Plutonium Shipment to France on the Way 97
duesi writes "According to BBC News a British vessel is carrying 140 kg of weapons grade plutonium from the US to France to turn it into nuclear fuel.
It doesn't take a nuclear physicist to see that this is a dangerous thing... Similar shipments have happened before, for example in 1999 and 2002
but BBC writes that this is the first time weapon grade plutonium has been shipped ever."
That IS dangerous... (Score:5, Funny)
Or disguise themselves as veteran British seamen and seize the bridge.
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:3, Funny)
I was just thinking, they must be carrying a packet of wire wool and a spare tin of paint to clean the charred,black,sooty smudge off the hull that the suicide bombers will leave when they crash their inflatable dinghy into the ship shouting, "Death to the Infidel! God is great!"
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:1)
They'd be found out straight away. When it's their turn to make the tea, they'll get it wrong. You just can't fake proper tea.
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:1)
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:1)
Yes :-)
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:2)
Re:That IS dangerous... (Score:2)
tell everyone! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh well. Security through obscurity is better than no security at all.
Chris
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:1)
None. The BBC just likes a good nuclear scare story, and John Large likes a bit of self-publicity.
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2)
For all you or I know the shipment was complete three weeks ago and this news is just a smokescreen. Wouldn't surprise me at all.
Shh!!! (Score:2)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:1)
Down that new highway to France?
- Peter
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:1)
Um. Yes.
But I'm unaware of a tunnel/highway from the United States to France, which is the route this nuclear material is following.
- Peter
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2, Funny)
Ten years after tunnelling recommenced, the US and UK excavation projects had reached the combined distance of exactly 1825 miles - just over half way.
So its there just not ready.
LOL (Score:1)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:1)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2)
Re:tell everyone! (Score:2)
Yeah, that's great, just tell everyone so they can go attack it. That's really smart. If I were the shipper or receiver, or any territory between which this parcel traveled, I would want it to be at least SOMEWHAT of a secret.
Oh well. Security through obscurity is better than no security at all.
My guess is that it is a classic case of misdirection. You say "We're moving this nice chunk of plutonium on this ship here - look at all our heavy security" when in fact you've cut it all up in to small piece
Not the way I would do it (Score:5, Informative)
I would split it up into 5kg bars and do a few trips. If there is a crash or whatever it wouldn't go critical. And it's not enough for a bomb is someone nicked it.
5kg / 19,816 kg/m^3 in cm^3 [google.com] is ~ 250cm^3 which is 5 by 5 by 10 cm.
Pretty strange that the entire consignment is smaller than [google.com] a shuttle case [google.com].
Re:Not the way I would do it (Score:2)
Re:Not the way I would do it (Score:3, Interesting)
2nd I know 10kg of plutonium is not that large as it's basically as heavy as led. But your not going to ship it all in one container it's much much safer to ship in several containers than one large pile.
WRONG (Score:1)
Re:Not the way I would do it (Score:2)
Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:1)
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:2)
Where are the neutrons coming from?
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:2)
A neutron bomb is the same as a thermonuclear, but the U-238 casing is left off, allowing neutrons to escape.
Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org]
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:2)
Sorry- misspoke, nutrons are higher energy. Should have said Alpha and Gamma Particle Bomb- though the design idea is the same, kill loads of people and leave the buildings intact. That was my intent when comparing it to the higher-energy-state neutron bombs- effects, not actual physics.
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:3, Informative)
:-)
I think the danger from a dirty bomb is more likely to be contamination and ingestion by people, plants and animals of the radioactive substances. This would lead to a long-term exposure to smallish amounts of radiation which, over many years, would result in an increase in cancer cases (and therefore deaths).
Because the legal thresholds for what counts as "contamination" are very low, such a weapon would render large areas uninhabitable. I for one certainly wouldn't want to live somewhe
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:3, Interesting)
Depends on how much, and what the wind distribution is- igestion by people once burnt can be acomplished by large amounts of plutonium oxide ash in the atmosphere- it's still radioactive.
