Thursday, September 28, 2017

This is the Southern Company and Voglte 3 and 4 in a year

So basically the licensees have total control of site information as long as the money keeps flowing. Then the truth comes out when the money stops. These are basically very complication business, political and public events. This reminds of cascaded event. It eventually totally overwhelms the executives and regulators of  all styles. This will be Vogtle in a year. Remember how the Southern company has handled their clean coal plant failure. I just think the whole lot of them is riddled with corruption. Nobody is ethical and the laws have been weakened over the decades, they just enforce even the weak laws.

The failure of Summer is drawing massive attention and transparency forces into these unprecedented event. The times that we live under is highly unstable. There is just too much black and white thinking. Forces will turn on you in a dime when the money stops flowing. It is going to upend the politics in Southern Carolina and seriously threaten the business theology in the south.  

This will be the Vogtle and Southern Company in a year. The cascading event will shock you for years on end.

The theme here across the nation are the utilities are trying to put on the grid the most expensive electricity they can think of to mitigate the depressionary forces of cheap natural gas.

SCANA’s future cloudy as furor over failed nuclear plant intensifies
By SAMMY FRETWELL
September 27, 2017 8:19 PM
Reeling from its failure to complete two nuclear reactors, Cayce-based SCANA is on the ropes, struggling to survive as the only major investor-owned power company headquartered in South Carolina.
Angry ratepayers are filing lawsuits, federal and state agencies are investigating, and politicians are promising to bar the utility from getting any more money from customers to pay for the bungled V.C. Summer reactor project, northwest of Columbia.
The state Office of Regulatory Staff also took steps Tuesday that could force SCANA to repay up to $1.7 billion that it has collected from customers for the project. The agency takes its case Thursday to the state Public Service Commission.
Once a pillar of Columbia’s business community, questions now are being raised about whether SCANA will be forced to file for bankruptcy or if a larger, out-of-state utility will seek to acquire SCE&G’s parent company.
SCANA’s troubles have sent its stock price plummeting to its lowest point in months — closing at $51.22 a share Wednesday, down from $75 in early summer.
Some state lawmakers say they want to see SCANA remain a S.C.-headquartered business. But they also are incensed over the nuclear reactor project’s failure.
“There has been a lot of concern about this and does it hurt South Carolina to lose its only investor-owned utility,’’ said state Rep. James, Smith, D-Richland. “However, the utility is reaping what they have sown.’’
Smith, a member of a House committee investigating the nuclear project’s failure, said “accountability is essential.’’
‘A much harsher stand’
SCANA and its junior partner, the state-owned Santee Cooper utility, shut down the two-reactor project they were building July 31.
The bankruptcy of chief contractor Westinghouse was a major reason the project could not be finished, the utilities said, adding the project had become too expensive and was not needed, as energy demand leveled off.
By then, however, the companies had spent $9 billion on the project and raised their customers’ rates 14 times to pay for the work.
Securities analysts interviewed by The State said they doubt SCANA, a relatively small utility, would be an attractive target for a bigger utility to buy — at least now. There is too much uncertainty surrounding the company, they said.
Neil Kalton, with Wells Fargo Securities, said a key drawback for SCANA is the lack of clarity over whether the company will be able to recoup its costs associated with the nuclear plant. The company previously had said it wanted up to $2.2 billion from ratepayers to help offset the costs of the failed plant.
“Really, this whole cost-recovery issue needs to be resolved before (other) parties might come in,’’ Kalton said of SCANA’s attractiveness as a takeover target.
Bankruptcy would grant SCANA relief from lawsuits by ratepayers and stockholders seeking damages, while giving it time to reorganize, said Elliott, who represents the S.C. Energy Users Committee, a group of industries that use large amounts of electricity.
Should a larger utility acquire SCANA and stabilize electricity rates, it could be a win for customers, some legislators say.
North Carolina’s Duke Energy, Dominion Energy of Virginia and the Southern Co. of Georgia have been mentioned as possible suitors.
“Duke has been a good operator in South Carolina,’’ said state Sen. Greg Gregory, R-Lancaster. “They would be capable of taking over SCE&G and running it.’’
State Rep. Kirkman Finlay, R-Richland, said providing customers with more affordable power rates and less devotion to stockholders would cure a lot of SCANA’s ills.
“Their lineman are getting screamed at, their employees are getting screamed at, and they had nothing to do with this,’’ Finlay said. “We need somebody who can come in there, cut costs, save the company and restore its credibility.’’
Attorney says Gov. McMaster considering him to help run Santee Cooper
Columbia attorney Steve Hamm said Wednesday that Gov. Henry McMaster contacted him several weeks ago about whether Hamm would help out with Santee Cooper’s leadership.
Hamm, executive director of the S.C. Ethics Commission, said the governor has not extended a formal offer. But Hamm said he would consider an offer.
“This is not something that I have sought,” said Hamm, who once was the state’s longtime consumer advocate, sometimes arguing electric rate cases.
Santee Cooper’s current chief executive, Lonnie Carter, announced last month he will retire early next year.
The state-owned Santee Cooper utility was the junior partner with SCANA in the aborted attempt to build two nuclear power plants in Fairfield County.
Santee Cooper is managed by a board of directors whose members are appointed by the governor — who has said he wants to sell the utility — with the consent of the state Senate. The board chooses the CEO.
Hamm said he would take the job without any preconditions. “I don’t have any marching orders.”
Before recommending any action, Hamm said, he would want to work with experts to study Santee Cooper’s obligations and debt.

