
Thanks for signing up for this exciting documentary production class. Over the course of three months we will be making a documentary about the MIT Nuclear Reactor. The blog below is a place to share links, video, images and more during the production process. If you need more information on how to use the blog, feel free to check out "How to..." Tutorials blog. You can subscribe or unsubscribe in the "Group Notifications" on the right hand side of the browser. If you are not involved in the production and would like more information, please contact shaun[at]cctvcambridge.org.
Here's a film produced by the US military in 1960 to assuage fears about accidental nuclear explosions (that occur when plane's carrying nuclear bombs crash). It has some great soundbites - that classic 1950's v/o speaking very seriously and ominously, firetrucks racing about, old laboratories, mushroom clouds. I am posting this particular video because at about 06:50 there is an animated sequence about what happens within the nucleus during a nuclear explosion, etc. I thought it might be useful for Lauren's segment.
Enjoy :)
Here is my rather hasty log of the 20 minute clip. I will also post it on our google docs.
http://www.archive.org/details/StaySafe1960
TITLE: Stay Safe, Stay Strong read more...
Check out James Hansen of NASA & Columbia University
http://www.charlierose.com/shows/2008/08/12/2/a-conversation-with-james-... Video on line
on Stopping Coal Development and Limiting Nuclear; developing alternative approaches.
'Global Warming 20 years later'
Leader in advice on Global Warming
Check out 'The Nuclear Illusion' at: http://www.rmi.org/sitepages/pid504.php and several articles with names at that site, especially 'The Case Against Nuclear'
Some other Orgs to check out, possibly find an Interviewee:
Citizens Action Network
Citizens for Safe Power
Committee for Nuclear Responsibility
Connectcuit Coalition Against Millstone
Greenpeace
Nuclear Control Institute
Vermont Public Interest Research Group
Institute for Energy & Environmental Research
Hi team,
Thanks to everyone who offered to help out with the Paradise shoot this full mooned Friday night (Aug. 15th).
If you are planning to come on this shoot, we'll meet around 10:30pm. at CCTV and head over to the Paradise. We can aim to start the shoot around 11pm or so. If you're planning to hang out at the club beforehand, great! (Let me know because I might join you.) For those peeps, we'll just meet up at the club. Come out and look for CCTV people a little before 11pm.
Also, get a little dolled up if you're feelin it because people may be warmer to us if we look like we're part of the night life!
Thanks!
Therese
Here's my cell: 617-386-3008
Lots more vids of Yucca on YouTube
Here are some links to things we discussed with Tyler on the tour:
First, Dr. Patrick Moore (one of the founders of Greenpeace who quit the
organization because of its increasingly radical positions) founded his own
coalition called the Clean and Safe Energy Coalition or CASEnergy Coalition
which actually speaks for nuclear energy. Their website is here:
http://www.casenergy.org/
Second, here are links to short 1 page fact sheets which describe security
upgrades to nuclear facilities, current state of nuclear safety at existing
facilities, non-proliferation, used-fuel transportation, used-fuel management,
economics and finance:
http://web.mit.edu/tyler9/www/BowmanANSseminar/
Third, as I mentioned on the tour, Amory Lovins newest paper "The Nuclear
Illusion" contains numerous falsehoods and misrepresentations. This link goes
to a weblog which dissects Lovins incorrect analyses. Lovins is given the read more...
The MITR is a 5-megawatt research reactor owned and operated by MIT. The MITR has carried out interdisciplinary research in advanced materials and fuel testing for next-generation nuclear systems. One of the many capabilities of the MITR involves the use of in-core loops and the ability to reach temperatures of up to 1,600 degrees centigrade. This allows researchers to replicate nuclear power reactor conditions to study the behavior of advanced materials and fuel designs for next-generation nuclear reactors. The MITR contains a wide range of irradiation facilities that are utilized for various nuclear applications such as neutron transmutation doping, neutron science and neutron capture therapy.
Be good if we contact Red Cross for their role, as well a number of people at the Reactor, in Nuclear Engineering Dept., and our representatives.
From Red Cross site: http://www.redcross.org/services/disaster/0,1082,0_319_,00.html
Each year, the American Red Cross responds immediately to more than 70,000 disasters, including house or apartment fires (the majority of disaster responses), hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, hazardous materials spills, transportation accidents, explosions, and other natural and man-made disasters.
spotlight
The Good News Is That We Can Help read more...
