|
 Topic: NuclearFalloutThe new items published under this topic are as follows.
 |
 First International Day Against Nuclear Tests and Marshall Islands Nuke Legacy
Today, Sunday, August 29, 2010, marks the first observance of the International Day against Nuclear Tests. The Day is meant to galvanize the efforts of the United Nations, Member States, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations, academic institutions, youth networks and media in informing, educating and advocating the necessity of banning nuclear tests to achieve a safer world.
|
| Read full article: 'First International Day Against Nuclear Tests and Marshall Islands Nuke Legacy' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Science & Technology Review: Return to Rongelap
LIVERMORE scientists are at the forefront of an extensive 30-year effort to return the native population of Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands to their home island. The population was displaced to a neighboring atoll following radioactive fallout from a U.S. nuclear test detonated in 1954 on Bikini Atoll, approximately 112 kilometers west of Rongelap. In 1957, the U.S. government resettled the islanders back on Rongelap. However, in 1985, they relocated to Mejetto Island on Kwajalein Atoll because of the community’s concerns about lingering radioactive contamination and its potential health effects.
|
| Read full article: 'Science & Technology Review: Return to Rongelap' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Bikini Atoll in Marshall Islands Chosen as World Heritage Site

Today the Bikini Atoll Nuclear Test Site was inscribed on the World Heritage List.
The Bikini Atoll was the site of atomic weapons testing during the period predating Cold War. Between 1946 and 1954, 67 nuclear tests were carried out in the Marshall Islands, 23 of them in Bikini. This equates 7000 times the force of the Hiroshima bomb.
|
| Read full article: 'Bikini Atoll in Marshall Islands Chosen as World Heritage Site' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Projected Lifetime Cancer Risks from Exposure to Regional Radioactive Fallout in the Marshall Islands
Radioactive fallout from nuclear test detonations during 1946–1958 at Bikini and Enewetak Atolls in the Marshall Islands (MI) exposed populations living elsewhere in the MI archipelago.
A comprehensive analysis, presented in seven companion papers, has produced estimates of tissue specific radiation absorbed dose to MI residents at all historically inhabited atolls from internal (ingested) and external irradiation resulting from exposure to radioactive fallout, by calendar year, and by age of the population at time of exposure.
|
| Read full article: 'Projected Lifetime Cancer Risks from Exposure to Regional Radioactive Fallout in the Marshall Islands' |
|
|
 |
 |
 NCI Dose Estimation and Predicted Cancer Risk for Residents of the Marshall Islands Exposed to Radioactive Fallout from U.S. Nuclear Weapons Testing at Bikini and Enewetak
Between 1946 and 1958 the United States tested 66 nuclear weapons on or near Bikini and Enewetak atolls, which had previously been evacuated. Populations living elsewhere in the Marshall Islands archipelago were exposed to measurable levels of radioactive fallout from 20 of these tests.
In this carefully considered analysis, National Cancer Institute (NCI) experts estimate that as much as 1.6% of all cancers among those residents of the Marshall Islands alive between 1948 and 1970 might be attributable to radiation exposures resulting from nuclear testing fallout. Due to uncertainly inherent to these analyses, the authors calculated a 90% confidence interval of 0.4% to 3.6%.
Why did the NCI investigate this exposure?
|
| Read full article: 'NCI Dose Estimation and Predicted Cancer Risk for Residents of the Marshall Islands Exposed to Radioactive Fallout' |
|
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 Testimony on Marshall Islands Supplemental Nuclear Compensation Act: RMI Minister of Foreign Affairs John Silk

Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Members of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, Ladies and Gentlemen:
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today. His Excellency President Jurelang Zedkaia once again takes this opportunity to personally thank you Chairman Bingaman for introducing S. 2941, the Republic of the Marshall Islands Supplemental Nuclear Compensation Act of 2010, and for convening this hearing so that we may present our views on this most important and historic legislation.
