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josh
Date: 4/1/2009 4:13 pm
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Try searching the phrase “nuclear success” in Google’s “I’m feeling lucky” feature. The results, thanks to Greenpeace, give us something sobering to consider as Manitobans contemplate a new nuclear facility in Pinewa.
In case you have not been following, read Mia Rabson's article in the Winnipeg Free Press, below.
Pinawa considered for site of nuclear power plant
OTTAWA -- Pinawa may be in line for a nuclear renaissance.
The
town of 1,500, 177 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg, is in discussions
with Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. to build a nuclear power plant on the
site of AECL's Whiteshell Laboratories.
Dale Coffin, a spokesman
for AECL, said it's very much in the early discussion stage but said
the idea of putting up a nuclear power plant in Pinawa is a good one.
"From
our point of view, Pinawa is already a licensed site, there are already
experienced people working there, abundant water nearby and it's close
to the United States and transmission lines," said Coffin.
"There are some very positive features there already."
The
Pinawa nuclear lab, established in the 1960s, was closed in 1998 and
its research activities transferred to AECL's lab in Chalk River, Ont.
It
once employed more than 1,300 people but is down to about 300 now, most
of whom are involved in decommissioning the lab. But the site still has
a nuclear licence, with a new one just granted for another 10 years.
Pinawa
Mayor Blair Skinner, who has been pushing to get the lab site turned
into a nuclear power generator for several years, said having that
licence would make getting a nuclear power plant approved for the site
a lot easier.
He estimates a nuclear power plant would provide
about $5 billion to the local economy from the construction and between
500 and 900 permanent jobs over the lifetime of the plant, which would
be about 60 years.
"There would be an enormous economic benefit," said Skinner.
Manitoba
Hydro president Bob Brennan said the Crown corporation isn't interested
in building a nuclear generator because it has enough capital projects
in the works with hydro-electric dams. But he said that doesn't mean
Hydro would not be interested in helping use its grid to transmit power
generated by a nuclear station if someone else built it.
"We'd be happy to work out some sort of agreement for the transmission of it," Brennan told the Free Press this week.
Ontario
is in need of massive amounts of new electrical generation and has
generally dismissed hydro power in favour of nuclear generation.
Whether
the power that might be generated from a nuclear site in Pinawa would
go to Ontario or to other markets including the U.S. or Saskatchewan
and Alberta would have to be determined.
Skinner plans to
continue talks with AECL and even reach out to others in the nuclear
community at a number of conferences in Ottawa, Regina and Calgary
later this year.
"We are open to any scenario," he said.