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Junk Plant River Bend: Power Has Been Jumping Around Like A Grasshopper For Last 6 Days  

Where did Grand Gulf go?

Vogtle At The Precipice 

Imagine if the non licensed engineer is big here?

The good news for backers of Plant Vogtle’s expanded nuclear capacity  
September 26, 2017

Plant Vogtle construction site in 2016. Johnny Edwards, jedwards@ajc.com
Last week, a small but influential online magazine that follows energy and environmental issues noted a slight shift in the Washington pecking order.
U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., has been placed in charge of the survival of nuclear energy in the United States, E&E Daily reported. Isakson inherits the informal position from his Senate colleagues in South Carolina, where utilities decided to abandon the construction of two nuclear reactors.
The cancellation leaves just two new nuclear units being built in the United States — both a part of the Plant Vogtle expansion in east Georgia.
“We’re kind of the last of the Indians here, with South Carolina dropping out,” Isakson said via telephone this week. “We’re not only the lead dog – we’re the only dog.”
If you follow Georgia politics, you’re probably aware of the two election cycles currently in play. Leadership contests in Georgia cities will resolve themselves in November or, as is likely in Atlanta mayor’s race, with a December runoff.
Then there’s the 2018 race for governor and other state elections. A first culling will come with the May primaries.
Sen. Johnny Isakson, R – Ga. Curtis Compton/ccompton@ajc.com
But there’s a third campaign in between – the fight over Georgia Power’s decision to continue the construction of two new nuclear reactors. The Vogtle expansion was already more than three years behind schedule and $3 billion over budget when its key contractor, Westinghouse Electric, filed bankruptcy in March.
The campaign to save the Vogtle expansion — or kill it — has two legs. The state Public Service Commission voted last week to begin a review of Georgia Power’s plan to keep going that will culminate with an up-or-down vote in February.
Georgia Power presents its case in November. Opponents have their say in December.
Then there’s the fight in D.C. that Isakson now has charge of, which is likely to play out in the final days of 2017.
Georgia Power and other sponsors of the Vogtle expansion are eligible for an $800 million tax credit if the reactors are up and operating by Jan. 1, 2021.
The tax credit is essential to making the expansion economically viable. But hope of meeting that deadline has dried up. Georgia Power says the new reactors will be operational by late 2022, at a cost of $28 billion — about double the original estimate.
Isakson said he’s likely to tack an extension for the nuclear energy tax credit to “catch-all” legislation in late December, perhaps coupled with tax breaks targeted for wind, solar or biomass interests.
“There are plenty of opportunities. There are also plenty of folks who have an interest in tax credits in the Senate who will need help getting theirs through,’ Isakson said. “I know who they are and where some of them live.”
Isakson’s new role as a protector of nuclear power has an element of karma. In the early 1980s, at the beginning of his political career and when he first became the House minority leader in the state Capitol, Isakson was a key supporter of legislation that allowed the first nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle to be built.
So it’s no surprise that, like Gov. Nathan Deal, Isakson is giving full-throated support to Georgia Power’s decision to persevere. “To let what’s been done go to the wayside would be a tremendous injustice for our people,” Isakson said.
The political hazard is ratepayer resentment. Georgia Power customers have paid roughly $4 billion in surcharges to cover financing costs associated with Plant Vogtle — an advance payment made possible in 2009 by the Legislature.
All five members of the PSC are Republican. Two members, Chairman Stan Wise and Chuck Eaton, are up for re-election in November 2018.
But advocates for continuing construction of the two new Vogtle reactors got some good news on Monday.
Over the last few months, utilities with aging nuclear reactors in several states – Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey included — have found themselves under increased economic pressure from cheap natural gas, and have sought direct state subsidies.
In each case, environmentalists and consumer advocates have voiced concern, but it has been the American Petroleum Institute, a trade organization that also represents the fracking industry, that has largely financed the opposition.
PSC Chairman Wise said he’s been told the API does not plan to participate in the debate over Vogtle — which means that opponents of the Vogtle expansion will have to look elsewhere for cash.
Another development has also emerged over the last few months that could bode well for Vogtle supporters. We’ve seen Democrats attempt to nationalize the Sixth District congressional contest in Georgia. Democrat Stacey Abrams aims to do the same in next year’s gubernatorial contest.
Plant Vogtle supporters are following suit. They’re not abandoning their arguments for cheap, locally produced energy, but they’re also invoking the name of Vladimir Putin.
Keeping up this country’s nuclear expertise is essential to blocking the spread of nuclear weapons, argues Michael Shellenberger, co-founder of Breakthrough Institute, a think tank that focuses on environmental issues. He supports the expansion of nuclear power as an answer to climate change, but has also begun to argue that U.S. influence abroad is at stake, too.
“The United States has been really the leader and pioneer of creating teams and human infrastructure – nuclear cops at the [International Energy Agency] and elsewhere — to prevent any diversion of materials for weapons,” Shellenberger said.
“Nuclear energy isn’t going anywhere,” he said. “The Russians and the Chinese are going to dominate that market. So then it becomes a question of how concerned are you that the Russians and Chinese will be as effective as the United States has been in preventing the spread of weapons.”
At least one PSC member, Tim Echols, has echoed these sentiments. And Isakson said the national security argument is giving him additional traction in Washington.
Nuclear expertise, he said, is devolving on “Russia, China and a lot of other people who aren’t our friends.
“All the nuclear component parts – all the stuff is built in Japan and other places around the world. They’re not built in the United States,” Isakson said.
And that, friends, is the unfinished tale of an American nuclear renaissance that is close to going bust.

