Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




CIVIL NUCLEAR
40 India nuclear plant workers contaminated: firm
by Staff Writers
Jaipur, India (AFP) July 24, 2012


More than 40 workers at a nuclear power station in northern India have been exposed to tritium radiation in two separate leaks in the past five weeks, company managers said on Tuesday.

The first accident occurred on June 23 when 38 people were exposed during maintenance work on a coolant channel at the Rajasthan Atomic Power Station in Rawatbhata, senior plant manager Vinod Kumar told AFP.

Two of them received radiation doses equivalent to the annual permissible limit, he said, but all those involved have returned to work.

In a second incident last Thursday, another four maintenance workers at the plant were exposed to tritium radiation while they were repairing a faulty seal on a pipe.

India is on a nuclear power drive, with a host of plants based on Russian, Japanese, American and French technology under consideration or construction.

The country's growing economy is currently heavily dependent on coal, getting less than three percent of its energy from its existing atomic plants, and the government hopes to raise the figure to 25 percent by 2050.

But environmental watchdogs have expressed concerns about safety in India, where small-scale industrial accidents due to negligence or poor maintenance are commonplace and regulatory bodies are often under-staffed and under-funded.

The director of the Rajasthan power station, C.P. Jamb, confirmed the second accident to AFP but said the radiation was within permissible limits and posed no health threat.

"The workers were exposed to radiation from 10 to 25 per cent of the annual limit," Jamb said. "Such minor leakages keep on happening but they cause no harm."

C.D. Rajput, director of the unit where the leak happened, also said the radiation exposure "was well under the limits and all the workers are working normally".

No explanation was immediately available as to why the first incident at the plant took a month to emerge.

In May 2011, four labourers were exposed to low levels of radiation at the Kakrapur Atomic Power Station in eastern Gujarat state.

In November 2009, workers at a nuclear plant in southern Karnataka state fell ill after radioactive water contaminated their drinking water.

Tritium is a mildly radioactive isotope of hydrogen.

.


Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CIVIL NUCLEAR
Stanford researchers calculate global health impacts of the Fukushima nuclear disaster
Stanford CA (SPX) Jul 23, 2012
Radiation from Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster may eventually cause anywhere from 15 to 1,300 deaths and from 24 to 2,500 cases of cancer, mostly in Japan, Stanford researchers have calculated. The estimates have large uncertainty ranges, but contrast with previous claims that the radioactive release would likely cause no severe health effects. The numbers are in addition ... read more


CIVIL NUCLEAR
Lockheed Martin Receives Contract For PAC-3 MSE Production

US building missile defense station in Qatar: report

Raytheon reveals new missile defense system architectural analysis capability

Raytheon awarded $636 million for Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Lockheed Martin Receives U.S. Army Contract For Guided MLRS Rockets

Boeing Receives US Navy Contracts for SLAM ER and Harpoon Missiles

Lockheed Martin Completes First LRASM Captive Carriage Test

Ukraine jails two N. Koreans for missile spying

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Britain and France sign two deals on drone cooperation

US drone strike kills 10 militants in Pakistan

Insitu ScanEagle set for Australia's navy

Northrop Grumman, AUVSI Partner to Develop Unmanned Systems Engineers

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Lockheed Martin Completes On-Orbit Testing of First US Navy MUOS Satellite

Northrop Grumman's RC-12X Airborne Signals Intelligence System Completes 1,000th Mission

Raytheon's vehicular soldier radio system links 37 different types of US, coalition radios

Lockheed Martin to Support Intelligence Analysis Worldwide Under DIA Solutions Contract

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Northrop Grumman Awarded contract for Continuing BACN Mission Support

Northrop Grumman Delivers First B-1 Radar Modification Kit

12 die in Brunei helicopter crash

Small Diameter Bomb II finds, hits moving target

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Israel's IAI signs Italian deals worth $1B

Colorado gun sales soar after mass shooting: report

'Word by word' arguments at UN over arms trade treaty

Italy, Israel in defense deals

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Obama defends his foreign policy ahead of Romney trip

Gun culture thrives despite US massacre

EU should step up joint defence drive, France says

US, China hold two days of human rights talks

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Researchers Create Highly Conductive and Elastic Conductors Using Silver Nanowires

Silver nanoparticle synthesis using strawberry tree leaf

UK nanodevice builds electricity from tiny pieces

Ferroelectricity on the Nanoscale




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement