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         Nuclear Power:     more books (100)
  1. Software for Computer Based Systems Important to Safety in Nuclear Power Plants (Safety Standards Series) by Iaea, 2000-10
  2. Qualification, Training, Licensing, Authorization and Retraining of Operating Personnel in Nuclear Power Plants (Nuclear Science and Technology (European Comm Info Serv)) by A. Kraut, W. Pfeffer, 1987-06
  3. Weekly Update.(Calendar): An article from: Nuclear Power Today
  4. Nuclear Power Reactor Instrumentation Systems Handbook by Joseph M. Harrer, 1974-01
  5. Nuclear Power and the Environment
  6. Nuclear Power by Eichholz, 1985-12-01
  7. Black Fox: Aunt Carrie's War Against the Black Fox Nuclear Power Plant by Carrie B. Dickerson, Patricia Lemon, 1995-10-01
  8. Nuclear Power (Eye on Energy) by Jill C. Wheeler, 2007-07
  9. America's Nuclear Wastelands: Politics, Accountability, and Power by Max S. Power, 2008-04-30
  10. Water Coolant Technology of Power Reactors (Monograph series on nuclear science and technology) by Paul Cohen, 1980-06
  11. Nuclear Principles in Engineering by Tatjana Jevremovic, 2005-07-01
  12. PAKISTAN NUCLEAR DISORDER: Weapons, Proliferation and Safety by Garima Singh, 2008-02
  13. Energy for the Public: The Case for Increased Nuclear Fission Energy by R. Stephen White, 2006-01-30
  14. Nuclear Power in the Developing World by Daniel Poneman, 1982-12

121. Nuclear Power Information At Business.com
nuclear power industry web links for business products, services, information and resources. nuclear power nuclear power. nuclear power.
http://www.business.com/directory/energy_and_environment/nuclear_power/
Nuclear Power - Manufacturers of nuclear power, along with equipment, products and safety information. All of Business.com
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122. Family Derivatives Nuclear Power Links
Photographs of nuclear power Plants around the World PBS FRONTLINE nuclear reaction “Why do Americans fear nuclear power?” Hollywoods Nuclear Flics.
http://www.cswnet.com/~mgoad/nuclear.htm
Home Genealogy Karen’s Quilts visits since 11/19/1997. LE FastCounter Arkansas Nuclear One - NRC info Calendar of Nuclear Accidents - Anti-nuclear (Greenpeace) Chernobyl and Soviet Reactors Entergy - Nuclear, The Right (Perhaps The Only) Choice In The 1970s International Nuclear Safety Center Database Nuclear Energy Institute the nuclear energy industry's Washington-based policy organization Nuclear Related Sites - Technical Management Services, Inc. Web Site Nuclear Information World Wide Web Server NUS - a Halliburton Company Nuclear Regulatory Commision
Code of Federal Regulations
Title
10 Energy
Appendix R to 10 CFR Part 50
Fire
Protection Program for Nuclear Power
Facilities Operating Prior to January 1, 1979
NRC News and Information

Reference Library
Fire Protection Photographs of Nuclear Power Plants around the World PBS FRONTLINE: nuclear reaction Why do Americans fear nuclear power?”
Hollywoods Nuclear Flics
Secret Documents Reveal Problems at U.S. Nuclear Reactors

123. Toward A Plutonium Free Future
Collection of articles and material on nuclear waste issues and guides for citizen action against nuclear power, waste and weapons.
http://www.nonukes.org/
www. nonukes .org the Plutonium Free Future resource library Information about nuclear power, nuclear weapons,
nuclear waste and citizen action for human survival R E S O U R C E S Featured Essay A careful evaluation of current nuclear dangers from a July, 2002, issue of The New York Review of Books: The Growing Nuclear Danger
By Steven Weinberg "There was a rationale for maintaining a very large nuclear arsenal during the cold war: we had to be sure that the Soviets would be deterred from a surprise attack on the US by their certainty that enough of our arsenal would survive any such attack to allow us to deliver a devastating response. I don't say that US strategic requirements were actually calculated in this way, but the need for such a deterrent at least provided a rational argument for a large arsenal. This rationale for a large nuclear arsenal is now obsolete." Steven Weinberg holds the Josey Regental Chair in Science at the University of Texas at Austin. He has been awarded the Nobel Prize in physics and the National Medal of Science and he has been a consultant to government agencies on national defense issues. A Renunciation of Nuclear Weapons One Citizen at a Time Documents in support of United States citizens' renunciation of nuclear weapons use on their behalf