Amory Bloch Lovins (born November 13, 1947 in Washington, DC) is Chairman and Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute, a MacArthur Fellowship recipient (1993), and author and co-author of many books on renewable energy and energy efficiency.
Soft energy technologies are those based on solar, wind, biofuels, geothermal, etc. For Lovins, large-scale electricity production facilities had an important place, but it was a place that they were already filling; in general, more would not be needed. One of his main concerns, was the danger of committing to nuclear energy to meet a society's energy needs.[3] read more...
Yucca Mt. was designated in 1987, was to have opened in 1998, now may open in 2017.
Much research and construction has been done at the site at considerable expense, but there are many problems and considerable opposition from: Native Americans, Nevada, environmentalists and Obama, etc.
Lacking an operating repository, however, the federal government owes to the utilities somewhere between $300 and $500 million per year in compensation for failing to comply with the contract it signed to take the spent nuclear fuel by 1998.[6]
For history of disposal and problems with this chosen site, see:
UPDATE (as of 8/10):
This shoot is possibly canceled. I'll post final word after class tomorrow.
Thanks,
Therese
-------------------------
Dear Project Documentary,
I am interested in doing a shoot this week (or next) at the Paradise Bar on Albany Street. (I'd prefer a Thursday or Friday night.)
I am wondering if I could get a small crew together for either this Friday night, August 8th, or next Friday, August 15th. Would anyone be able to join? I am particularly in need of a camera wiz.
If you're down, please let me know which night works best for you. My email is tccondit@gmail.com.
Thanks!
Therese
Last night at the MITR tour, Tyler explained a few procedures for testing the casks that transport nuclear fuel to reactor sites, etc. They are made of lead and steel and are so heavy that they can only be handled by cranes. Testing may be done by burning the cask in jet fuel, dropping it from hundreds of feet onto a pointed surface or flying planes into them! This clip is of one such test.
More Nuclear Sites 8/3/08
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_reactor
Hi vs Lo enriched uranium use in research reactors around the world.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf61.html
Very good article on research reactors around the world: variety, methods & uses.
http://www.iaea.org/worldatom/rrdb/
Has list of all research reactor around the world.
http://www.etsu.edu/writing/3120f99/zctb3/nuclear2.htm
On Waste disposal; a little old, though progress in this field is very slow. Also not mentioned in ‘Safety’ articles.
http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/nuregs/brochures/br0216/
Fed.Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Waste; Controls MIT & Research reactors.
http://www.thebulletin.org/web-edition/reports/nuclear-waste-repository-...
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists--Dutch reactors, Args. against recycling of fuel.
Very interesting article @ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanford_Site
eg: Established in 1943 as part of the Manhattan Project, it was home to the B-Reactor, the first full-scale plutonium production reactor in the world.[1] Plutonium manufactured at the site was used in the first nuclear bomb, tested at the Trinity site, and in Fat Man, the bomb detonated over Nagasaki, Japan.... read more...
Wrote to Lynette Cheah, a Grad Student in the Energy Systems Division of the School of Engineering. She did not know anything about the reactor & referred me to the American Nuclear society.
Wrote & Spoke to Else Olivetti, Post-Doc Associate for the MIT Energy Initiative. She does not know about the reactor either, but says to call back for further contacts after the tour, if needed. Wanted to know more about topics of interest to us.
Website & Info: Potential contacts
We are in touch with some, eg. Tyler Ellis
http://web.mit.edu/ans/www/officers.html
We need to follow up on reactor role in MIT's work on developing nuclear power approaches.
I'll try, but all are welcome to use this site for info.
This is last year's info, but probably of some use. Referred to me by an energy Club member.
Everybody, please check your e-mails to make sure that you got my message with the B-roll shoot logs. I sent it out on July 21.
As it turns out, the NRL has done certain experiments whose results are relevant to currently used nuclear power plants:
http://web.mit.edu/nrl/www/research/in_core.htm
If we want to go this route, we should choose one of these experiments, maybe the one that has the most obvious benefit, that we (or an interviewee) could quickly explain.
I spoke with Tom Newton the Associate Director of Reactor Engineering and Operations about the possibility of taking the tour of the Reactor. He said we can certainly take the tour and he is checking to see when times are available. So my question is to everyone: who would like to go on the tour? I will have more info shortly.