Because th
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:2)
Big scared crowds tend to break things, trample one another, and lose their normal respect for things like charity towards their fellow human beings, not to mention law, property, and traffic regulations.
Plus it gives all the assholes an excuse to drive their Hummers on the sidewalk and over your lawn.
But your scenario doesn't work (Score:2)
Re:But your scenario doesn't work (Score:2)
Re:Don't need critical mass to make a bomb (Score:3, Informative)
It is not that it is so radioactive it is a heavy metal and is very toxic.
Unless you have enough to make an atomic bomb. What people do not get is that if they do not stick it in reactor and use it for fuel it will just sit around for a few thousand years waiting for someone to make a bomb out of it.
Converting it to electricity is the best
In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
In other news, people do dangerous things every day... Like transport sulfuric acid in train tankers through residential neighborhoods. Some things are dangerous. That's life.
Environmentalists say it presents a major terrorist target.
Shouldn't environmentalists be worrying about the environment? How come the article doesn't say anything about *security experts* being worried about this? Couldn't they have found any?
Greenpeace says the plutonium should be disposed of as nuclear waste to avoid the transport and proliferation risks.
Right, because being stored in a hole somewere will be safer than reprocessing it and using it. We're much better off with all this weapons grade material sitting around than not existing....
That is the irony, isn't it? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is one reason why, despite being an environmentalist, I have little use for today's environmental "movement". The groups who go to great efforts to paint themselves green turn out to be watermelons.
Re:That is the irony, isn't it? (Score:1)
:-)
Re:That is the irony, isn't it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That is the irony, isn't it? (Score:3, Interesting)
What? I'm anti energy consumption. That doesn't mean I think we should all live in caves, just that we (Americans in particular) are extraordinarily wasteful with our energy. There is nothing wrong with being anti energy comsumption.
If I were king I'd make incandescent lights illegal, replace all coal-fired power plants with those new pebble-bed reactors and build nuclear waste reprocessing plants all over so we ca
Re:That is the irony, isn't it? (Score:2)
There is nothing wrong with being anti energy comsumption.
There's a difference between being anti energy consumption, and being against wastefullness. You sound like you're the latter. Anyone truly anti-energy consumption would just kill themselves and all life since it takes energy consumption to live (or so says the laws of thermodynamics).
Re:That is the irony, isn't it? (Score:2)
That one comment makes you thousands of times more rational than the Greenpeace agenda would allow. When I describe them as anti-consumption, I mean that as them being in an entirely different league than where you are. Replacing incandescent lights wouldn't lower your quality of life enough to satisfy them. You shouldn't need that power plant, no matter what fires it.
Maybe not the first time. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the first time that the PUBLIC knows about it, but isn't necessarily the first time that weapon grade plutonium has been shipped.
Big difference.
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:1)
Which would people have it on? A boat which sinks (its GONE NOW) or in a plane, which when it blows up.... like we have seen happen twice in the last month will proberly end up spraying it everywhere...
Or just incase this wasn't amusing enough for you, i heard n.a.s.a has fitted it with parachutes in case of falling.... who wants to be the first to jump out a helicopter and catch this one?!
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:1)
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:4, Insightful)
This is hardly the first time the public knew about it. Weapons grade plutonium is shipped about routinely; in weapons.
We put on boats. We fly it around in aircraft. We haul it in trucks on public roads. Shipping significant quantities of weapons grade plutonium has been routine for over half a century.
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:2)
1. Leave all the plutonium on the nuclear warheads.. This is comming from decommissioned Nuclear missles, this should be seen as a good thing..
2. Try to get the laws in the us changed so that we can do reprocessing here at home. Then we wouldn't have to ship our plutonium overseas. And we could refine and reuse our used uranium from our power generating nuclear reactors too. That sure would make Nevada happy. (less w
Reprocessing? (Score:2)
I suspect that the real barrier is the refusal of publicity- and litigation-shy US nuclear plan
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:2)
Didn't the US ship some back in the 40's?
