Missing nuclear waste.....From where????

Salik

Senator (1k+ posts)
Missing N-waste sparks fresh alarm

The worlds biggest radioactive event in four years may just get a whole lot bigger.

Three radioactive Cobalt-60 pencils are understood to be missing at the Mayapuri junkyard, declared safe a few weeks ago. Worried scientists resumed their search for the new radiation sources on Friday.

Sources told HT the scientists realised after examining the remains of the irradiation machine from Delhi University the Cobalt-60 source that it had more of the radioactive isotope than earlier recovered.

The machine contains 54 slots for Cobalt pencils. While not all 54 slots are filled, such a machine usually has around seven pencils, sources said.

The search and recovery team earlier found only four, said a top official of the Department of Atomic Energy, on condition of anonymity.

One of the injured scrap-workers had even kept a pencil in his chest pocket, not realizing what it was, the official said. The resumed search is to make sure no radioactivity remains in the area, said Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) chairman S.S. Bajaj. We have to ensure all the radioactive isotopes are in place, he told HT.

What could be worrying, according to sources, is that Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) officials have discussed, internally, that there is little chance of finding the missing pencils.

This means the Cobalt-60 pencils could be anywhere in the area, exposing unsuspecting people, they said.

The AERB is being assisted by scientists from the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited in the investigation. The scientists have calculated that the missing pencils are still potent as DU miscalculated their shelf life while discarding them and ideally, they should be dead only around 2018. The radioactive trail led back to the central university on Friday as one AERB official went on a recce of the campus but fortunately found no alarming levels of radioactivity.

The radiation exposure, termed the worlds most serious since 2006 by the International Atomic Energy Agency, killed one scrap-worker and made seven others seriously ill.http://www.hindustantimes.com/Missing-N-waste-sparks-fresh-alarm/H1-Article1-537802.aspx
 

gazoomartian

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Missing N-waste sparks fresh alarm

The worlds biggest radioactive event in four years may just get a whole lot bigger.

Three radioactive Cobalt-60 pencils are understood to be missing at the Mayapuri junkyard, declared safe a few weeks ago. Worried scientists resumed their search for the new radiation sources on Friday.

Sources told HT the scientists realised after examining the remains of the irradiation machine from Delhi University the Cobalt-60 source that it had more of the radioactive isotope than earlier recovered.

The machine contains 54 slots for Cobalt pencils. While not all 54 slots are filled, such a machine usually has around seven pencils, sources said.

The search and recovery team earlier found only four, said a top official of the Department of Atomic Energy, on condition of anonymity.

One of the injured scrap-workers had even kept a pencil in his chest pocket, not realizing what it was, the official said. The resumed search is to make sure no radioactivity remains in the area, said Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) chairman S.S. Bajaj. We have to ensure all the radioactive isotopes are in place, he told HT.

What could be worrying, according to sources, is that Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) officials have discussed, internally, that there is little chance of finding the missing pencils.

This means the Cobalt-60 pencils could be anywhere in the area, exposing unsuspecting people, they said.

The AERB is being assisted by scientists from the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited in the investigation. The scientists have calculated that the missing pencils are still potent as DU miscalculated their shelf life while discarding them and ideally, they should be dead only around 2018. The radioactive trail led back to the central university on Friday as one AERB official went on a recce of the campus but fortunately found no alarming levels of radioactivity.

The radiation exposure, termed the worlds most serious since 2006 by the International Atomic Energy Agency, killed one scrap-worker and made seven others seriously ill.http://www.hindustantimes.com/Missing-N-waste-sparks-fresh-alarm/H1-Article1-537802.aspx


YUP India's nukes are the safest :banghead:

IAEC seems very quiet. Fawad should send this to the White House. All media should start the news. Actually one one needs to start, others will follow in competition
 

sangeen

Minister (2k+ posts)
it won't make any news in ghost media like CNN and other alike. It would have been a mess if the same happend in Pakistan and then you would've seen International media dancing like monkeys.