Hey Everyone,
It seems most of us have problem of hearing back from the person whom we emailed. Julie and i tried to contact Ralph Lopez and fortunately she could talk to him through phone and he is willing to give an interview but that is possible only after 3 weeks as he has to travel somewhere. Beside these two guys, it is quite hard to find another person who is against of the MIT-location.
Usually, when you make any documentary film, one has to have some kind of legitimate paper work or any brief notice from the production house is required to show when you approach people for interviews. I think just emailing people is not enough to convince. Anyway, that's what think. Yours views might be different.
I have emailed Tyler Ellis and Ed Lau again tonight.
I am not having any luck hearing back. I will
try phoning them tomorrow.
Tyler S Ellis
toSarah Brett
cceslau@mit.edu,
kadak@mit.edu,
kazimi@mit.edu,
todreas@mit.edu
dateThu, Jun 26, 2008 at 4:56 PM
subjectRe: Tour of Nuclear Reactor
mailed-bymit.edu
hide details Jun 26 Reply
Hello Sarah,
Thanks for your email. The main point of contact for the Nuclear Reactor
Laboratory is the Reactor Superintendent Ed Lau (eslau@mit.edu). He will be
able to speak with you more in depth about what can be filmed and what can't.
I also CCed this email to three different Professors in the Department of
Nuclear Science and Engineering at MIT, Professor Andrew Kadak, Professor Mujid
Kazimi and Professor Neil Todreas. Hopefully a few of them will have some time
to meet with you. Since I'm both a supervisor at the reactor as well as a read more...
No emails from:
Officer Frank Pasquarello (PIO, Public Information Officer for the Cambridge Police).
So I called and left a message.
----------------------------------------------
No emails from:
Deputy Chief James Burns (PIO for Cambridge Fire).
So I called and found out that for on-air interviews I need to speak with John Gelinas, Chief of Operations.
He was in. I called, but he did not pick up. I left a message.
--------------------------------------------------
However, I did receive a voicemail from Lou DiBerardinis, MIT Environmental Health Office.
He said that Cambridge Fire contacted him about my inquiry. And that he wanted to know what the project was all about, since they have not been contacted. His last sentence was: "so I can let the fire department know whether it was ok to talk to you guys".
Let me get this straight: MIT is telling the Fire Department whether the Fire Department can talk to us?
What's that all about?
I have spoken with David O'Connor, Emergency Management Director for Cambridge. He needs to get an "ok" from the City Manager Bob Healy to do an on-air interview. But on the phone he seemed amenable to the idea. He will get back to me in 1-2 business days.
Ini Tomeu, Public Information Officer, passed me along to Susan Feinberg who gave me police and fire public information officers' contacts:
Officer Frank Pasquarello (police) and Deputy Chief James Burns.
I have emailed both of them, and have yet to hear back.
So possibly one interview with the city's pov.
Nuclear Article sites:
1. University reactors & terrorism 2/08
# Story Highlights
# Congressional report: University-based nuclear reactors at risk for terrorism
# Nuclear Regulatory Commission: Report is flawed, attack scenarios highly unlikely
# There are 37 research reactors in the United States
# Report identifies potential shortcomings at some of the reactors investigators visited
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/02/12/congress.nuclear/index.html
http://www.ekonoiz.com/Eko_Noiz_Eco_Facts/Nuclear_Facts.htm
newsfromchernobyl.blogspot.com/2008/01/reactor-cited-for-minor-violations-by.html
on MIT error 1/08
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V127/N62/nrc.html
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V127/N62/nrc.html
Palo Verde: http://phoenix.about.com/cs/utilities/a/paloverde.htm
30.4 million megawatts of power, largest in country, serves 4 Mill. with elect. since ’88 read more...
Hello everyone and mainly to the instructors,
I was talking about attorney David Hoicka who is one of the initiator to move the MIT-Nuclear Reactor from densely populated area of cambridge. His co-founder for that step is Mr. Ralph Lopez. I was trying to email them but i found only Ralph Lopez email and i email him about our project and the interview. However, i found David's phone number but i feel comfortable by emailing them. Anyway, here is their information or biographies. Both of them tried to run for State Senator and State Representative in 1998. However, they couldnt make it. You can also check the following email that i wrote. If you have any suggestion about the email, please let me know sooner. I might also need help if i have to talk to them through phone.
thanks guys.
PS: The picture is Mr. Ralph Lopez.
Ralph Lopez for State Senator
(Cambridge, East Boston, North End, Winthrop and Revere, Massachusetts)
· Writer read more...