances, LED and compact fluorescent lighting, and solar panels on the garage roof, and you've got a home that doesn't rely on carbon-based energy sources.

"Energy is going to be finite, whether it's going to be in 20 years or 50," Thomas said.

Before they move in, the house will undergo a series of tests to show how "green" it is and to check the energy efficiency of the home's design.

Lewis said there's a misconception that energy-efficient homes are much more expensive than standard homes. Waring said constructing a tight shell and duct system at this home has added about $3 to $5 per square foot. He said as homeowners add elements such as geothermal systems and solar panels, the costs can go up, though rebates and grants help with those expenses.

Thomas and Lewis are scheduled to move into their house next week.

"We're getting of the age where you think about being creative . . . [and want] to pay something forward," Thomas said. "This is an opportunity to try and do that."

Read more:
http://www2.timesdispatch.com/lifestyles/flair/2010/aug/28/h-zero28-ar-476561/