A License to Kill
For every U.S. nuclear power plant that has its license renewed, enough
radiation will be released to cause 12 additional cancer deaths, the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) estimates.
The NRC figure comes as part of a correction to NRCs 1996 plant
relicensing regulations, and does not include deaths from accidents, non-routine
releases or high level waste and spent fuel disposal.
U.S. nuclear power plants can renew their licenses for an additional
20 years. According to the Nuclear Energy Institute, six plants have so
far received renewed licenses, 14 more have already applied and another
26 are expected to apply for renewals in the near future. Virtually all
103 U.S. nuclear plants are expected to eventually apply for license renewal.
The Bush administration and the nuclear power industry think killing
more than 1,000 people is an acceptable price to pay for the continued
use of nuclear power. We think its a national scandal, says
Michael Mariotte, executive director of the Washington-based Nuclear Information
and Resource Service. This admission gives the lie to the Bush-Cheney
administration and nuclear industrys claims that nuclear power is
somehow an emissions-free technology.
Natural background radiation is a part of our everyday lives,
retorts Steve Kerekes, a spokesperson for the Nuclear Energy Institute.
The exposures that individuals have naturally is multitudes times
more than what is being talked about here. When we say nuclear energy
is an emission-free technology, were talking about emissions into
the atmosphere. We dont burn anything to create the electricity.
Asked why he doesnt characterize radiation as an emission,
Kerekes retorts, If you dont like that word, choose your own
word.
Drugs and Money
The pharmaceutical industrys claim that high drug prices are needed
to sustain research and development is contradicted by the drug makers
own reports to the government, according to a Washington, D.C.-based consumer
health group.
Families USA, which examined annual reports filed by drug manufacturers
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), says the drug manufacturers
spend more than twice as much on marketing, advertising and administration
as on research and development.
In this context, to suggest that any moderation in drug prices
would reduce R&D ignores the fact that future profits of pharmaceutical
companies are dependent on the development of new blockbuster drugs,
concludes the non-profit consumer advocacy group.
The group says drug prices for the top 50 drugs prescribed for seniors
rose more than twice the rate of inflation in 2000. At the same time,
the industry continues to be the most profitable in the United States,
with profit margins nearly four times the average of Fortune 500 companies.
Meanwhile, the highest-paid executives of the nine top pharmaceutical
companies received an average of nearly $19 million each, without counting
unexercised stock options, which were valued at nearly $900 million for
the nine executives. The highest paid executive was William Steere, Jr.,
chair of Pfizer, who received over $40 million in 2000.
The study is inaccurate when it compares spending on drug research
versus marketing, says Jackie Cottrell, spokesperson for the Pharmaceutical
Manufacturing Association (PhRMA). Pharmaceutical companies spend
more on research than on promotion, and half of the promotional spending
is dedicated to free drug samples for patients.
Neither Dry Nor Clean
Consumers who dry-clean their clothes are exposed to a cancer-causing
solvent that could be easily replaced with non-toxic alternatives, says
Greenpeace.
In a new report, Out of Fashion: Moving Beyond Toxic Cleaners,
the group asks the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for tighter regulations
on the cancer-causing dry cleaning solvent perchloroethylene (perc). A
government study published earlier this year linked the chemical to 266
dry cleaning workers cancer deaths in four U.S. cities.
Studies show the chemical continues to offgas from clothing after it
is taken home. Residents living above dry cleaners can be exposed to elevated
levels of the chemical, while 75 to 90 percent of all dry cleaners have
caused costly groundwater contamination. The state of Florida alone may
face 2,800 perc groundwater cleanups costing an estimated $1.4 billion.
What is most important at this point is that national, state and
local governments provide incentives to dry cleaners and pave the way
for new technologies to flourish by removing obstacles to change,
says Rick Hind of Greenpeace, who points out that hundreds of cleaners
are already perc-free today. Non-toxic alternatives include liquid carbon
dioxide cleaning and wet cleaning processes.
A bill pending in the U.S. Congress would give tax credits to cleaners
who use these safer cleaning systems.
But the Halogenated Solvents Industry Alliance, a Washington, D.C.-based
trade association which includes perc manufacturers Dow, PPG Industries
and Vulcan Chemicals, says perc has been used safely for over 50 years.
Dow lobbyists are actively opposing the proposed legislation, which they
say should also include tax credits for solvent-reducing technologies.
Charlie Cray
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