Tuesday, September 30, 2014

PETITION: We call for 2 more seats on the NRC, to be occupied by citizen activists


Why this is important to me

Citizen activists will provide oversight of the otherwise pro nuclear industry NRC, which has become nothing more that a re-branded Atomic Energy Commission.
Since it's the public's money and their health and safety that the nuclear power industry uses and requires to continue operating, then it's the citizens and communities across the country who are most effected directly by the high health costs and safety hazards of nuclear power plants; thereby, it is that public and the citizenry who should be represented and have a voice on the commission.

SIGN NOW > Sen. Boxer, Sanders, Markey, President Obama: We call for 2 more seats on the NRC, to be occupied by citizen activists

Monday, September 29, 2014

Nuclear weapons can’t maintain security | Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

In Round One, Sinan Ulgen maintained that nuclear weapons deterred the United States and Soviet Union from engaging in direct conflict during the Cold War. He argued that nuclear weapons can deter future wars as well. Though Wael Al Assad has already taken issue with elements of this argument, I have my own reasons—related, but distinct—for disputing Ulgen's notion that nuclear weapons are irreplaceable in security maintenance.

Nuclear weapons can’t maintain security | Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists


Still no confidence in NRC radwaste policy | GreenWorld




Today, in the first step of a process that almost certainly will end up back in federal court, clean energy advocates filed new contentions in licensing and license renewal cases involving 23 reactors at 14 sites (groups involved in one license renewal case, at Indian Point, intend to file a similar petition later) and a new petition to the NRC Commissioners to reinstate its licensing moratorium.





Wednesday, September 24, 2014

FOTOS: Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free at the People's Climate March September 21, 2014




This photo gallery documents the Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent at the historic People's Climate March in New York City September 21, 2014. Included are a couple photos from the Nuclear-free strategy meeting on September 20, 2014, preparations for the Contingent in the early morning hours of September 21, speakers at the rally and the march itself. Thank you to everyone who participated and supported this Contingent and made this event possible. Largest Climate March Ever. Largest Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Action Ever. We, and our message, are unstoppable. And, together, we WILL build the safe, clean, affordable nuclear-free, carbon-free energy system our planet both needs and deserves. Photos are by Paule Saviano, Lionel Delavigne, Lee Roscoe, Sheila Parks and Michael Mariotte

Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free at the People's Climate March September 21, 2014



AT NIRS.org –


THANK YOU to the many thousands of people who marched with the Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent to the People's Climate March September 21 in NYC. We made history. Largest climate march ever. Largest nuclear-free, carbon-free action ever.

Flyer: Talking Points on nuclear power in EPA's proposed carbon reduction rule. pdf version.jpg version.
Briefing Paper: Nuclear Energy is Dirty Energy (and does not fit in a clean energy standard).pdf

Breaking News
September 11, 2014.

Killing the Competition. The Nuclear Power Agenda to block climate action, stop renewable energy, and subsidize old reactors.

Major new report by NIRS' Executive Director Tim Judson details how major utilities and nuclear power companies have begun a campaign to rig energy markets, climate regulations, and clean energy programs to prevent the advance of renewable energy. Using a deceptive public relations campaign and heavily-funded front groups like Nuclear Matters, Third Way, and C2ES, corporations including Exelon and Entergy have tried to drum up fears of a national energy crisis stemming from the closure of several aging, uncompetitive nuclear plants and the advance of renewable energy. While touting the need to “preserve” nuclear power, nuclear interests have covered up the actual reforms they are seeking and their implications for the U.S.’s energy future.

Audio recording (mp3 file) of press conference release of the report featuring Tim Judson, Dr. Mark Cooper, Vermont Law School, Institute for Energy and the Environment; Tyson Slocum, energy program director, Public Citizen; Deb Katz, executive director, Citizens Awareness Network (New England); David Kraft, executive director, Nuclear Energy Information Service (Illinois); Jessica Azulay, program director, Alliance for a Green Economy (New York).



Nuclear Information and Resource Service - NIRS
http://www.nirs.org/
https://www.facebook.com/nonukesnirs






whats up: #BustTheMyth
you can't nuke global warming!