124. Subject Bibliography: Nuclear Power (200)
nuclear power (200). Building the Bombs History of the Nuclear Weapons Complex. BOOK. 2002. Owners of nuclear power Plants. BOOK. 2002. 85 p. 016-067152-3.
http://bookstore.gpo.gov/sb/sb-200.html
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Nuclear Power (200) Building the Bombs: History of the Nuclear Weapons Complex. BOOK. 2002. 279 p.; ill. 0-16-067187-6
E 1.2:B 86/9 S/N 061-000-00960-4 $30.50 Civilian Radioactive Waste Management Program Plan, Revision 2. BOOK. 1998. 160p.; ill. 0-16-063452-0
E 1.68/2:0504 S/N 061-000-00914-1 $17.00 (Out of Stock) Closing the Circle on the Splitting of the Atom: The Environmental Legacy of Nuclear Weapons Production in the United States and What the Department of Energy is Doing About It. BOOK. 1995. Describes existing environmental, safety, and health problems throughout the nuclear weapons complex and what the Department of Energy is doing to address them. Intended to foster deeper public understanding to help hasten progress as the DOE moves ahead on resolving these problems. 116 p.; ill. 0-16-048448-0
E 1.2:C 62 S/N 061-000-00854-3 $12.00 (Out of Stock)

125. Greenpeace International : Nuclear
Greenpeace Nuclear issues. Find out about the global effects of nuclear technology and explore the alternatives to nuclear power.
http://www.greenpeace.org/~nuclear

126. Bellona: Russia - Nuclear Power Plants
News, information, and analysis about Russian nuclear power plants, nuclear waste, and reprocessing, from the Bellona Foundation.
http://www.bellona.no/e/russia/npp.htm
Enter focus: * Russia The Nikitin-process The Northern Fleet Current Status * Facts * The Bellona Foundation Contact us Press releases Bellona Web Norsk Russkaya Bellona English ... Russia
Russia
Nuclear power plants
Sections: The Nikitin-process
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Status: Nuclear Power for the Next Century
Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant

Nuclear power plants in Ukraine

Handling of spent nuclear power plant fuel
Related: Factsheet No. 3: Kola Nuclear Power Plant Factsheet No. 46: Nuclear Power Stations in Russia Factsheet No. 52: Leningrad Power Station Bellona Report no. 1:1994. Chapter5: Kola Nuclear Power Plant RBMK spent fuel piles up No faith in MOX at Novovoronezh NPP Thieves stole radiation alarm ... Armenian NPP builds dry storage, receives free fuel from Russia Duma criticism against new nuclear plant: Minatom backs Canadian npp for Russian Far East Kola NPP may run on gas Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant: Bankruptcy case suspended Bankrupting Proceedings against Leningrad NPP Lousy economics at Leningrad NPP: 25 year old reactor keeps Leningrad running Ignalina's spent fuel storage site postponed Finland wants to purchase more nuclear power from Kola Gore discussed nuclear co-operation with Russia NGO's camp demands to shut down Kola NPP: New NPP unlikely to be completed Russia will supply Ignalina NPP with fuel: EBRD will shut the plant down Latvian research reactor is shut down Nuclear Power Plant Protesters Goes to Moscow Russian State Nuclear Inspection:

127. International Conference On Fifty Years Of Nuclear Power - The Next Fifty Years
International Conference on Fifty Years of nuclear power the Next Fifty Years 27 June – 2 July 2004 Moscow/Obninsk, Russian Federation.
http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/Meetings/Announcements.asp?ConfID=114