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:1)
Re:Maybe not the first time. (Score:1)
Sellafield (Score:1)
Re:Sellafield (Score:4, Informative)
Sellafield [sellafield.com] has never been a "power plant" it's just the ignorant, stupid, sensationalist British media and such that refer to it as one.
Sellafield is an enormous site. I think that somewhere in the region of 15000 people work there on a daily basis.
Sellafiled contains many things, including the ill-fated (criminally badly designed) Windscale reactors (whose sole purpose was plutonium production), the Calder Hall power station (mainly for providing site electricity and steam and the very first Magnox in the world, now shut down for good), various separation and containment facilities including the notorious "open pond", reprocessing facilities, the WAGR (Windscale Advanced Gas-cooler Reactor - absolutely brilliant piece of engineering, now decommissioning), the MOX Demonstration Facility, THORP (Thermal Oxide Reprocessing Plant) plus a load of other stuff.
Most of it isn't top secret and can be visited by the public. I went once on business. Very interesting. For those of us too young to remember the Cold War Era, it's absolutely incredible to see what's there.
Try clicking on the above link. I think BNFL has now got a clue and realises that IE isn't the only browser in existance...:-)
Not necessary (Score:4, Funny)
Can you say "Doomed?"
Re:Not necessary (Score:1)
Sounds eerily reminscient of the Titanic. "Oh, we're invincible, don't worry."
Doomed indeed.
Penny Henny (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Penny Henny (Score:2)
Re:Penny Henny (Score:2)
Re:Penny Henny (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Penny Henny (Score:2)
That's still not necessarily sufficient reason to invade it without clear evidence of imminent danger; I don't disagree with your overall argument. There are plenty of more dysfunctional but non-oil-bearing states that we never raise a hand aga
Re:Penny Henny (Score:2)
Re:Penny Henny (Score:2)
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:5, Informative)
That's actually an urban myth. Read about it at the wikipedia [wikipedia.org].
140kg of plutonium is enough to cause cancer in the entire world population about ten times over.
Depends what you mean by "cause cancer." Tt is generally accepted that exposure to ionising radiation icreases your risk of developing cancer by an amount depending on the type of radiation, its strength and the time you are exposed to it. This is a very complicated subject, and people make careers out of understanding it and supervising radiation workers. Technically, exposure to any sort of ionising radiation at all increases your risk of developing a fatal cancer. For example, every banana you eat (which contains naturally-occuring potassium-50) slightly increases your risk. Having a dental X-ray increases your risk somewhat more, and so does flying in an aeroplane.
I'm not sure what the dose rate is from weapons-grade plutonium, but people are able to handle it in the lab, and people are able to stand next to nuclear warheads, all without turning green and losing their hair.
The dangers of plutonium are greatly exaggerated. I knew a man who ingested some. They figured out that the likeleyhood of him catching cancer from it was very small.
Smoking cigarettes is far more dangerous.
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:2)
A few facts from a book that never leaves my desk (called Nature's Building Blocks):
It is dangerous because of the alpha particles it emits, but alpha particles are unable to penetrate even some of the thinnest materials.
Pu-238 is used as an energy source in heart pacemakers (also used for some instruments on Apollo 14, and on both Voyager missions).
I knew a man who ingested some. They figured out that the likeleyhood of him catching cancer from it was very small.
I'm assuming it was pl
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:2)
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:2)
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:1)
Actually, it's potassium-40 -- but I suspect you just typoed that one. However, there are cases where the cancer risk drops way down when you are exposed to a certain "alarming" elevated level of radiation. Check out http://www.aapsonline.org/jpands/vol9no1/chen.pdf/ [aapsonline.org] or, better y
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:1)
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:1)
Re:Highly poisonous (Score:2)
Plutonium is also astonishingly dense, and not water-soluble. Somehow the greens never seem to notice
Whats the problem? (Score:5, Insightful)
Both have a squad of armed police on board from the UK Atomic Energy Agency Constabulary.