We made history; now the real work starts | GreenWorld




No matter how you look at it, 400,000 is a lot of people.
It’s not the largest crowd I’ve ever been in: that was the nearly two million at President Obama’s first inauguration. Nor the largest demonstration: that was the million at the 1982 nuclear freeze march in New York City. And the 1970 Atlanta Pop Festival I went to was somewhere around 800,000 (but, of course, who remembers that one? Probably not even many who were there…).

But it’s still a lot of people.
And to put it in a more appropriate perspective, it’s as many or more people than participated in some other seminal events that changed history and the trajectory of American politics and lives: the 1963 civil rights March on Washington, the 1969 Woodstock festival, the November 1969 anti-Vietnam war mobilization, the 1979 No Nukes protest in Washington after Three Mile Island.

Perhaps the world’s governments will simply ignore the legions in the streets–and in the streets of cities and towns all across the world–and continue to do little or nothing to take the steps necessary to quite literally save our planet.
Two days later is far too early to pronounce, or even take a legitimate guess at, the ultimate impact of Sunday’s People’s Climate March.
That would be a tragedy of astronomical proportions...

more > We made history; now the real work starts | GreenWorld




whats up: #BustTheMyth
you can't nuke global warming!




Monday, September 22, 2014

WHY NUKES CAN'T SAVE THE PLANET FROM CLIMATE CHANGE

-- even though the People's Climate March is over, i wanted to re-post all of this very important information -- many thanks to Nuclear Information and Resource Service - NIRS!


Reason #1. Too Many Reactors, Not Enough Carbon Reductions
 pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).
REASON #1: TOO MANY REACTORS, NOT ENOUGH CARBON REDUCTIONS

Major studies (from MIT, Commission on Energy Policy, and International Atomic Energy Agency, for example) agree that about 1,500-2,000 large new atomic reactors would have to be built worldwide for nuclear power to make any meaningful dent in greenhouse emissions (fewer than 400 reactors now operate globally). If all of these reactors were used to replace coal plants, carbon emissions would drop by only about 20% worldwide. If used as new capacity instead of sustainable technologies like wind power, solar power, energy efficiency, carbon emissions actually would increase.



Reason #2. Nuclear power costs too much.
 
pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version(take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

REASON #2: NUCLEAR POWER COSTS TOO MUCH
Construction of the 1,500 new reactors (200-300 in U.S. alone) needed for nuclear power to have a significant impact on carbon reductions would cost trillions of dollars. New reactors cost some $7 billion to $15 billion each. Use of resources of this magnitude would make it impossible to also implement more effective means of addressing global warming. Energy efficiency improvements, for example, are some seven times more effective at reducing greenhouse gases, per dollar spent, than nuclear power.



Reason #3. Nuclear Power Would Take Too Long.
 
pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).
REASON #3: NUCLEAR POWER WOULD TAKE TOO MUCH TIME

Construction of  the 1,500 new reactors needed to make a meaningful dent in carbon emissions would mean opening a new reactor about once every two weeks, beginning today, for the next 60 years—an impossible schedule and much too late to achieve necessary carbon reductions. The world’s nuclear reactor manufacturers currently are capable of building less than half that amount.  Addressing the climate crisis cannot wait for nuclear power.



Reason #4. New Reactor Designs: Too Slow, No Demand.
 
pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

REASON # 4: NEW REACTOR DESIGNS: TOO SLOW, NO DEMAND
Some otherwise knowledgeable climate scientists advocate using new, supposedly safer, reactor designs as a climate solution. These untested designs, such as the IFR (Integral Fast Reactor), PBMR (Pebble Bed Modular Reactor), thorium reactors and others, including “small modular reactors,” won’t help either. The designs—all of which have been discussed for decades—exist only on paper and it would take decades more to bring them to commercial operation. To achieve even that would require utilities to want to build them, but none do. Their costs would be even higher than current reactor designs—one reason utilities aren’t interested. Safety-wise, the designs are unproven and would require extensive and time-consuming testing before the federal NRC could license them. Waiting for such reactors to materialize would forestall much faster and cheaper climate solutions.


