ISSN (Print) - 0012-9976 | ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846

Articles by V T PadmanabhanSubscribe to V T Padmanabhan

Koodankulam's Untameable Atomic Reactor

A 1,000 MWe pressurised water reactor failed four times in the final commissioning test. Numerous emergency shutdowns and four maintenance outages have kept the reactor off-grid for days on end, and it has supplied far less electricity than it was supposed to. Yet, plans to import a dozen more reactors of the same vintage from the same vendor are in progress.

Koodankulam's Reserve Water Requirements

There is not enough reserve water inside the Koodankulam nuclear power plants complex for cooling the reactor cores and the spent fuel pools.

Microbial Genomic Programme

The US department of energy is about to release genetically engineered microbes into the nuclear waste storages across the country. Well known and safer decontamination options are being shelved, as they are expensive and the microbes are cheap. This experiment might turn out to be a disaster of an unprecedented scale.

Radioactive Minerals and Private Sector Mining

The proposals of three state governments to lease the mining rights for monazite-ilmenite to private parties need a thorough debate on all aspects with regard to the release of radioactive elements, storage and safety of wastes, and impact on the environment and food chain, before the plans are pushed through.

All within Limits-Radioactive Waste Disposal at IRE

Radioactive Waste Disposal at IRE V T Padmanabhan The Indian Rare Earths (IRE) Plant at Alwaye in Kerala processes thorium bearing mineral sands releasing highly radioactive waste. Environmental contamination can occur either because of the improper disposal of these wastes or because of accidental release of such material. This article which appears in two parts reports on the status of radioactive waste disposal at IRE and points out that the plant may be disregarding standard international scientific practice and so posing a grave threat to the environment and the population.

All within Limits-Radioactive Waste Disposal at IRE

Radioactive Waste Disposal at IR E V T Padmanabhan The Indian Rare Earths (IRE) Plant at Alwaye in Kerala processes thorium bearing mineral sands releasing highly radioactive waste. Environmental contamination can occur either because of the improper disposal of these wastes or because of accidental release of such material. This article which appears in two parts reports on the status of radioactive waste disposal at IRE and points out that the plant may be disregarding standard interna tional scientific practice and so posing a grave threat to the environment IN the forties the nuclear power technology had not arrived as yet, but its science was known. It was also known that besides uranium, thorium could also be used for fuelling such a reactor. India and Brazil, two major exporters of thorium bearing ore

The Number Game-Occupational Health Hazards at Indian Rare Earths Plant

Occupational Health Hazards at Indian Rare Earths Plant V T Padmanabhan The Department of Atomic Energy is currently pushing forward its ambitious plan involving a ten-fold expansion of nuclear power generation by the year 2000. This would involve the setting up of a number of nuclear establishments and would expose a number of people, workers and neighbouring communities to varying degrees of excess radiation. The Indian Rare Earths is the only DAE venture which has completed 30 years of operation, which incidentally is the average latency for cancer which is just one of the health hazards of exposure to radiation.

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