The ships carry naval cannons, have satellite monitoring, twin engines and hull protection.
These are _armed_ ships, with armed security. An attack on them would require a warship. So north korea or iran or some other nation is going to attack and try and seize this ship? A couple terrorists with guns and a speedboat isn't going to cut it.
I fail to see how this is any more dangerous than the transportation of any hazardous chemicals, or gold bullion, except it seems to be rather more secure.
Hooray for sensationalist alarmist stories!
Re:Whats the problem? (Score:1)
Re:Whats the problem? (Score:1)
Re:Whats the problem? (Score:2)
Re:Whats the problem? (Score:2)
Unless they are the speedboats used to attack USS "Cole".
Re:Whats the problem? (Score:2)
Second, the Cole didn't sink, and you can bet that what they are transporting in nuclear material on has a double ha
Bits from the article (Score:4, Interesting)
Environmentalists say it presents a major terrorist target.
So let's protest to be sure it makes international news and everyone with an internet connection will know about it.
Both have a squad of armed police on board from the UK Atomic Energy Agency Constabulary. The ships carry naval cannons, have satellite monitoring, twin engines and hull protection.
"Ok Abdullah, here's the plan: we'll sneak in really quiet so they don't kill us with their 30mm cannons. We then kill a dozen armed guards, disable the automatic satellite tracking, then avoid all of the spy satellites, AWACS, aircraft carriers, and submarines from every infidel country that will be looking for us, and book it 5000 miles for home in this giant freighter. Are you done sharpening your boxcutter?"
But critics say the shipment would be safer if carried on a naval frigate.
I hope it's not the environmentalists making that criticism. The ships are owned by British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL). They were designed to safely and securely transport the stuff. It's not like you just want to toss the stuff in the dry storage on a frigate.
Captain Malcolm Miller, head of international transport at BNFL, said they were the "safest sea transports" he had ever seen. A naval escort had not been requested and was not necessary, he added.
He ain't worried, and he's in the middle of it.
Irish Environment Minister Martin Cullen told the BBC that "any accident could have catastrophic effects." He wants assurances that they will not pass near Irish waters.
An understandable concern, I suppose. I would expect that the fuel is sealed up in a pretty durable container that would contain any leaks long enough for recovery if the ships sank.
Ireland, with New Zealand, Peru and Chile, is co-sponsoring a proposal at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) seeking detailed information for coastal states on all movements of nuclear material in international waters.
Seems like a good idea. It sounded, however, like BNFL was being pretty generous with relevant information on this trip, even though they don't have to.
Greenpeace says the plutonium should be disposed of as nuclear waste to avoid the transport and proliferation risks.
Ok, so it's unacceptable to burn it, move it, or leave it sitting in storage. Let's take Greenpeace's advice, then, and dispose of it as nuclear waste in a way that will keep it safe for 10000+ years in a chemically stable, glass form, in concrete and steel casks, a couple thousand feet underground in Yucca Moun...oh wait, they're protesting that also.
Non-nukes know nothing (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Non-nukes know nothing (Score:1)
All Pu is "weapons grade" (Score:4, Interesting)
usable in an implosion device, so simple chemical
separation suffices. It is a bit trickier to
detonate plutonium, because of the precise timing
requirements for the compression charges, but the
upside is that it's a lot easier to go thermonuclear,
if you've got the tritium.
Re:All Pu is "weapons grade" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:All Pu is "weapons grade" (Score:1)
Pu is obtained by neutron capture on 238U. The problem is that 239Pu(the usefull one) can also capture neutrons to produce 240Pu that is not as stable as 239Pu and produces unstable/unsafe weapons.
So in order to produce weapon grade Pu the U must be left in a flux of neutrons long enough to produce 239Pu, but it must be taken out before the 240Pu starts to build up. That's why the IAEA inspectors in charge of nuclear non-proliferation track the loading and unloading of nuclear fu
What a waste (Score:3, Funny)