Reason #5. Too Much Radioactive Waste.
 pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version(take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

REASON # 5: TOO MUCH RADIOACTIVE WASTE
Operation of the 1,500+ new reactors needed for nuclear power to make a dent in carbon emissions would create the need for a new Yucca Mountain-sized radioactive waste dump every 3-4 years. Yucca Mt. was studied for 20 years before being dropped by President Obama as a nonviable waste solution. International efforts to site radioactive waste facilities are similarly behind schedule and face substantial public opposition. For this reason, the nuclear industry wants to reprocess nuclear fuel as a waste management tool—a dirty, dangerous and failed technology that increases nuclear proliferation risks.


Reason #6. Too Little Safety.
 pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

REASON # 6: TOO LITTLE SAFETY
Odds of a major nuclear disaster are said to be on the order of 1 in 10,000 reactor-years, but experience shows accidents occur even more frequently. Operation of some 1,500 reactors needed for nuclear power to play a meaningful role in reducing carbon emissions could result in a Fukushima-scale nuclear accident every five years—a price the world is not likely to be willing to pay. And more reactors means more potential terrorist targets.


Reason #7. Too Many Nuclear Weapons.
 pdf version (best for downloading and printing).
 jpg version (best for posting online).
 Word version(take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).


REASON # 7: TOO MANY NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Operation of the 1,500 or more new reactors necessary for nuclear power to play a meaningful role in reducing carbon emissions would require a dozen or more new uranium enrichment plants, and would result in the production of thousands of tons of plutonium (each reactor produces about 500 pounds of plutonium per year), posing untenable nuclear proliferation threats.



Reason #8. Nukes are not carbon-free. 
pdf version (best for downloading and printing). 
jpg version (best for posting online). 
Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).


REASON # 8: NUKES ARE NOT CARBON-FREE
While nuclear reactors themselves are not major emitters of greenhouse gases, the nuclear fuel chain produces significant greenhouse emissions. This chain includes uranium mining, milling, processing, enrichment, fuel fabrication, and long-term radioactive waste storage. At each of these steps, construction and operation of nuclear facilities results in carbon emissions. Taken together, the fuel chain greenhouse emissions are more than double solar power emissions, which are declining as the industry becomes more efficient, and some six times higher than wind power—not to mention emissions-free energy efficiency technologies.


Reason #9 Nukes are not suited for warming climates.
pdf version (best for downloading and printing). 
jpg version (best for posting online). 
Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

REASON # 9: NUKES ARE NOT SUITED FOR WARMING CLIMATES
Unlike solar power, nuclear power does not work well in warming climates. Reactors require vast quantities of water to keep the core cool; changes in water levels, and even water temperatures, can greatly affect reactor operations. Reactors in the U.S. and elsewhere have been forced to close during heat waves, when they’re needed the most. Ever-stronger storms, like Hurricane Sandy, also threaten to inundate both coastal and inland reactors. More frequent tornados, ice storms and related loss-of-power accidents, and other indicators of climate change also imperil reactors. The Fukushima accident was caused primarily by loss-of-power, not direct damage from the tsunami or earthquake. Rising sea levels threaten coastal reactors with flooding even without mega-storms.


Reason #10 A Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free energy system is safer, cleaner, cheaper and faster at reducing carbon emissions.
 pdf version (best for downloading and printing). 
jpg version(best for posting online). 
Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).


REASON # 10: A NUCLEAR-FREE, CARBON-FREE ENERGY SYSTEM IS SAFER, CLEANER, CHEAPER AND FASTER AT REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS
If we could meet our electricity needs without radioactive waste, nuclear meltdowns, releases of carbon and methane and all the other environmental destruction associated with extraction of nuclear and fossil fuels from the Earth, why wouldn’t we? Just a few years ago, solar and wind power weren’t competitive with nuclear power or fossil fuels. Now, both are usually cheaper than the polluting power choices. It is increasingly affordable for homeowners to install solar power plants on their rooftops—a new solar rooftop system is installed in the U.S. every 4 minutes, a number that will drop to every 90 seconds by 2016.

