May 1, 2008

Tips For A Dirty Dublin Bomb

May 1, 2008: The US Government "mistakenly" dumped depleted Uranium into an incinerator.

Osama Bin Liner (c) has similar advanced plans lodged in a special purpose offshore entity based in Luxembourg and Surinam. The ConadVantage.


Currently, Bundesrepublik Deutschland, its alleged by others, sends illegal radioactive medical waste to The Balkans (result of a political quid pro quo on statehood). At the Bord Pleanala Hearing the Chief DONG Engineer said they could stop illegal radioactive medical waste activity by asking the drivers for their ID cards! (See hearing transcripts). Homer was impressed.


How To Do A Dirty Bomb Over Dublin.

When you want to send metallic nano-particles over Dublin just dump
Depleted Uranium into the 20th century Dublin Bay Incinerator (depleted Uranium is low in actual radioactivity; the issue is metallic nano-particles causing Gulf War Syndrome).

To see this through Gary Gilmore's eyes, or DCCs, just use the best available technology as per the following article, dated May 1, 2008, from Utah.
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Incinerator doesn't want a repeat incident

But skeptics say the plant's changes likely won't boost safety
Do you turn it away? Do you pull off to the side and dump it on the ground, potentially increasing individual exposure by digging through it trying to find the waste that set the alarm off?
- Wasatch Integrated Waste Management District director Nathan Rich, wondering what would happen if instruments did detect depleted uranium in shipments of waste at the Layton incinerator.

The director of the Layton incinerator where Air Force personnel mistakenly burned several pounds of depleted uranium over an eight-month period said his agency is “taking reasonable and appropriate steps to ensure this doesn't happen again.”

But Wasatch Integrated Waste Management District director Nathan Rich lamented it is unlikely that any of those steps could have prevented what occurred over the last year.

Rich said his plant was exploring two modes of additional control on the waste that comes into the incinerator for disposal. He said it was likely the plant would institute a policy requiring all users to sign a document making them responsible for the content of the waste they wanted destroyed. He also said he is exploring the possibility of placing a radiation detector at the plant.

Plant managers say that Hill Air Force Base officers promised ahead of time that there was nothing dangerous in the waste they delivered in eight shipments to the incinerator. As such, Rich said, it is unlikely that requiring further documentation would have prevented the recent burn incidents.
“My understanding is that the base would have filled out the paperwork and said, 'There's nothing hazardous here,' ” he said. “But it might help us with some liability issues.”
And that, Rich said, might prompt incinerator users to think harder about what they are burning.
Rich also wasn't sure that a radiation-detection system would actually identify a small amount of depleted uranium, like that fed into the Layton incinerator. “And even if the radiation detector does go off, then what do you do?” he asked. “Do you turn it away? Do you pull off to the side and dump it on the ground, potentially increasing individual exposure by digging through it trying to find the waste that set the alarm off?”

Brian Moench, co-founder and president of Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment, said he isn't comforted by the steps being taken to prevent further problems of this sort - not only on the part of the incinerator, but also on the part of the military, regulators and government officials.

He said that in addition to an investigation into what went wrong, Utahns need to demand a fundamental shift in the way they think about radioactive waste. “I think the basic misconception that seems to permeate everybody involved in this process is that low levels of nuclear radiation are acceptable,” Moench said. “And they are not acceptable.”
mlaplante@sltrib.com

http://www.sltrib.com/davis/ci_9121177


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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

VX nerve agent shuts Incinerator

Washington State, USA.

Thursday, May. 15, 2008
Incinerator shut down after strainer blocked
By the Herald staff
http://www.tri-cityherald.com/901/story/184991.html

HERMISTON -- Incineration at the Umatilla Chemical Depot will be stopped for a couple of days as officials investigate why smoke filled part of a furnace area.

The incident happened at 7 a.m. Wednesday in the furnace area of the liquid incinerator, where VX nerve agent was being burned for disposal, said depot spokesman Bruce Henrickson.

No one was injured and there was no danger to the environment or the community, Henrickson said.

Fire alarms went off and automatic dampers closed to stop any chemical agent or smoke from escaping outside the facility.

Henrickson said an apparent blockage of a strainer in the piping system caused the smoke to escape, but Army officials are investigating to determine the exact cause.


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