----- Original Message -----
From: Greenpeace Press Releases <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <undisclosed-recipients:;>
Sent: Monday, January 15, 2001 12:11 PM
Subject: [ENWL-eng] Deadly plutonium shipment set to leave Europe this week


>
>
>                Deadly plutonium shipment set to leave Europe  this week ã
>                           Greenpeace warns en route  countries
>
>
>
> London, Jan 15th 2001. Greenpeace today warned coastal nations  around the
world to
> be on high alert for a deadly weapons-usable  plutonium/MOX fuel shipment
from
> Europe to Japan. The armed  nuclear transport freighters the Pacific
Pintail and Pacific
> Teal  began to leave the British port of Barrow-in-Furness this morning
bound for the
> French port of Cherbourg where they will load the  plutonium cargo before
an eight
> week 30,000km journey to Japan.  The ships, each have three 30mm canon and
armed
> nuclear police  onboard. The transport is expected to begin late on
Wednesday  January
> 17th.
>
> This will be the first transport of plutonium/MOX fuel to Japan  since
1999 after which
> BNFL admitted irregularities in quality  control records and previous
shipments of MOX
> fuel have still not  been loaded into reactors as a result of legal action
in Japan.
>
> Last night special forces from the French anti-terrorist police  (GIPN)
arrested
> Greenpeace France protesters while they were  blocking a railway line in
Cherbourg. The
> line is used by Cogema  to transport nuclear material to the port from its
nearby facilities.
>
>
> The British, French and Japanese governments and the nuclear  companies
responsible
> (1) have not provided any information on  the departure date, route to be
taken or the
> amount of plutonium  to be transported. Despite strong international
opposition to these
> potentially devastating transports there has been no prior  consultation
with en-route
> countries. An official announcement of  the route is only expected 24
hours after
> departure.
>
> Three principal routes are possible: via the Caribbean Sea,  Panama Canal,
then across
> the Pacific; via South Africa/Cape of  Good Hope, the Tasman Sea and the
South
> Pacific; or via South  America/Cape Horn, and the south Pacific. (2, and
Map  available)
>
>
> The transport is one of an increasing number scheduled over the  coming
years.
> According to the Japanese Foreign Ministry all  three routes will be used
in a õwell
> balanced manneræ. In addition,  it stressed it would be impossible not to
use the Panama
> Canal  route.(3)
>
> õThe nuclear industry has no credibility and its claims that these
transports are safe lack
> credibility. A cargo of hundreds of  kilograms of plutonium, high
explosive ammunition,
> and fuel oil is a  recipe for environmental disaster. The industryôs
refusal to  conduct an
> international environmental impact assessment and  hold prior consultation
and approval
> talks with the en-route  nations, highlights the disregard they have for
public health and
> the  environment,æ said Shaun Burnie of Greenpeace International.
>
> The plutonium/MOX fuel cargo was produced by the Belgian  company
Belgonucleaire,
> from plutonium reprocessed by the  French state-owned company Cogema. It
is owned
> by the worldôs  largest electrical utility, Tokyo Electric Power, and is
to be loaded  into
> the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa unit 3 nuclear reactor in the Niigata  Prefecture
on the Sea of
> Japan coast. Plutonium MOX fuel  produced by Belgonucleaire for Tokyo
Electric and
> delivered in  September 1999 has still not been loaded into a reactor. In
August  2000 a
> court action was brought by nearly 1000 Japanese citizens  against Tokyo
Electric
> seeking an injunction against plans to load  the MOX fuel. The case was
based upon on
> evidence of  irregularities in the quality control data for the
Belgonucleaire  MOX. The
> court is expected to rule on this case in February.
>
> The credibility of the plutonium industry is at an all time low  following
the falsification
> scandal. It led to Japanese government  ministers and industry describing
BNFL as
> untrustworthy and not  a company they can do business with. Having
deceived one of
> their most important clients for several years BNFLôs reassuring
statement that their
> ships are some of the safest in the world are  unconvincing.
>
> õUnfortunately, ships have accidents and so does the nuclear  industry.
The 1999
> criticality accident at Tokai-mura in Japan was  impossible according to
the Japanese
> government. But it  happened. Shipping plutonium around the planet across
some of  the
> most dangerous seas in the world is inherently dangerous and  wholly
unjustified,æ said
> Burnie.
>
> For further information:
> Shaun Burnie ã Greenpeace International   ++ 31 629 00 11 32  (mobile)
> Mike Townsley ã Greenpeace International  ++ 31 20 523 62 18  or ++ 31 621
29 69 18
> (mobile)
>
> Video footage of Greenpeace France protests at Valogne and  Cherbourg is
available
> from Michael Luze at Greenpeace France.  Tel: ++33 1 44 64 02 14
> Photos of Greenpeace France Protests available from GPI  Picture Desk ++31
20 524
> 9580
> A Map of transport routes is available from Greenpeace  International
Picture Desk
> ++31 20 524 9580
> And on our website  <www.greenpeace.org/~nuclear/transport/mox00>
>
> NOTES TO EDITORS:
> BritishNuclear Fuels (BNFL), Cogema and Japanese utility  Tokyo Electric
Power
>
> Thereis, in addition, a possible fourth route, past South Africa  and the
South China
>     Sea, via the Malluca Straits.
>
> The Nuclear Fuel Division of the Japanese Foreign Ministry  issued its
statement in
>     response to a question from Diet  Member Fukushima on December 18th.
>
> The Pacific Pintail and Pacific Teal are operated by Pacific  Nuclear
Transport Ltd, in
>     which British Nuclear Fuels  (BNFL) has a majority stake.
>
> A   second nuclear shipment also bound for Japan left France  at the end
of December
>     carrying high level nuclear waste.  The highly radioactive waste is
being carried on
>     board the  Pacific Swan, which has just rounded Cape Horn amidst a
storm of
>     protest.
>
> Cogema has sought an injunction against Greenpeace France  in a bid to
prevent protest
> actions against the departure of the  transports from Cherbourg.
> end
>
> For information on Greenpeace please visit:
>
> http://www.greenpeace.org
>
> High-bandwidth users can view current and archive streaming
> Greenpeace videos  at:
>
> http://www.tappedintogreenpeace.org
>
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> -----------
>
> For more information on this press release please contact:
> Greenpeace International Press Office
> T: ++ 31 20 5249515
> F: ++ 31 20 5236212
>
> --
>                ------------- *  ENWL (English) * --------
>           Ecological  North West Line * St. Petersburg, Russia
>            E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  http://www.enwl.net.ru
>             -----------------------------------------------
>


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