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Licensed Engineers Optional At The Failed Summer Facility  

Is it a NRC requirement?
Failing the 'prudent' test
On Sunday, The Post and Courier reported that not only had SCANA used unlicensed engineers to draw up hundreds of constantly-revised and sometimes impossible-to-build plans, but that in doing so the utility and its lead contractor Westinghouse might have violated state law.
South Carolina requires that drawings for large construction projects be stamped and signed by a licensed engineer. The law is designed to protect the public from potential hazards by ensuring that top professionals provide oversight to major works.
Obviously, the risks posed by nuclear reactors are significant, making that oversight even more critical.
And yet, SCANA and Westinghouse appear to have proceeded through years of construction — and constant delays, revisions and cost overruns — in disregard of those rules.,,

Monday, September 25, 2017

North Korea: Declaration of War on USA

I am surprised they haven't started shooting yet.
North Korea Says It Has the Right to Shoot Down U.S. Warplanes

By RICK GLADSTONESEPT. 25, 2017

North Korea’s foreign minister escalated tensions with the United States on Monday, saying that President Trump’s threatening comments about the country and its leadership were “a declaration of war” and that North Korea had the right to shoot down American warplanes, even if they are not in North Korean air space.

“The whole world should clearly remember it was the U.S. who first declared war on our country,” the foreign minister, Ri Yong-ho, told reporters as he was leaving the United Nations after a week of General Assembly meetings in New York.

“Since the United States declared war on our country, we will have every right to make countermeasures, including the right to shoot down United States strategic bombers even when they are not inside the airspace border of our country,” he said...

Friday, September 22, 2017

The Highly Suspicious High Altitude ICBM Test

Update Sept 2

I predicted it on 9/25. The implication of a successful test is mind boggling. This guy is a dead man and he knows it. As I said earlier, this guy is on the road to suicide.

It will knock out a lot of satellites if it is a high altitude burst.


CNN: North Korea could test a powerful nuclear weapon over the Pacific Ocean in response to US President Donald Trump's threats of military action, the country's foreign minister has warned.

Ri Yong Ho spoke to reporters in New York shortly after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made an unprecedented televised statement, accusing Trump of being "mentally deranged."

Originally published 9/25

OK, the setup. We proactively destroy the coastal ICBM, then they launch the doomsday ICBM from a secret interior site? 

Damn, these low probability and high consequence events, and increasingly becoming probable. It is now in the realm of doable. The mother of all black swan events.

They won't need any reentry technology...

Hmm, what about those extremely hypersonic experimental missiles we got. It could get to NKorea in a few ten minutes or so.

Scenario: How about the North Koreans detonating a hydrogen bomb/EMP in a inhabitable part of the pacific with insignificant damage. How will the world respond? Maybe a simultaneous invasion of Soul?

Will a high altitude hydrogen detonation, or set of detonations, destroy or destabilize our magnetic fields or ionosphere??? Do we got any surprises underneath this?

Could they knock out the space station? Yes, from a long way away. It would be a slow and gruesome deaths.  

It is a widespread satellite killer!!!

Honestly, North Korea is mostly not electrified. A EMP won't hurt them, especially with prior notification.

A large percentage of our nuclear plants melting down.

Think about it, we would lose a tremendous amount US wealth and our financial system would immediately freeze up. It would be a financial catastrophe for the whole world. 

I feel like now I am on the tv series the "Last Ship"?
 


Honestly, we can't allow them to launch another missile!!! 

The missile reached an altitude of about 3,000km (1,865 miles) and landed in the sea off Japan, the Japanese national broadcaster NHK said.
It comes three weeks after North Korea's first ICBM test.
In response, the US and South Korean military conducted a live-firing exercise using surface-to-surface missiles, a US defence official said.
The missiles were fired into the "territorial waters of South Korea along the east coast," a US military statement said.
The latest North Korean missile flew higher, further and for longer than the one in early July. Its launch has been condemned by a number of countries.
The test - the 14th carried out by North Korea in 2017 - is the latest to be conducted in defiance of a UN ban.
US President Donald Trump called it "only the latest reckless and dangerous action by the North Korean regime".
Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear nonproliferation expert at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California, said that initial indications showed the latest missile had a range of about 10,000km - far enough to strike the west coast of the United States and beyond.
The Washington Post reported that Denver and possibly Chicago could now be in North Korea's range.
Here is the doomsday site. Want they are really telegraphing to us is they can launch the doomday missile from anywhere they want. Launching it in darkness? Lets see, it nighttime in Nkorean, and daylight in the USA.
The latest missile was launched at 23:41 (15:41 GMT) from an arms plant in Jagang province in the north of the country, the Pentagon said.
It is unusual for North Korea to launch a missile at night - the significance is as yet unclear. No missiles had been fired from Jagang province before, indicating a previously-unknown launch site is operational.
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the missile flew for about 45 minutes - some six minutes longer than the ICBM tested in early July…

Friday, September 08, 2017

Asymmetric Weapon: North Korea's Hydrogen EMP Bomb Has Already Cost Us Many 100s of Millions of Dollars   

 
It is a Pearl Harbor Attack.

Dollar hits 10-month lows below ¥108 in Torokyo
The dollar dived below ¥108 for the first time in about 10 months in Tokyo trading on Friday, as a risk-averse mood grew amid heightened worries about the possibility of North Korea firing a ballistic missile, or conducting other provocations, on Saturday, the anniversary of the reclusive nation’s founding.