I would also like to take this opportunity to recognize other members of our delegation present here today, and to thank them for their presence and contributions.
|
| Read full article: 'Testimony on Marshall Islands Supplemental Nuclear Compensation Act: RMI Minister of Foreign Affairs John Silk' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Presidential Panel Urges US to Further Compensate Marshall Islands for Nuke Legacy
The U.S. has not met its obligation to provide for ongoing health needs of the people of the Republic of the Marshall Islands resulting from radiation exposures they received during U.S. nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific from 1946–1958, according to U.S. government panel report published online this week.
The annual report of the President's Cancer Panel, "Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk," pointed to the toxic legacy of military operations in the United States and beyond its borders, including chemical and radiation contamination.
In the Marshall Islands, the total yield of the 67 nuclear tests conducted by the U.S. during the Cold War era, was "equal to 7,200 Hiroshima bombs, or the equivalent of 1.6 Hiroshima bombs per day for 12 years."
|
| Read full article: 'Presidential Panel Urges US to Further Compensate Marshall Islands for Nuke Legacy' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Bikinian's Appeal Nuke Case Review before U.S. Supreme Court Denied
The Supreme Court refused on Monday to hear any new cases, including the petition of the people of Bikini Atoll and Enewetak Atoll to review the lower court rejection of appeals to their case. No reason for denying review of that or any other case turned aside Monday was given.
On Petition for a Writ of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit:
|
| Read full article: 'Bikinian's Appeal Nuke Case Review before U.S. Supreme Court Denied' |
|
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 BRAVO's 56th Birthday and its Radioactive Legacy
Glenn Alcalay, a former Peace Corps volunteer on Utrik in the Marshall Islands, now an adjunct professor of anthropology at Montclair State University in New Jersey, has studied the impact of U.S. Cold War nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands. In the following article, he relates the story of the BRAVO H-bomb test and its aftermath:
John Anjain, then-mayor of Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands, told me in 1981 how a man working with the Atomic Energy Commission in February 1954 stuck out the tip of his index finger - about a half-inch - and said, "John, your life is about that long."
|
| Read full article: 'BRAVO's 56th Birthday and its Radioactive Legacy' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Marshall Islands ratifies Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty
The Marshall Islands has ratified the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), becoming the 151st country to do so.
The ratification of the CTBT by the Marshall Islands is highly symbolic. A total of 67 atmospheric nuclear tests were conducted by the United States at the Bikini and Enewetak Atolls between 1946 and 1958.
|
| Read full article: 'Marshall Islands ratifies Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Investigative Documentary on BNL's Marshall Islands Nuke Connection Makes Impact
The Brookhaven National Lab's (BNL) 43-year study of Marshallese exposed during US nuke testing is detailed in the Newsday series, Fallout: The legacy of Brookhaven Lab's mission in the Marshall Islands. In the following account, written at request of Harvard University's Nieman Foundation for Journalism and showcased on its website, reporter Thomas Maier describes how the three-year multi-media project developed and what impact it is making today:
For a long time, I’ve wanted to produce a newspaper investigative project with an accompanying full-fledged video documentary – a marriage of traditional hard-hitting reporting with narrative-style television journalism. The story of Brookhaven National Lab’s troubled history in the Marshall Islands – told in a nine-part 32-minute documentary and a 5,000-word Sunday magazine piece with on-line sidebars – provided a challenge to do just that.
|
| Read full article: 'Investigative Documentary on BNL's Marshall Islands Nuke Connection Makes Impact' |
|
|
 |
 |
 Series on Fallout Legacy in Marshall Islands Elicits Brookhaven Lab Response
Fifty years ago, Marshallese, exposed to the radioactive fallout during U.S. nuclear testing, were called "savages" in a Cold War documentary.
The 1954 BRAVO blast, which was a thousand times stronger than the bomb to Hiroshima, contaminated Rongelap. Rongelap mayor John Anjain and six other men were brought to Argonne Lab in Chicago and filmed during health tests.
"Guinea pigs" is the term Marshallese use themselves. They believe they were "unwitting subjects" in a long-running research effort designed to study the impact of radiation at the expense of their health. The U.S. performed 67 nuclear tests in the Marshall Islands from 1946-58.
|
| Read full article: 'Series on Fallout Legacy in Marshall Islands Elicits Brookhaven Lab Response' |
|
 |
|