128. Platts Nuclear
Nuclear energy business news, issues, and trends in nuclear power. News in other energy production categories also available.
http://www.platts.com/nuclear/index.shtml

129. Israel Reported To Be A Formidable Nuclear Power - World - Www.smh.com.au
Over the past two decades, Israel has built up a nuclear weapons arsenal formidable enough to make it an important nuclear power, according to a report in
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/04/21/1082530225487.html
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Israel reported to be a formidable nuclear power
By Yvonne Preston October 6, 1986 Print this article Email to a friend This story was first published in the Herald on October 6, 1986 London, Sunday: Over the past two decades, Israel has built up a nuclear weapons arsenal formidable enough to make it an important nuclear power, according to a report in today's (6/10/86) Sunday Times Israel has long been suspected of having the atom bomb, but it is now rated sixth behind the US, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China, the report says, with at least 100 and perhaps as many as 200 nuclear weapons of varying destructive power. This is 10 times the previously estimated strength of Israel's nuclear arsenal. Israel's secret weapons factory at Dimona in the Negev Desert was transformed from a civilian nuclear research establishment to bomb production with French plutonium-extracting technology. The 26-megawatt reactor was built by the French, the report says.

130. USEC Inc. - A Global Energy Company
Production and sales of uranium fuel enrichment services for commercial nuclear power plants.
http://www.usec.com/
Search Contact Us Site Map To view the FLASH version of our home page, click here.

131. RadWaste.org - International Nuclear Power Plants & Utilities (1)
RadWaste.org Directory of international nuclear power station owners and operators. Click Here. International nuclear power plants (1).
http://www.radwaste.org/power.htm
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This site is listed in the BBC Education Web Guide. Begin your journey on the internet with The Rail. This is junction 1360 on "The Science Expedition". International nuclear power plants (1) There are currently approximately 437 nuclear power reactors in operation in over 25 countries around the world, with a total output of some 350,000 megawatts. An additional 36 reactors (27,000 MWe) are currently under construction. The links on this page point to owners and/or operators of commercial nuclear power plants, including both private (investor owned) and public (government owned) entities. At many of these sites, you can find generic and site specific information about the design, operation and performance of various reactor designs. It should be noted that a given nuclear power plant may be owned or operated by a consortium of electric utilities. In addition, many nuclear sites host more than one reactor (often of different designs), which may be owned or operated by different companies. Not all of the power plants have "official" web sites. Click on the icons for links to photos of the plant, on the

132. Mothball Millstone! Connecticut Coalition Against The Millstone Nuclear Power Re
An antinuclear citizens group dedicated to safely shutting down the Millstone nuclear power plant, finding clean energy alternatives, and providing anti-nuclear energy information. Site has press releases and bulletins.
http://www.mothballmillstone.org/
Joseph H. Besade
December 1, 1936 - August 16, 2003
Nukebuster
~ Rest in Peace ~ " TO LAUGH OFTEN AND MUCH; TO WIN THE RESPECT OF INTELLIGENT PEOPLE AND AFFECTION OF CHILDREN; TO EARN APPRECIATION OF HONEST CRITICS AND ENDURE THE BETRAYAL OF FALSE FRIENDS; TO APPRECIATE BEAUTY; TO FIND THE BEST IN OTHERS; TO LEAVE THE WORLD A BIT BETTER-WHETHER BY A HEALTHY CHILD, A GARDEN PATCH OR REDEEMED SOCIAL CONDITION; TO KNOW EVEN ONE LIFE HAS BREATHED EASIER BECAUSE YOU HAVE LIVED.
THAT IS TO HAVE SUCCEEDED."
"What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us."
RALPH WALDO EMERSON
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CCAM CONNECTICUT COALITION AGAINST MILLSTONE STOP THE MILLSTONE NUKE WASTE DUMP CONNECTICUT SITING COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING
THURSDAY OCTOBER 16, 2003

