Blog Archives

1979-07-16

Church Rock disaster A pond holding leftovers (tailings) from a uranium mill breaks on this day in 1979, spilling 90 million gallons of radioactive waste into the groundwater in Church Rock, Arizona. The site is on a Navajo reservation and is one of the largest releases of radioactive waste in history. Arizona’s governor refuses Navajo Nation’s request for disaster declaration.

1967-07-25

Fukushima nuclear plant construction starts on this day in 1967. Following a tsunami on March 11, 2011, three of the four units would melt down, forcing permanent evacuations of hundreds of thousands of people and creating serious unknown hazards for future generations. Coincidentally, the Fukushima plant start date is the same as the day that the Washington Public Power Supply System, built to finance nuclear reactors in Washington State, declared bankruptcy in 1983. Along with the Chernobyl and Three Mile Island melt-downs, the four major disasters effectively halted the expansion of the nuclear power industry in the 21st century.

1945-08-06



Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima
The US dropped the world’s first nuclear weapon on the Japanese city of Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945,  killing between 90,000 and 140,000 people. The bombing ended WWII and opened a new era in world history. Whether or not the bombing could — or should —  have been avoided remains the subject of intense debate. However, there is no debate about the damage done to the people, the city and the environment of this section of coastal Japan, or the way any future nuclear war would utterly destroy the people and environment of the earth.