At 5 p.m., the dollar stood at ¥107.73-74, down from ¥108.99-109.00 at the same time Thursday. The euro was at $1.2048-1.2049, up from $1.1954-1.1954, and at ¥129.81-82, down from ¥130.30-30.

The dollar was weak around ¥108.30 in early trading in the wake of an overnight tumble of the key U.S. long-term interest rate on concerns over Hurricane Irma’s possible devastation on the U.S. economy and the European Central Bank’s downward revision in its inflation forecasts on Thursday.

Threat of North Korean EMP attack leaves Japan vulnerable

Pyongyang claims ability to trigger high-altitude electromagnetic pulse

Staff Writer
The North Korean nuclear crisis has fueled global concern over how much time is left before Pyongyang masters the technology required to miniaturize nuclear warheads and make the re-entry vehicles needed to deliver them on target.

But a Sept. 3 announcement by the reclusive state raised fears of another kind of attack that completely bypasses those hurdles: an electromagnetic pulse.

In Sunday’s announcement, Pyongyang claimed to have successfully tested a hydrogen bomb and said it had the ability to detonate one at high altitude to generate an EMP — an electromagnetic wave that would fry electronic devices and disrupt communications for hundreds of kilometers around.

A nuclear device detonated 30 km to 400 km above ground could disrupt nearly all types of electronics within range, including computers, power grids and communication systems, experts say. Recovery could take years.

“The electromagnetic pulse generated by a high-altitude nuclear explosion is one of a small number of threats that can hold our society at risk of catastrophic consequences,” concluded a 2008 report by a U.S. commission tasked with assessing such threats for Congress, the president and other key government bodies.

Wednesday, September 06, 2017

Cover-up at STP Nuclear Facility Over Hurricaine Harvey

Honestly I should be talking to a plant official, but non of these guys talk to outsiders. This setup always screws the NRC and the inspectors. \
If you want to do the NRC favor, you need public relations retraining at the STP. Basically was talking about why didn’t  STP shutdown, explained the blackout procedure at TP. The inspector said never had hurricane winds at STP. I asked him does the Colorado river abut the plant, basically came back its national security information. He gave me a string of I don’t know, I don’t know, I don’t knows, then later admitted he can’t disclose the information. He should have said right off the bat, it is restricted information.  Later pushed him pretty hard, he admitted in a flash of anger it was around 40 MPH. These guys would be terrible communicators in a real crisis. Basically the plants in Texas have been running great, the NRC and the inspectors have let their public communication atrophy. I have talked to a ton of NRC inspectors and NRC inspector bosses, STP inspector skills are weak. I am having trouble contacting the boss of the inspectors. I know they recorded my phone call. That is ok. I am in the realm of a cover-up.

Obsolete Turkey Point Nuclear Plant In Line For A monstrous Hurricane 

Update 9/11 (This is such a sad day)

So they both shutdown and one tripped on the way down with bad equipment.  

Maybe a roof leak during the hurricane. 

Winds now 180 mph. Still a long way from Florida.

When will they shutdown?

This is way worst than Andrew!!!


NRC INFORMATION NOTICE 93-53:  EFFECT OF HURRICANE ANDREW ON TURKEY POINT NUCLEAR GENERATING STATION AND LESSONS LEARNED
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing this information notice to alert addressees to the lessons learned from the joint NRC/industry team review of the effect of Hurricane Andrew on Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station.  It is expected that recipients will review the information for applicability to their facilities and consider actions, as appropriate, to avoid similar problems.  However, suggestions contained in this information notice are not NRC requirements; therefore, no specific action or written response is required. 
Description of Circumstances

Turkey Point, situated on the shores of Biscayne Bay about 40 kilometers  (25 miles) south of Miami, Florida, is the site for four electric generation units.  Units 1 and 2 are fossil fuel fired and Units 3 and 4 are pressurized light water moderated nuclear units that are owned and operated by the Florida Power and Light Company.  The area experiences tropical storms about once every 2 years and hurricane-force winds once every 7 years. 

On August 24, 1992, Category 4 (on a scale of 1 to 5, where 5 is the most severe) Hurricane Andrew hit south Florida and caused extensive onsite and offsite damage at Turkey Point.  An NRC/industry team was organized to review the damage that the hurricane caused the nuclear units and the utility actions to prepare for the storm and recover from it, and to compile lessons that might benefit other nuclear reactor facilities.  Results of the team review are presented in the report, "Effect of Hurricane Andrew on the Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station from August 20-30, 1992," issued in March 1993. This report was distributed to all power reactor licensees by the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations on June 10, 1993…. 









Tuesday, September 05, 2017

North Korea: Stealing Corn and Their Military's End-of-Times Preperations


Is this about long term plans with preparations to attack and hold South Korea?
31 August 2017 • 11:20am
As North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un boasts of his military prowess and flaunts his high tech weapons to the world, his malnourished soldiers are said to be stealing corn from fields to stave off hunger pangs.
Officers are ordering their troops to supplement their meagre food rations by plundering local fields, in order to keep up their strength for battle, according to a report in the Daily NK.
“The military officers are instructing their soldiers, exhausted after training, to eat corn in the fields because war is imminent,” a source in North Hamgyong Province told the news website...

