No emissions claim mars SaskPower webinar on nuclear power

No emissions claim mars SaskPower webinar on nuclear power

Postby Oscar » Tue Nov 21, 2023 4:44 pm

No emissions claim mars SaskPower webinar on nuclear power

[ https://thestarphoenix.com/opinion/lett ... lear-power ]

A reader comments that a presentation by SaskPower on small modular nuclear reactors failed to include information about nuclear emissions. Author of the article: Reader Letters Published Nov 18, 2023

An artist's rendering of a GE-Hitachi BWRX-300 small modular nuclear reactor. SaskPower is studying the BWRX-300 for possible deployment in Saskatchewan, with a decision on whether to proceed with building one expected in 2029. PHOTO BY MATT SMITH /Saskatoon StarPhoenix

SaskPower held a webinar on its proposal for a Hitachi Boiling Water Reactor (BWRX300), a small modular nuclear reactor in Southern Saskatchewan. Its otherwise informative webinar was marred by a statement that the BWRX300 would have no emissions.

No emissions! People may not know everything about nuclear power plants, but most of us know that tritium or “hydrogen” is created and released in planned or unplanned episodes. It could build up and cause an explosion.

Tritium is more dangerous than the nuclear industry admits. Tritium is radioactive hydrogen. When combined with oxygen, it forms radioactive water. Tritium has been described as a “weak beta emitter.” Its beta particle can be stopped by paper or skin.

Our bodies incorporate hydrogen into every cell and cellular structure in our bodies. Our bodies are unable to distinguish between a normal hydrogen atom and tritium. This means that every tritium atom that we ingest into our bodies could spontaneously decay into helium, a gas.

As the tritium decays, it emits energy that can oxidize cellular contents including RNA and DNA, genetic material. Many believe that tritium is the culprit for the increase in children developing leukemia close to nuclear power plants.

With a half-life of 12 years, the tritium that is released today will not be “gone” for 120 years.

But let’s not forget the small amounts of other radioactive elements emitted: krypton-85, carbon-14, strontium-90, iodine-131, and caesium-137, to name a few. Nuclear power plants also emit all the types of pollutants any other steam- or gas-powered electrical plant emits.

Dale Dewar, Wynyard
Oscar
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