Smart grids, distributed generation and other 21st century technologies enable the large-scale use of renewables despite their variable nature. And advances in battery and other storage technologies mean that both rooftop solar and larger-scale renewable power plants can provide power 24/7—just like the behemoth nuclear and coal “baseload” power plants of the 20th century.

Numerous studies show conclusively that a nuclear-free, carbon-free energy system is attainable before mid-century. The technology is not the issue; only political will now stands in the way. Our choice is stark: we can choose nuclear power, or we can address global warming. We can’t do both. Fortunately, the choice is an easy one.



Nuclear Power and Climate: Why Nukes Can't Save the Planet.
NIRS' basic 1 sheet factsheet: Perfect for downloading, printing, and distributing (pdf format).

http://www.nirs.org/factsheets/nukesclimatefact614.pdf
- includes all the above info, plus this:



Most people don’t realize just how fast clean renewable energy is growing nor how low its costs are plummeting. Just a few years ago, solar and wind power weren’t competitive with either nuclear power or fossil fuels. Now, both are usually cheaper than the polluting power choices.

Increasingly, it is both feasible and economical for homeowners to install their own solar power plants on their rooftops — a new solar rooftop system is installed in the U.S. every four minutes, a number that will reach every 90 seconds during 2016. Smart grids, distributed generation and other 21st century technologies enable the large-scale use of renewables despite their intermittent nature. On one day in May 2014, 74% of Germany’s power was provided by renewables, a level skeptics said could never be reached.

And advances in battery and other electricity storage technologies mean that both rooftop solar and larger-scale renewable power plants increasingly and affordably provide power 24/7—just like the behemoth nuclear and coal “baseload” power plants of the 20th century.

Investing our resources in clean energy— renewables and energy efficiency --gives us much more bang for the buck: instead of a 20% reduction in carbon emissions with nuclear power, we can get a 100% reduction — and that’s a goal worth working for. Numerous studies show conclusively that a nuclear-free, carbon-free energy system is both attainable and affordable before mid-century. The technology is not the issue; only political will stands in the way.


Our choice is stark: we can choose nuclear power, or we can address global warming. We can’t do both. Fortunately, the choice is an easy one. --Michael Mariotte, June 2014







whats up: #BustTheMyth
you can't nuke global warming!


Saturday, September 20, 2014

More Nuclear Power is NOT the Answer to the Climate Crisis :: PETITION





PETITION

More Nuclear Power is NOT the Answer to the Climate Crisis
This petition was published by Tom Hayden on Sep 04, 2014

We urge you to revise the recommendations of the UN's Sustainable Development Solutions Network to remove its advocacy of nuclear fission as a "solution" to the climate crisis. The accelerated development of nuclear power plants would only increase the course we are on to planetary catastrophe.

We urge you to develop an analytic model that includes the decommissioning of current nuclear plants as part of a transition to a future based on conservation, efficiency and renewable energy.


image: Gail Payne


VIDEO – Speakers at September 15, 2014 at UN Church Center in conjunction with the NYC People’s Climate March September 21st and the United Nations Climate Summit 2014


▶ Nuclear Power Is Not the Answer to Climate Change - YouTube

Nuclear experts and activists speak about issues associated with nuclear power – such as Fukushima, nuclear waste, uranium mining, human rights, health, economic, and technical issues – and discuss why nuclear energy is not “clean” energy nor a solution to climate change.

Speakers, in order, Tim Judson, Arnie Gundersen, Leona Morgan, Alfred Meyer, Marilyn Elie, and Mari Inoue. September 15, 2014 at UN Church Center in conjunction with the NYC People’s Climate March September 21st and the United Nations Climate Summit 2014 starting September 23rd. Video by Joe Friendly





whats up: #BustTheMyth
you can't nuke global warming!


Friday, September 19, 2014

▶ Nuclear Power Is Not the Answer to Climate Change - VIDEO



▶ Nuclear Power Is Not the Answer to Climate Change - YouTube


Nuclear experts and activists speak about issues associated with nuclear power – such as Fukushima, nuclear waste, uranium mining, human rights, health, economic, and technical issues – and discuss why nuclear energy is not “clean” energy nor a solution to climate change.