Nuclear Plant: Hurricane Irma

update Sept 6

It is now a monster cat 5 storm with 185 mph winds. It is still heading towards Turkey Point. They seem to not have enough confidence to know where the hurricane is suppose to go.

These crazy assholes won't shut the plant down to the winds on site get to 73MPH.

When should they shutdown???

...Projected to go right over Turkey Point today. Its too early to tell though.

These guys have been tested by past hurricanes. You hoped they have learned the lessens from the past. These guys are grossly obsolete, deteriorating quickly and questionable upkeep and maintenance.

Turkey Point
St Lucie

New NKorean Threats: Gift Packages to USA?

New today.
North Korea said nuclear tests are "gift packages" to the United States and that more will follow.

Han Tae Song, the ambassador of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to the UN in Geneva, made the comment during a UN-sponsored Conference on Disarmament today.
The warning comes two days after his country detonated its sixth and largest nuclear test.

"The recent self-defence measures by my country, DPRK, are a gift package addressed to none other than the US," Han told the Geneva forum.

"The US will receive more gift packages from my country as long as its relies on reckless provocations and futile attempts to put pressure on the DPRK."

North Korea's EMP Weapons

Call me crazy, has North Korea completed testing with extremely high altitude ICBMs or whatever. Do you remember the missile shot who only went a few hundred miles , but went to extremely high altitudes. Remember everyone puzzling why it went so high, but never went that far?    
North Korea threat: EMP attack can destroy a nation’s entire infrastructure in a flash

KIM Jong-un needs only one hydrogen bomb to bring America to its knees. And he knows it. This is the nation-wide effect it can have in nanoseconds.

DETONATING a thermonuclear warhead 400km above Washington would instantly fry most of the nation’s power grid — and electronics.

The idea is not about melting a city, set enormous fires and irradiate vast tracks of terrain.

It’s about eliminating a nation’s entire infrastructure in a single flash.

There’s little surprise that North Korean state media has been lauding the power of Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP).

This is where the gamma radiation of a high-altitude nuclear blast interacts with the ionosphere — a blanket of electrons and electrically charged particles surrounding the Earth — to send a series electromagnetic pulses spearing into the ground below.

Once this burst of radiation strikes the ground it can induce strong currents — particularly in electrical cables and phone lines. This can overload and destroy electrical networks, as well as cause delicate circuit boards to fuse.

An entire economy can be brought to a standstill in nanoseconds.

In the words of former director of the CIA James Woolsey, it would bring the United States “to a cold, dark halt”.

ELECTRIC WAR

It’s an effect similar to that of Earth being struck by a serious solar storm, or — at a much smaller scale — when lightning causes a surge in a power grid.

North Korea’s state news agency commented on just such a tactic at the weekend. It follows a series of similar observations about the power of EMP in July.

The latest statement boasts North Korea’s new bomb “is a multifunctional thermonuclear nuke with great destructive power which can be detonated even at high altitudes for super-powerful EMP attack.”

But it’s not an attack without human cost.

It would bring “widespread and long lasting disruption and damage to the critical infrastructures that underpin the fabric of US society,” a 2008 US Congress report warns.

The last time anything on this scale happened was in 1859 — when the world was just beginning to discover the use of electrical technologies. The EMP from an enormous solar storm overloaded the simple telegraph wires then in use to transmit morse code, setting the paper telegrams at their terminals on fire.

Things would be infinitely worse today.

“Two thirds of the US population would likely perish from starvation, disease, and societal breakdown,” Woolsey warned US Congress in 2014. “Other experts estimate the likely loss to be closer to 90 per cent.”

INFRASTRUCTURE ELIMINATED

Hospitals would be without power. Essential services — electricity, gas, water, sewage, communications — would all be offline. Emergency services would be unable to respond. Food production and distribution networks would collapse.

Computers. Smart phones. Car ignitions. Pacemakers. Any form of delicate electronics within the pulse’s effective range would cease to function.

But the greatest damage would be to the power grid itself. Power stations and network transformers would be burnt out.

And the effect of a high-altitude EMP burst would not be localised.

EASY OPTION

Such a high-altitude thermonuclear attack does not require the technical skills necessary to enable a warhead to survive re-entry to the Earth’s atmosphere, cope with the heat of enormous speeds — and still hit its specific target.

Perhaps this is why the devastating power of EMP attack has again appeared in North Korean propaganda broadcasts.

“I can exploit it in high-altitude areas for strategic purposes and (inflict) EMP attacks on vast areas,” Kim Jong-un declared back in July.

In 2015, North Korean propaganda boasted it could destroy all electronic devices in South Korea and Japan by detonating a 100 kiloton bomb 100km above Seoul. “If we lower the altitude to 60-70km, we can make the EMP effect only the southern part of the Korean Peninsula,” it declared.

“(EMP) can neutralize all advanced electronic guided weapons and destroy aircraft carrier fleet at once”.

The warhead it tested yesterday is estimated to be in the vicinity of 50 to 120 kilotons.

But such an attack would not give Kim Jong-un a victory…

Monday, September 04, 2017

NKorea This Morning: We Are Going To Eradicate the USA From The Face Of The Earth

This paints a very bleak picture. North Koreas grew up in a cultish environment and grew up in a system of little truth and foundation of typical society. We can never understand them and they never can understand us. This is a cult and the citizen are susceptible to a collective suicidal ideation. You threaten them, they will respond in a different way than we were trained in. Certainly this would get you to a suicidal hydrogen strike on Guam or bigger, thinking this will save their ass. I am certain our government knows this country will respond to our threats, or any action, in a way we can't or ever will understand. So all this bluster from Trump isn't aimed at shaping North Korea behavior, its for us and the rest of the world. From times immortal, including South Korea, these nations have been nothing but a slaughter house and unbelievable. South Korea amazedly has straighten out.     

