If former New York Representative, Anthony
Weiner has a problem with ‘sexting’ (pardon the slang!), then Virginia
Uranium Inc. and a number of Virginia’s elected officials have a problem accepting
numerous studies which demonstrate the various risks posed by uranium mining in
Southside Virginia.
Unlike Weiner’s problem, however, Virginia’s inability to
heed multiple
warnings to slow its role on attempting to lift the three-decades old
moratorium on uranium mining has the potential to directly affect thousands
of Virginians for generations.
While proponents of uranium mining in Southside Virginia
have brushed away concerns regarding the risks involved with uranium mining in
Southside Virginia, their inability to compare apples to apples or to control
for pertinent variables in their cited research lends to the conclusion that the
moratorium on uranium mining should remain in place until greater consensus has
been reached about its safety.
Advocates of uranium mining have also failed to convincingly
argue that the Virginia Department of Mines, Mineral, and Energy (DMME) can
adequately regulate uranium mining if it were to become a reality in Virginia. As
has been noted before, the Roanoke
River Basin Association’s final report on DMME’s ability to adequately regulate
uranium mining in Virginia further crystallized one of the biggest objections
to lifting Virginia’s moratorium on u-mining. If such a risky venture can’t be adequately
regulated, how is it moral or rational to lift the moratorium?
Then, of course, there is the economic side to the issue of
uranium mining. If the mining of uranium were conducted in Virginia, what
guarantees would there be that Virginia would reap the financial and energy
benefits of this energy resource? As one astute observer pointed out, yellowcake is sold on an
open market, meaning that the highest bidder for this resource will be the one
taking it home.
And if you need another reason to be suspicious about any
claims that Virginia will reap the rewards of uranium mining in our state,
consider the fact that Virginia Energy
Resources, a Canadian-based company, owns 100 percent of the Coles Hill deposit.
Why, it almost sounds as if Virginia
will be getting the short end of the uranium mining stick, in more ways than
one!
Maybe in some distant future there will be a safe way to
mine uranium in such wet climates as Virginia’s (or any climate for that
matter). But that future has not yet come to pass, and until it does we should
follow the recommendations of numerous reports: don’t lift the moratorium on
uranium mining in Virginia.
No comments:
Post a Comment