133. Who Killed U.S. Nuclear Power?
A COORDINATED WALL ST. ASSAULT. Who Killed US nuclear power? by Marsha Freeman. There are many myths about who killed nuclear power in this country.
http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/spring01/nuclear_power.html
A COORDINATED WALL ST. ASSAULT Who Killed U.S. Nuclear Power? by Marsha Freeman From the Spring 2001 issue of (full text).
Washington Public Power Suppy System
By 1967, through the momentum of the lunar landing program and its high-technology economic expansion, the AEC again upped its projections, this time to 145 GW of nuclear capacity by the year 1980. Engineers in the industry, looking farther ahead, expected 2,000 GW nuclear by the year 2000. Now, in 2001, there are only 103 nuclear plants in operation in the United States. More than that number have been cancelled. The collapse in orders, and cancellations, have left the U.S. nuclear industry in such a state of contraction, that today it could not even build a new nuclear reactor, were one to be ordered. The pressure vessel would have to be imported, because there is no U.S. firm capable of fabricating one. There are many myths about who killed nuclear power in this country. Blame is put on the accident at Three Mile Island in 1979, which certainly added to the attacks on the industry, but was not a decisive factor. Blame is put on the American public, which supposedly became anti-nuclear (although, except for a small vocal minority, this has never been the case). The claim is made that nuclear is inherently just too expensive to use, but, in fact, it was a coordinated assault by Wall Street and its foot soldiers in the environmentalist movement that drove the costs up. If we do not understand how we got to where we are, we will never be able to change the situation.

134. Nukewatch
Wisconsin environmental peace group, dedicated to nonviolent action to abolish nuclear power and weapons. Nukewatch focuses attention on locations, movements, dangers, and politics of nuclear weapons and radioactive wastes.
http://www.nukewatch.com/index.html
Welcome!
Nukewatch is a Wisconsin-based environmental and peace action group, dedicated to the abolition of nuclear power and weapons. Nukewatch brings critical attention to the locations, movements, dangers, and the politics of nuclear weapons and radioactive wastes. Staff and volunteers advocate Gandhian nonviolence in education and action, and report on nuclear issues in a quarterly newsletter, The Pathfinder Nukewatch began in 1979 in response to the cold war build up of nuclear weapons and the secrecy surrounding the nuclear industry. Nukewatch conducted TrackWatch; a program to monitor and expose secret shipments of radioactive waste on U.S. rails; TruckWatch, the transportation of H-bombs and component parts in unmarked trucks by the DOE; Nukewatch mapped all 1,000 land-based nuclear missile silos for educational and organizing purposes. Nukewatch has a long history of successful grassroots organizing across the nation. Today, Nukewatch organizes a minimum of four activities each year at the Navy's Project ELF in northern Wisconsin in opposition to this first-strike nuclear war communication system. Nukewatch monitors the transportation of radioactive waste around the country and around the world on an on-going basis.

135. Decommissioning The Trojan Nuclear Plant
Background. Trojan was Oregon’s only nuclear power plant. It operated for almost 17 years, from March 1976 to January 1993. Portland
http://www.energy.state.or.us/siting/trojan.htm
Oregon
Department of
Energy
Decommissioning
the Trojan Nuclear Plant Ensure Oregon has an adequate supply of reliable and affordable energy, and is safe from nuclear contamination, by helping Oregonians save energy, develop clean energy resources, promote renewable energy and clean up nuclear waste.
Decommissioning
the Trojan Nuclear Plant

Background
What is decommissioning?
How long will it take?

How safe will the site be after decommissioning?
... Questions? Background Trojan was Oregon’s only nuclear power plant. It operated for almost 17 years, from March 1976 to January 1993. Portland General Electric (PGE) owns the Trojan nuclear plant and is responsible for its decommissioning. The Trojan nuclear plant is located on U.S. highway 30, approximately 12 miles north of St. Helens in Columbia County. What is decommissioning?