Somebody is giving this psychopathic and schizophrenic society money and taking advantage of these sick and abused people. What happens when two psychopathic and schizophrenic societies collide? Certainly China can't control these guys. They will think of negotiating in a different way than us and having no idea what crossing the Rubicon means. Absolutely no perception or fear of it. Never once questioning it.   

I think Putin's money is behind this as a means to destroy us. I bet you a cup a coffee, when NKorea is burning and in ruins, we will see Kim showing up in Russia or Iran.

The idea of the delay in trying to coalesce the world against NKorea is a fallacy...it insanity on our part. You are giving him time to better plan his catastrophic strike against us. Isolating him for economic reasons and cutting off his petroleum, you are going to provoke him into a suicidal attack against the world. He is a crazy mad dog, you play with him or try in control or modify his behavior, that dog is going to bite your head off and kill your children. This guy is going to behave in away we can't image. They are right now talking about my EMP (I called it emf) weapon on CNN. They ignite a hydrogen bomb high over the southern tip of south Korea, South Korea is toast, as with the economic heart of China and the rest of that power house area. Our anti ICBMs missile systems, they don't go high enough in altitude to kill the EMP missiles.

Honestly, to reform a nation like this, we are going to have crush them like we did Japan and Germany during II. Utter devastation. We would have to set up a multinational organization to totally manage this nation for decades. Or we can abandon them after the war, and there is our new Syria. That is what we face.

All those millions of "psychopathic and schizophrenic" North Koreans flooding into China, that is what China is afraid of. It would be so disruptive for a nation. China, who better knows the psyche of the NKoreans?  

      
https://theintercept.com/2017/09/04/undercover-in-north-korea-all-paths-lead-to-catastrophe/

...Maybe all this "locked and loaded", "fire and fury", multitudes of the final "red lines in the sand", maybe trump is doing this for American public consumption.

According the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint chiefs last night, just "one more threat" to us?

You know, if you make a threat, you got to be mature enough to carry it out. Or at least enlightened enough to keep you mouth shut and swallow what you see all around you. Or the world is going run right over you. I thought by the next threat, the North Korean adventure would be a thing of the past.     

Trump's weakness is humiliating us in the eyes of the rest of the world.

Now I am starting to feel so sad for President Trump. How us and himself have slung this old man through the meat grinder for entertainment. 

I am really sad about how pathetic we all are.

I am really sad about the job of the god of the universe. All the stuff we force him to do to keep this planet glue together. What a miserable and lonely job that must be... !

Hell no, I don't want that job...

Who said yesterday, the planet of the absurd? 

Jesus, Our Grand Gulf Probem

Been shutdown since Aug 30, been at 65% for many days before this. How do they make any money? There capacity factor is so disgusting.

They make looking at the NRC's plant  power level page fun. I wonder when the NRC is going to shutdown this page.

Sunday, September 03, 2017

North Korean Hydrogen Bomb: Crossing the Rubicon

update Sept 4
...See, this was my assessment last night: North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, “is begging for war,” Nikki R. Haley, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, told the Security Council on Monday.
...Don't' be ridiculous with this hermit kingdom. How much money do they really have? The missiles, submarines and nuclear weapons program, these guys are really expensive. All the testing. The typical weapons facing Soul, that is where they have been saving money. I bet you the artillery and shells are old and obsolete. You have to plow a lot of money into the artillery system to keep it effective.
Hmm, the news this morning reports NKorea is getting ready to launch missiles into pacific. What happens if Guam is incinerated? It is a forgone conclusion NKorea would be turned into glass. How would it change us?    
What about a ICBM hydrogen bomb detonation in a rather inhabitable part of the pacific. Maximum world terrorism, but a too chicken Obama, I mean president Trump, to do anything about it. I don't think it is enough to glassify NKorea.
At the bottom of this, how accountable should we hold the rank and file NKoreans? Maybe they are the monsters? Why hasn't there been a uprising no matter what the cost? Why haven't they modernized their government? Isn't that the big problem across globe with our assortment dictators and despots. Yea, collectively, how much do we hold ourselves accountable for our dysfunctional and ineffective political system? We are all victims and powerless, and on the dole...
Is that the root of all wars and conflicts across the planet?     
Update: I predict 5000 to 7500 South Korean causalities or less. It will be a quick and wicked war much like Iraq. I have no qualms if we use highly targeted nuclear weapons. It would deter idiots like this in the future and save many more potential lives.   

