Saturday, July 26, 2008

Repeat After Me: France Does Not Exist

clipped from online.wsj.com

In Pittsylvania County, just north of the North Carolina border,
the largest undeveloped uranium deposit in the United States -- and the seventh
largest in the world, according to industry monitor UX Consulting -- sits on
land owned by neighbors Henry Bowen and Walter Coles. Large uranium deposits
close to the surface are virtually unknown in the U.S. east of the Mississippi
River. And that may be the problem.

Virginia is one of just four states that ban uranium mining. The
ban was put in place in 1984, to calm fears that had been sparked by the partial
meltdown of a nuclear reactor on Three Mile Island outside of Harrisburg, Pa. in
1979.

Yet it is not as if we have no experience with uranium mining, which is in fact relatively harmless. Handled properly, the yellowcake that is extracted is no more hazardous than regular household chemicals (and unlike coal, it won't smolder and combust).

what sense does it make for the state to ban the safest step in the nuclear fuel
cycle?
And they don't generate 80% of their electricity from nukes. Move along now...