Speakers, in order, Tim Judson, Arnie Gundersen, Leona Morgan, Alfred Meyer, Marilyn Elie, and Mari Inoue. September 15, 2014 at UN Church Center in conjunction with the NYC People’s Climate March September 21st and the United Nations Climate Summit 2014 starting September 23rd. Video by Joe Friendly



PETITION

More Nuclear Power is NOT the Answer to the Climate Crisis
This petition was published by Tom Hayden on Sep 04, 2014

We urge you to revise the recommendations of the UN's Sustainable Development Solutions Network to remove its advocacy of nuclear fission as a "solution" to the climate crisis. The accelerated development of nuclear power plants would only increase the course we are on to planetary catastrophe.

We urge you to develop an analytic model that includes the decommissioning of current nuclear plants as part of a transition to a future based on conservation, efficiency and renewable energy.

> SIGN NOW



see also:

whats up: reasons nukes can't save the planet | 9.21 PEOPLES CLIMATE MARCH, NYC: nuclear-free, carbon-free contingent






whats up: #BustTheMyth
you can't nuke global warming!


Thursday, September 18, 2014

Why Nukes Can't Save the Climate. Reason #10: A Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Energy System is Safer, Cleaner, Cheaper and Faster at Reducing Carbon Emissions




REASON #10: A NUCLEAR-FREE, CARBON-FREE ENERGY SYSTEM IS SAFER, CLEANER, CHEAPER AND FASTER AT REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS

If we could meet our electricity needs without radioactive waste, nuclear meltdowns, releases of carbon and methane and all the other environmental destruction associated with extraction of nuclear and fossil fuels from the Earth, why wouldn’t we? Just a few years ago, solar and wind power weren’t competitive with nuclear power or fossil fuels. Now, both are usually cheaper than the polluting power choices. It is increasingly affordable for homeowners to install solar power plants on their rooftops—a new solar rooftop system is installed in the U.S. every 4 minutes, a number that will drop to every 90 seconds by 2016.

Smart grids, distributed generation and other 21st century technologies enable the large-scale use of renewables despite their variable nature. And advances in battery and other storage technologies mean that both rooftop solar and larger-scale renewable power plants can provide power 24/7—just like the behemoth nuclear and coal “baseload” power plants of the 20th century.
Numerous studies show conclusively that a nuclear-free, carbon-free energy system is attainable before mid-century. The technology is not the issue; only political will now stands in the way. Our choice is stark: we can choose nuclear power, or we can address global warming. We can’t do both. Fortunately, the choice is an easy one.

nirsnet@nirs.org
http://www.nirs.org/







Make history: Join us in NYC on September 21, 2014.

People's Climate March Hub: http://peoplesclimate.org/nonuclearpower/

Resources, flyers, info:http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/climatemarchhome.htm

SIGN UP: Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent to People's Climate March
http://org2.salsalabs.com/o/5502/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=71744

Why We Are Marching: Statement of the Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent; pdf version for downloading/printing
http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/ncfccwhywearemarching.htm
http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/climatemarchstatement.pdf

Endorsers of Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent. We now have 120+ organizational endorsers! To endorse, send your name, organization name, city, state, country (if outside U.S.) to nirsnet@nirs.org. Individuals: Endorse the Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent here.
http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/ncfccendorsers.htm
http://org2.salsalabs.com/o/5502/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=18247

Take Action: Tell EPA to take nuclear support out of its carbon rules.
http://org2.salsalabs.com/o/5502/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=18179

Press release announcing Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Contingent, August 4, 2014. pdf.
http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/marchpr8414.pdf

DIY: Mobilize for the People's Climate March, Nuclear Free Carbon-Free Contingent! How-to guide from NIRS! in pdf format
http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/diymobilize.htm
http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/diymobilizing.pdf

--- Flyers: Why Nukes Can't Save the Climate:
[visit http://www.nirs.org/climatemarch/climatemarchhome.htm to find these] -

Reason #1. Too Many Reactors, Not Enough Carbon Emissions pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

Reason #2. Nuclear power costs too much. pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

Reason #3. Nuclear Power would take too long. pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

Reason #4. New Reactor Designs: Too Slow, No Demand. pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

Reason #5. Too Much Radioactive Waste. pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

Reason #6. Too Little Safety. pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info). -- MORE TO COME!