Crossing the Rubicon 
Wiki: 
Julius Caesar's crossing the Rubicon was an event in 49 BC that precipitated the Roman Civil War, which ultimately led to Caesar's becoming dictator for life and the rise of the imperial era of Rome. Caesar had been appointed to a governorship over a region that ranged from southern Gaul to Illyricum (but not Italy). As his term of governorship ended, the Roman Senate ordered Caesar to disband his army and return to Rome. He was explicitly ordered not to bring his army across the Rubicon river, which was at that time a northern boundary of Italy. In January of 49 BC, Caesar brought the 13th legion across the river, an act that was considered insurrection, treason, and a declaration of war upon the Roman Senate. According to some authors, he is said to have uttered the phrase "alea iacta est" — the die is cast — as his army marched through the shallow river.
The phrase "crossing the Rubicon" is today often used as an idiom to mean passing a point of no return.
The new situation. I am amazed how ignorant my daughter's generation and media commentators are about hydrogen bombs. How much bigger they are.  
North Korea Says It Tested a Hydrogen Bomb Meant for Missiles
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea carried out its sixth and most powerful nuclear test early Sunday in an extraordinary show of defiance against President Trump, who responded by declaring the country “hostile and dangerous to the United States” and criticizing an American ally, South Korea, for “talk of appeasement.”
The underground blast, which caused tremors that were felt in both South Korea and China, was the first by the North to clearly surpass the destructive power of the bombs dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II.
The government said it had tested a hydrogen bomb that could be mounted on an intercontinental ballistic missile, and hours before the detonation, it released photographs of its leader, Kim Jong-un, examining what it said was the new weapon.
Hydrogen bombs are vastly more powerful than ordinary atomic weapons, and though some analysts were skeptical of the North’s claim, the early estimate of outside experts was that the weapon detonated underground Sunday morning was most likely four to sixteen times more powerful than any the North has detonated before.
Basically same massage,different versions. I mean what I say. It is on comment section. I think my comment on both sites was the last one until the crisis stabilizes.   
·        Mike Mulligan 7 hours ago 
Personally, considering the news on NKorea, I crossed the Rubicon. I request all investigations (Congressional, Navy or whatever) surrounding the USS Fitzgerald and McCain be suspended. You don't want any of our military dragging their “safety investigation” anchors in this environment. Safety investigations eat up precious military resources. I need the US Navy and military to focus solely on national security and protection of the USA. Really the world economy and stability. God bless the USA and I love my country with all my might. God Bless my president Trump now! I am ready to serve my nation in anyway I can, including returning to military service!!! I will wash dishes, peel potatoes or clean the officer's toilets in any quarters.

LinkedIn: God bless our military and USA today. I was skeptical of President Trump yesterday, but now I am 150% behind him and my country. My version of the Cajun Flotilla would be tens of millions us signing up to serve the USA in anyway we can, including military service. We were all born to be heroes!!! I am ready to serve my nation in any way I can, including washing dishes and peeling potatoes. We should call the Senate and House back in secession without debate, give the president the full authority to do what ever it takes on the North Korean crisis, including placing the USA on a full war footing. Personally I think war is imminent and necessary .
Translation: Message from Secretary of Defense Mattis and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Joe Dunford. Our last Military statement to North Korea. Did you see how red Joint Chief Dunford eyes were? They were bleeding. I wonder how many hours he was going on without sleep? Obama had one red line in the sand with Syria, which they disobeyed and then the president did nothing. President Trump drew about six red lines in the sand in the last few weeks and Kim passed every one. Basically Kim is using escalation actions/behaviors based on a agenda. Ultimately Kim wants to go to war with the USA. Kim knows he is done, he is going to sacrifice his country in order to change the world for the worst. It would traumatized the world and knock the USA off the world stage. The way we go to war is the other guy has to start it. Trump has set this up as Kim has to make one more threat to Guam. It is a "threat" war is keyed on, not a action. I believe it will be Guam we will go to war over. The last threat North Korea will every make will be to Guam.

This will be a world shattering event if we prohibit trading with China. Maybe the post WW II era is over. I think we will see the world stock market collapse next week and it all will be in ruins within a few months.









What is a Hobson's Choice? Don't let the magnitude of the possible deaths frighten you. Do we really have a choice? 
Definition of Hobson's choice

1 : an apparently free choice when there is no real alternative

2 : the necessity of accepting one of two or more equally objectionable alternate
The setup is a choice of "tens of thousands to a few millions of deaths" or "10s, 100s or more of millions of deaths and world in total chaos". We face a nation in ruins with a large hydrogen bomb detonated high above us. A really scary EMF weapon. This would be way more damaging to us than if it was detonated on the ground.

Hurricane Harvey and all the suffering in Texas will be long gone in the new's media rear view mirror by the end of next week. 

Jesus God, from the far right white racist protest in the last month, to Hurricane Harvey and now a world wide holocaust with North Korea... How do we get from under this burden... A month of horrendous change. 

<<<I think the only play here for Kim is to create tens of thousands of deaths and tremendous devastation to either South Korea or the USA, shatter the stock markets across the planet, then negotiate a settlement. It is the only way he is going to survive.>>>  

Friday, September 01, 2017

My $40 Million Dollar Bridge

This was a special attention seeking project of mine. I protested at this bridge on and off for three years. The last summer I did this I spent lots of time at the bridge. The object of my effort was to get them to replace the bridge. It was the best arrest that ever happened to me. There was loose walkway planks on the bridge, I couln'td get the state to replace or renail the planks to the walkway. Basically I pulled up about 20 plank and threw them overboard into the Connecticut River. It was all attention seeking. I also put up steady safety barriers up on both sides of the walkway for safety. I emediately called up 911, connected to a police officer, admitted I did it. Put up the pictures of what a did on the internet within two hours and before any police officer interviewed me. It turned into a class B misdemeanor and I paid a $1500 fine. They did a $27,000 walkway rehab with completely new planks 161 days after I hucked the boards into the river.

So the aim was to piss off my town folks and anyone who rode across the bridge. I was the talk and hate of the Town. Basically I coalesced the town folks into advocating for the bridge replacement.

Its my bridge!!!!

