Mark, if the stored radioactive material escapes it may not travel too far 
unless it is transported into the upper atmosphere.  Is there reason to believe 
that anyone except for the local region will receive a massive dose?  Not that 
that would be so great!


Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Goldes <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, Nov 23, 2012 12:54 pm
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Michio Kaku: One solar flare could bring many Fukushimas


This is one of two Ticking Time Bombs which pose near-term threats to life in 
at 
least the Northern hemisphere. 

The other is the fuel pools at Fukushima. A strong earthquake, which is 
virtually certain within three years, can release radioactivity exceeding all 
700 nuclear bombs exploded in the atmosphere since WWII.

See the Aesop Institute website for much more information and additional 
suggestions for prevention of the worst.

Incidently, a solar flare has launched a pair of CMEs that will hit the 
geomagnetic field this weekend. This is an M-class event and will probably only 
affect the polar region on Sunday. However, NOAA says we have a 70% probability 
of more M-class CMEs and a 30% chance of an X-class CME from this same sunspot 
now facing the earth.

Mark

Mark Goldes
Co-Founder, Chava Energy
CEO, Aesop Institute

www.chavaenergy.com
www.aesopinstitute.org

707 861-9070
707 497-3551 fax
________________________________________
From: ChemE Stewart [[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, November 23, 2012 9:42 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Michio Kaku: One solar flare could bring many Fukushimas

Guys,

I think we are at a HUGE risk with Fission reactors in 2013 with CMEs and the 
two large Comets inbound (a third comet just broke up) which will fly close to 
the sun and could trigger large ejections and flares.  A huge solar flare could 
fry the grid, backup batteries and knock out generators on Earth.  I say take 
fission reactrors offline for a year and fire up the gas turbines while we see 
what happens with the sun.  I think the comets will cool things down anyway.

Stewart
darkmattersalot.com<http://darkmattersalot.com>


On Fri, Nov 23, 2012 at 12:26 PM, Vorl Bek 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:
On Fri, 23 Nov 2012 12:10:07 -0500 (EST)
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> Preventing Armageddon Would Cost Only $100 Million
> … But Congress Is Too Thick to Approve the Fix
>
> http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2012/11/preventing-armageddon-would-cost-only-100-million-but-congress-is-too-thick-to-approve-the-fix.html
>
>

>From the article:
Unfortunately, the world’s nuclear power plants, as they are
currently designed, are critically dependent upon maintaining
connection to a functioning electrical grid, for all but
relatively short periods of electrical blackouts, in order to keep
their reactor cores continuously cooled so as to avoid
catastrophic reactor core meltdowns....


I thought that reactors were designed so that inserting rods of
some material would kill the reaction. I imagine they would have
battery power for long enough to insert the rods; heck, maybe
they even have a manual way to crank the motor to do it.



 

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