Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Uranium dust, an unmentionable radioactive fact

The dust that dare not speak its name WA Today September 30, 2009 Source: The Sydney Morning Herald, Elizabeth Farrelly “…………………For us, as for most of the world, central Australia might as well not exist. It is almost a paradigm of unthinkability. It’s Timbuktu. That’s why we do things like nuclear testing there. It’s why BHP Billiton’s proposal to turn the Olympic Dam uranium mine into an open-cut operation is even contemplated for approval. Because it’s there, not here. Or was there – until, like Burnham Wood, it came here.

Open-cut uranium mining? It’s a gash a kilometre deep, churning 410 million tonnes of radioactive dirt per annum, “dewatering” the local aquifers, using 253 megalitres of water a day. No wonder the locals call them water thieves.

Of course, BHP’s environmental impact statement devotes a couple of pars to dust management. BHP proposes water trucks – like the ones they spray roads with. And they’ll monitor airborne particulates at nearby Hiltaba Village (so small even Google Maps can’t find it) and the thriving metropolis of Roxby Downs. That’ll do it.

A possibility the EIS doesn’t contemplate, however, is that several thousand tonnes of the stuff might reach the Opera House, or even Mount Egmont, where it lay so thick people thought their cars had rusted overnight. Where even New Zealand rains couldn’t wash it away…………….What goes around, comes around.

The dust that dare not speak its name

September 30, 2009 - Posted by | 1, climate change - global warming, environment, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , , ,

1 Comment »

  1. A single kilogram of Plutonium is enough to kill each and every person on Planet Earth IF DISPERSED FINELY AND EXACTLY ENOUGH. A similar health hazard exists because of radioactive yellow cake uranium particles and this could far exceed the problems presented by asbestos.

    The amount of radioactive dust that causes lung cancer, resulting in death of a person, would not be easily detectable by a radiation meter such as a Geiger counter.

    It could simply be a small fragment of dust “Blowing In The Wind” from BHP’s Olympic Dam radiation facility.

    CLOSE ROXBY DOWN

    Like

    NO Nukes Australia's avatar Comment by NO Nukes Australia | October 1, 2009 | Reply


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