terrorism

Friday the 13th

Posted by jamie — 13 January 2006 at 9:00am - Comments

The UK is not on track to reduce our contribution to climate change with CO2 emissions actually increasing in the last two years. Tony Blair has found himself in a vulnerable and unenviable position, desperately seeking a solution. The nuclear industry's lobbyists, equally desperate to revive their dying trade, have found rich pickings in the Prime Minister's situation. Blair seems to have frantically seized upon nuclear power as the default solution to climate change.

Nuclear power and terrorism

Last edited 13 January 2006 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
13 January, 2006

Summary

Building more nuclear power stations will dramatically increase the risk of a catastrophic terrorist attack, which could claim millions of lives. This shocking dossier of expert evidence shows how a terrorist strike, targetting dangerous radioactive waste held at the Sellafield nuclear facility in Cumbria, could kill over two million people.

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No new nuclear power: Greenpeace submission to the House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee

Last edited 10 October 2005 at 8:00am
Publication date: 
10 October, 2005

Summary

In detailed evidence to the Committee, Greenpeace has shown that a new reactor programme would: be an expensive gamble using an untried reactor design; increase the UK's nuclear waste stockpile by 400%; take too long to build to reduce CO2 emissions in line with the government's 2020 target; and provide more targets for terrorist attacks.

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Nuclear site security archive

Last edited 13 January 2003 at 9:00am
Sizewell B: police vans arrive at Sizewell

Sizewell B: police vans arrive at Sizewell

On 13th January, Greenpeace volunteers exposed the complete lack of security at Britain's flagship nuclear power station, Sizewell B, when they were able to walk en masse into the plant and easily gain access to the plant's control building and reactor dome. Disturbingly, this was the second time Greenpeace volunteers were able to break into the nuclear site. In October 2002, 140 volunteers encountered little security as they breached the perimenter fence and occupied rooftops.

Governments have known since the 1990's that terrorists have regarded nuclear power plants as potential targets. Since intelligence reports that the fourth hijacked plane involved in the September 11th 2001 attacks on the United States may have been heading for the nuclear plant at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania, this concern has increased. The UK Office of Civil Nuclear Security (part of the Department of Trade and Industry) have now had to admit that nuclear power plants are possible terrorist targets. The most likely scenarios for an attack range from insider sabotage or theft of nuclear materials to outside invasion or assault on a nuclear reactor or waste store.

Emergency Planning: The ever-present nuclear threat

Last edited 27 November 2002 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
21 March, 2007

Publication date: November 2002

Summary

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Anti-terrorism act threatens people's right to know

Posted by bex — 19 November 2001 at 9:00am - Comments
Nuclear transport in transit

Nuclear transport in transit