136. Canadian Nuclear Association - Association Nucléaire Canadienne
Founded in 1960, to promote the orderly and sound development of nuclear energy in Canada and abroad for the purposes other than those related to armament . Site contains information about nuclear power and climate change, as well as links to members and publications.
http://www.cna.ca/

137. Nuclear Information & Resource Service, Southeast
Top 10 Reasons to Oppose nuclear power. Every nuclear power reactor makes massive amounts of radioactive waste. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON nuclear power
http://www.nirs.org/nuclearrelapse/toptenreasons.htm
P.O. Box 7586 Ashville, North Carolina fax 828-236-3489 nirs.se@mindspring.com National Office: NIRS / WISE-Amsterdam th St. NW Suite 404 Washington, DC fax 202-462-2183 nirsnet@nirs.org http://www.nirs.org/
Top 10 Reasons to Oppose Nuclear Power
  • Every nuclear power reactor makes massive amounts of radioactive waste. Nuclear power’s waste is deadly, causes cancer and genetic mutations, and there is no known way to permanently contain, dispose or neutralize it. All claims to the contrary are unfounded. The explosion of the Chernobyl nuclear power station was the worst industrial accident of any kind in history. Tens of thousands of people have died, and more will over time. The estimated cost of the consequences of that accident to date is over 350 Billion dollars, and both the monetary costs and human deaths will increase over time as Chernobyl has caused permanent contamination of food and water and children. Every radiation exposure increases our risk of cancer. Nuclear energy requires that many communities be exposed as uranium is processed to fuel and fuel is used to produce waste. Many workers are contaminated and sometimes their families are exposed. Uranium mining is overwhelmingly done on the land left to Indigenous People (Native Americans, Aboriginal People, Traditional African and European communities). These communities are disproportionately affected with sickness and genetic impacts.
  • 138. CNER - Centre For Nuclear Energy Research
    Incorporated research and development laboratory on the UNB campus in Fredericton, N.B. Conducts research and development work related to the operation and maintenance of CANDU nuclear power stations.
    http://www.unb.ca/cner/web/index.html
    The Centre for Nuclear Energy Research is an incorporated research and development laboratory on the campus of the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, N.B. We specialize in courseware, research and training. You need a frames capable browser to see this website.
    CNER, webbased training, training, courseware, courseware development, nuclear energy research, nuclear, centre for nuclear energy research, nuclear training, chemical sensors, flow assisted corrosion, candu, moderator temperature, nuclear research, nuclear probes, e-learning, web based training, internet based training, incutech, unb, university of new brunswick

    139. Whither Nuclear Power?
    Whither nuclear power? POLICY FORUM Monday, March 8, 2004 1100 am. Featuring Richard Gordon, Professor Emeritus of Mineral Economics
    http://www.cato.org/events/040308pf.html
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    Whither Nuclear Power?
    POLICY FORUM
    Monday, March 8, 2004
    11:00 am Featuring Richard Gordon , Professor Emeritus of Mineral Economics, Pennsylvania State University; Peter Bradford James Hewlett , Industry Analyst, U.S. Energy Information Administration. The Cato Institute
    1000 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
    Washington, DC 20001
    Watch the Event in Real Video
    Listen to the Event in Real Audio (Audio Only) One of the most interesting aspects of the ongoing debate over national energy policy is the political determination to do something to subsidize the revival of nuclear power. Richard Gordon, however, contends that subsidies are the wrong prescription for the industry's woes. The real policy problem, he argues, is that the nuclear power industry is burdened by unjustifiably strict edicts from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Gordon proposes to eliminate the NRC and its regulatory code and to replace it with a regime of strict liability for nuclear power generators. Peter Bradford, a former commissioner at the NRC, and James Hewlett, a nuclear industry analyst at the Energy Information Administration, will comment. Support the Cato Institute Send this page to a friend Printer Friendly Version 1000 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. Washington D.C. 20001-5403

    140. International Energy Outlook 2001 - Nuclear
    World wide nuclear power market analysis by the Energy Information Administration of the Department of Energy.
    http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/ieo/nuclear.html

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