Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 11:19AM
Gravelines nuclear power plant (France), steam generator replacement.
Framatome ANP has replaced 79 steam generators in Europe and in the United
States, i.e. more than any other industrialist in the world.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 11:20AM
Framatome ANP supplies the most comprehensive array of nuclear services in the
world.
We currently perform the full range of inspection and maintenance services on
all types of PWR and BWR reactors, based on the most advanced techniques
available today.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 11:23AM
Frametome is an Areva subsidiary. World leader in the design and construction
of nuclear power plants, and the supply of fuel, maintenance and modernization
services.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 11:29AM
French technology is nothing to laugh about. When you want to post a photo of a
40 year old French car in a wrecking yard, every one else LAUGHS in your
pathetic face. If you worked in high technology as I do, you would realize that
the US is not the only country. Europe and Japan are both kicking are asses in
many fields -- not all, but many.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 12:46PM
yeah the japs do kick the ass in most technological aspects, and i agree, if
you look at tech 40 years old then its obviously gonna suck, where did america
have 40 years ago? slave labour and donkeys... wow high tech.... we are gonna
look back on this photo 40 years from now and laugh about how primitive it was
pro_junior Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 04:49PM
only a little bit shiny

John_Stone Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 04:52PM
Not to sneeze at French reactors or anything, just speaking generally: The
sooner we consider nuclear power primitive, the better, IMHO. At least until we
can make the waste non-radioactive somehow.
John_Stone Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 04:52PM
What are the french doing with the waste? I ask out of sheer curiosity.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 05:15PM
Actually, the French really are the world leaders in the development of nuclear
technology. We haven't built a new nuclear power plant in the U.S. in over 30
years because of the aftermath of Three Mile Island.
pro_junior Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 06:09PM
seems a bit phallic...
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 08:06PM
"where did america have 40 years ago? slave labour and donkeys"
You ignorant idiot, 50 years ago the United States was the the pioneering nation
in the development of nuclear technology. Ever here of the Manhattan
Project?
And yes, the major problem with nuclear power is the incredibly toxic waste that
NOBODY knows what to do with.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 09:09PM
Exactly right in NJ!!
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 02, 2005 09:35PM
>>What are the french doing with the waste? I ask out of sheer
curiosity.
France is 20 years ahead of anyone in this field and processes nuclear waste for
many foreign countries as well as their own. France generates 80% of its
electricity with nuclear generated power with 60 power plants.
"The COGEMA (part of AREVA, www.cogema.com) La Hague site, located on the
western tip of the Cotentin Peninsula in Normandy France, reprocesses spent
power reactor fuel to recycle reusable energy materials-uranium and
plutonium-and to condition the waste into suitable final form."
Here is a reprocessing example of COGEMA's contract with the power companies of
Japan :
Executive summary
The first transport of MOX fuel from Europe to Japan initiated in 1999 the
process of recycled nuclear fuel return from Europe to Japan; it complements the
transport of spent nuclear fuel from Japan to Europe (over 160 shipments) and
the vitrified residues return from France to Japan (approximately 1 shipment a
year for about a decade). Similar MOX fuel transports will be performed in the
years to come on a regular basis.
In February 1997, the Japanese government stated that, in accordance with the
country's long-term nuclear energy commitment, it was necessary for Japan to
start utilising MOX fuel in its commercial nuclear reactors as soon as possible.
Later that month, the Japanese electric power companies unveiled their plans to
utilise MOX fuel in 16 to 18 reactors by 2010.
MOX fuel is manufactured in Europe with plutonium recovered at British and
French reprocessing facilities under long-standing commercial contracts between
BNFL (UK), COGEMA (France) and Japanese electric power companies. BNFL and
COGEMA have an extensive track record in safely manufacturing, and transporting
MOX fuel to various utilities in Europe.
How is radioactive waste disposed of?
In the nuclear industry, storage and disposal mean very different things: a
nuclear waste can be either stored temporarily or disposed of definitively.
Low-level, short-lived waste packages are monitored, bar code labeled and routed
to ANDRA's near-surface disposal facility near Soulaines in the Aube Department.
They are stacked in concrete vaults and separated from each other by grout or
gravel. The vault is sealed with an impermeable concrete slab. The vaults are
monitored continuously and the location of each waste package in the vault is
entered into the database.
Long-lived high- and medium-level waste is stored first, primarily at La Hague.
In 2006, the French Parliament will make a decision on the final disposal method
to be used for this long-lived nuclear waste.
There is much more to this information page.
This is taken from COGEMA's site at
[
www.cogema.com]
John_Stone Report This Comment Date: October 03, 2005 12:10AM
Thanks.
John_Stone Report This Comment Date: October 03, 2005 12:12AM
George_in_New_Jersey@195176: Unfortunately, capitalists are anti-environment.
More people need the environment than need money, so perhaps that is to say that
hard-core capitalists are anti-human too.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 03, 2005 01:35AM
well actually the waste can be disposed of efficiently, the australians have
nearly finished developing a tech called "synroc" it works by turning
the uranium back in to its original harmless rock form, as it is non radioactive
in this form it can be safely buried back in the mines where it came from.
and when i said slave labour and donkeys i was being *slighly* sarcastic, i dont
think low of americans, just th 1% of them that are duds and no nothing about
anything outside of america, one of our australia tv shows went over to times
square with a map and asked about 40 americans to put a pin where they thought
australia was, over 50% put it in america, some in artica, france, and one was
in the pacific ocean, only 3 got it right (if you count putting it in bali as
getting it right then there was 4)
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 03, 2005 05:09AM
Would you all please sign on to "whogivesafuck.com" and discuss this
matter further..
John_Stone Report This Comment Date: October 03, 2005 06:14AM
If you don't give a fuck, then why do you bother posting a response? Or do you
just need to talk so that someone will hear you?
148102: thanks for the info on synroc, sounds pretty amazing. I'll keep my
eyes open for more news.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 04, 2005 05:21PM
"with a map and asked about 40 Americans to put a pin where they thought
Australia was, over 50% put it in America"
The US is a different place. It is definitely more socially stratified or
polarized than most nations. There are either very educated intelligent people
or incredibly ignorant people. Unfortunately, the ignorant people tend to
attract more attention and create a major image problem for the U.S. There is no
way the TV show 'survey' is a statistically valid way to draw conclusions about
American society. First of all New York is probably one of the most myopic
insular self-centered regions of the U.S. Also, the more intelligent educated
people were probably busy working instead of wandering around Times Square.
Still, it is ubelievable how ignorant a lot of Americans are, especially in this
global communication era made possible by the internet.
Anonymous Report This Comment Date: October 04, 2005 10:26PM
I'd have to agree with you 208121. I count my self lucky that I work for a
company that has put me in 4 different countries in the last 10 years. It has
been a real eye opener, and given me a real humbleness about being American.
There are a lot of great people/countries out there!