New Hampshire DOT sets public meetings for Hinsdale-to-Brattleboro bridge project

Posted
HINSDALE, N.H. — The New Hampshire Department of Transportation will hold two combined public officials/public informational meetings regarding the planned Route 119 bridge replacement over the Connecticut River and associated improvements to Route 119n and Route 142.

The first public meeting will take place on Wednesday, Sept. 13, at 7 p.m. at the Hinsdale Town Hall Auditorium, 11 Main St. A second meeting will be held on Thursday, Sept. 14, at the Brattleboro, Vt., Municipal Center Selectboard Room, 230 Main St. An open house will begin at 6:30 p.m., with a formal presentation at 7 p.m.

The purpose of this meeting is to present citizens and public officials with information regarding the proposed project and to solicit public input in order to ensure that project decisions meet public transportation needs, community goals, and protect and enhance the environment.

Any individuals needing assistance or auxiliary communication equipment due to sensory impairment or other disability, should contact the Bureau of Right-of-Way, NHDOT, PO Box 483, Concord, New Hampshire 03302-0483 or call 603-271-3222. TDD Access: Relay NH 1-800-735-2964. Notification for the need of assistance should be made at the earliest convenience. If you have any questions or need any additional information regarding the proposed project, call 603-271-2171.

Additional information about the project can be found on the NHDOT website.

Hatch SRVs: Demonstrated Component Unreliability

Update

So the manufacturing gap defect was also seen in 2016 at unit 1. The exact same defect in 2017 at unit 2. Are you sure these guys are nukes?  
May 26,2016
Edwin I. Hatch Nuclear Plant Licensee Event Report 2016-004-00
SOUTHERN«\ NUCLEAR A SOUTHERN COMPANY NL-16-0772


On March 30, 2016, Unit 1 was at 1 00 percent rated thermal power (RTP) when "as-found" testing results of the 3-stage main steam safety relief valves (SRVs) indicated two of the eleven Unit 1 SRVs had experienced a setpoint drift during the previous operating cycle which resulted in their failure to meet the Technical Specification (TS) opening setpoint pressure of 1150 +1- 34.5 psig as required by TS Surveillance Requirement (SR) 3.4.3.1. The test results showed that two SRVs were slightly out of spec low due to setpoint drift. 
The SRV pilots were disassembled and inspected while investigating the reason for the drift. SNC has determined that the abutment gap closed pre-maturely. The pre-mature abutment gap closure is most likely due to loose manufacturing tolerances leading to SRV setpoint drift. 

...Look at all these quality issues in the LERs at the bottom? In three stage, then two stage, then back to three stage. A new platinum coating in the seat and disc on first use failed on roughness of the base metal. Issues with the gape abutment last reporting period remained uncorrected. 

These valves are lucky to be cycled once in 18 months. It would be highly unlikely these valves getting cycle three times in 18 months. These are extremely light duty safety valves. Why all the problems. 

Did they do any testing like cycling the valves with these for 200 times like in the worst accident.       
Edwin I. Hatch Nuclear Plant licensee Event Report 2017-(){)4-()() Safety Relief Valves' As Found Settings Resulted in Not Meeting Tech Spec Surveillance Criteria

On June 30 2017, with Unit 2 at 100 percent rated thermal power {RTP), "as-found" testing of the 3-stage main steam safety relief valves (SRVs) (EBS Code RV) showed that two of the eleven main steam SRVs that were tested had experienced a drift in pressure lilt setpoint during the previous operating cyde such that the anowable technical specification (TS) surveillance requirement (SR) 3.4.3.1 limit of 1150 +/- 34.5 psig had been exceeded. Below is a table illustrating the Unit 2 SRVs that failed as found testing results alter being removed tom service during the Spring 2017 refueling outage.
MPL
2821-F013C
2821-F013E
Event cause Analysis
Drift
-39 psig
-49 psig
The SRV pilots were disassembled and inspected while investigating the reason for the drift It was found that the abutment gap closed prematurely during testing using a linear variable differential transformer (l von to measure pilot stroke distance. The pre-mature abutment gap closure is most likely due to loose manufacturing tolerances leading to SRV setpoint drift.
So they are incapable of detecting a manufacturing defect in the below.
LER 1-2016·004 Identified multiple SRV setpoint drift for 2 of Ole 11 SRVs. Corrective actions included revising vender specifications to tighten as-left tolerances of abutment and pre-load gap, increase the minimum set for abutment pressure at the high end of specification, and tighten diametrical and face run-out tolerances for bellows assembly on pre-load spacer mounting end. 

LER 2-2015..004 identified multiple SRV setpolnt drift for 2 of the 11 SRVs. Corrective actions included replacement of the 2-stage SRVs with 3-stage SRVs which typically do not exhibit set point drift. The selpoint drift was out of spec high while the event discussed in LER 1-2016-004 have failed to meet acceptance criteria by drifting out of spec low. 

LER 1-2014-003 identified multiple SRV setpoint drift for 5 of the 11 SRVs. Corrective actions included replacement of the 2-stage SRVs with 3-stage SRVs which typically do not exhibit set point drift. The setpoint drift was out of spec high while the event discussed in LER 1-2016-004 have failed to meet acceptance criteria by drifting out of spec low. 

LER 1·2012-004 identified multiple SRV setpoint drift for 8 of the 11 SRVs. Corrective actions included replacement of the 2-stage SRVs with 2-stage SRVs whose pilot discs had undergone a platinum surface treatment which was considered at that time to be the lorig term fix for this corrosion bonding issue.