Reason #7. Too Many Nuclear Weapons. Operation of the 1,500 or more new reactors necessary for nuclear power to play a meaningful role in reducing carbon emissions would require a dozen or more new uranium enrichment plants, and would result in the production of thousands of tons of plutonium (each reactor produces about 500 pounds of plutonium per year), posing untenable nuclear proliferation threats.

Reason #8. Nukes are not carbon-free. pdf version (best for downloading and printing). jpg version (best for posting online). Word version (take out NIRS contact info and add your group's info).

Reason # 9: NUKES ARE NOT SUITED FOR WARMING CLIMATES
Unlike solar power, nuclear power does not work well in warming climates. Reactors require vast quantities of water to keep the core cool; changes in water levels, and even water temperatures, can greatly affect reactor operations. Reactors in the U.S. and elsewhere have been forced to close during heat waves, when they’re needed the most. Ever-stronger storms, like Hurricane Sandy, also threaten to inundate both coastal and inland reactors. More frequent tornados, ice storms and related loss-of-power accidents, and other indicators of climate change also imperil reactors. The Fukushima accident was caused primarily by loss-of-power, not direct damage from the tsunami or earthquake. Rising sea levels threaten coastal reactors with flooding even without mega-storms.



Reason #10: A Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free Energy System Is Safer, Cleaner, Cheaper And Faster At Reducing Carbon Emissions
If we could meet our electricity needs without radioactive waste, nuclear meltdowns, releases of carbon and methane and all the other environmental destruction associated with extraction of nuclear and fossil fuels from the Earth, why wouldn’t we? Just a few years ago, solar and wind power weren’t competitive with nuclear power or fossil fuels. Now, both are usually cheaper than the polluting power choices. It is increasingly affordable for homeowners to install solar power plants on their rooftops—a new solar rooftop system is installed in the U.S. every 4 minutes, a number that will drop to every 90 seconds by 2016.
Smart grids, distributed generation and other 21st century technologies enable the large-scale use of renewables despite their variable nature. And advances in battery and other storage technologies mean that both rooftop solar and larger-scale renewable power plants can provide power 24/7—just like the behemoth nuclear and coal “baseload” power plants of the 20th century.
Numerous studies show conclusively that a nuclear-free, carbon-free energy system is attainable before mid-century. The technology is not the issue; only political will now stands in the way. Our choice is stark: we can choose nuclear power, or we can address global warming. We can’t do both. Fortunately, the choice is an easy one.

--- Background Reading

Briefing Paper: Nuclear Energy is Dirty Energy (and does not fit in a clean energy standard). Revised and updated, July 2014. pdf
http://www.nirs.org/factsheets/nuclearenergyisdirtyenergy2014.pdf

Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free: Links to studies showing different pathways to a nuclear-free, carbon-free energy system by mid-century--if not sooner.
http://www.nirs.org/nuclearfreecarbonfree/nuclearfreecarbonfreehome.htm

If not nuclear power, what? NIRS' Michael Mariotte on DailyKos, June 27, 2012.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/06/07/1098283/-If-not-nuclear-power-what

Top 10 Reasons Nuclear Power Won't Save the Climate. NIRS' Michael Mariotte on DailyKos, August 18, 2009 (and still valid).
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2009/08/18/766224/-TOP-10-REASONS-NUKES-WON-rsquo-T-SAVE-CLIMATE

--- Join us online:

People's Climate March Hub: http://peoplesclimate.org/nonuclearpower/

Facebook Groups Page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/nukefreeclimatefreemarch

Tumblr Page: https://www.tumblr.com/blog/nirsclimatemarch

Join the e-mail listserv: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/nfcf-climate-march

Nuclear Information and Resource Service - NIRS
http://www.nirs.org/
https://www.facebook.com/nonukesnirs





see also:

whats up: reasons nukes can't save the planet | 9.21 PEOPLES CLIMATE MARCH, NYC: nuclear-free, carbon-free contingent

(all the memes on one page)






whats up: #BustTheMyth
you can't nuke global warming!