Home  
Shop Subscribe Contact us About us
---- News Categories -----        

LATEST NEWS
Chemicals
Children's health
Climate change
Diet
Energy sources

Fertility
Food Industry
GM crops
Illnesses
Lifestyle

Transport
Vaccination
Women's health
Workplace health
TOP TWENTY
Subscribe/Renew

RADIATION

Six hot spots to avoid
- radon may kill
19,000 a year

Aliens in microwaved food
- molecules torn apart

Poisons in microwaved
baby food

Thames Valley leukaemia clusters

Wales goes radioactive

Some smoke detectors
radioactive

Pigeons glow in dark

Radioactive metals
in food cans

Breast cancer clusters
around Hinckley Point


Leukaemia - new evidence
of Sellafield danger


Sellafield major suspect of
birth defects and cancer
on Irish coast


Is Plymouth the new Sellafield?


Traces of tritium and
carbon-14 found in
local food

More radiation exposure,
more stillbirths


Infant mortality rates fell
when nuclear reactors
closed down


Peace iniatives more
cost effective than war


Nuclear plants ideal targets
for terrorists


Irradiated mail sickened
US postal workers

 
Is Plymouth the new Sellafield?
The UK Government approved an application from Devonport Management Ltd. to dump five times the amount of radioactive waste currently being dumped into the city's River Tamar from the Devonport naval dockyard in Plymouth. The Devonport nuclear naval shipyard is in the centre of the 300,000 population city and only 400 yards from the nearest primary school. The school is the only one in the UK with nuclear alarm buttons in every classroom.

Leukaemia rates in Plymouth were already 25-29% above the national average but calls for a public inquiry were rejected. Levels of radioactive tritium emissions into the River Tamar in Plymouth are prediced to rise five to sevenfold.

Independent nuclear experts believe that tritium poses a serious health threat. If it enters the human body it can mutate DNA at cellular level, leading to cancer and birth defects.

(8844) Cumbrians Opposed to a Radioactive Environment