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Opposition to the development of nuclear
power and weapons in the U.S. is the largest grassroots political
movement in history. This movement has done more to shape democratic
values here and around the world than any other. Every year we
celebrate the Civil Rights Movement yet, you wouldn't know it that
there ever was such a thing as an antinuclear movement if you only rely
on TV or the corporate media for your source of news. You wouldn't know
that the media has done everything in its power censor the history and
scope this movement and the support it has had for the last half
century with the people of this country and around the world.
Two years before the 1986 Chernobyl
disaster this country was at the turning point in the push to develop
nuclear power here and around the world. Forbes Magazine called the
U.S. nuclear power industry the largest financial disaster in American
History. The article went onto to describe some of the key economic
issues that led to the "socalled collapse". In that article, Forbes
claimed that it's demise had little to do with public opposition to the
issue.
Here is a timeline of events, incidents
and people that Forbes Magazine and the rest of the corporate media
have tried to make go away. In the early days of the movement, anyone
who dared question the promotion of nuclear power or weapons was
immediately branded a communist or a traitor. Our work is not done
until the full story is told to the people of the world and what the
nuclear terrorists (US, French, UK, and Russian Governments) have done
to us! Let the past not be forgotten for its ability to inspire and
root ourselves in the knowledge that we have done the right thing in
saying no to nuclear power and weapons.
If you have an event you would like
added, please send it to
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- 1895
Whilhelm Roentgen (Germany) discovers X-rays;
- 1896
Elihu Thomson (designer of X-ray tubes) claims X-rays are dangerous
& calls for protection, but is ignored. By 1922, up to 100
radiologists had died from exposure;
- 1896
Dr. D.W. Gage reports hair loss and skin damages due to X-rays;
- 1924
Employees of U.S. Radium Corp. die from licking radium paint brushes
while painting watch faces;
- 1925
The first exposure standards are set at 730 rems per year.146 times
higher than standards in the 1970's;
- 1930's
X-rays used to test for breast cancer start;
- 1934
Marie Curie discovers radioactive isotopes. She dies later of leukemia;
- 1934
Enrico Fermi discovers the concept of fission in uranium;
- 1939
German physcists successfully split an atom;
- 1940-1960
The Hanford weapons facility releases massive amounts of radioactive
materials into the air for experimental purposes, Cancer rates downwind
are extremely high;
- 1942
The ultra secretive $2 billion Manhattan Project is launched. It was
dubbed "the greatest single achievement of organized humans in history."
- Dec
2 The first reactor (pile) goes critical in Chicago;
- 1945
First nuclear device exploded near Los Alamos New Mexico;
- Aug
6 U.S. drops nuclear bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. Over 100,000 die;
- 1946
U.K. study indicates that radiologists have leukemia rates 8 times that
of doctors;
- July
Nuclear bomb testing begins across the Pacific, initiating the 40 year
experiment in using humans to determine the impacts of radiation
(Bikini Island);
- Oct
Atomic Energy Act passed by congress initiates the Atomic Energy
Commission (the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is its current
descendant);
- 1948
Soviet Union tests its first nuclear device;
- 1950's United Mine
Workers oppose nuclear development due to the dangers of mining
uranium. Mining would be dangled in front of native americans in the
southwest where most of the country's uranium was located.
- 1950-1963
U.S. initiates large scale atmospheric testing. Media pushes americans
into nuclear faddism. Nuclear planes, cars, ships introduced with the
line "power to cheap to meter", while kids learn to duck and
cover at school;.
- 1950
(Aug) An air force bomber crashes killing Gen. Travis and 18 others in
Northern California that releases radiation;
- 1952
(Dec) The Chalk River experimental reactor in Canada has a partial
meltdown that releases millions of gallons of water into the reactor
containment area;
- 1953 The detection
of nuclear fallout in Troy New York started the campaign opposing
atmospheric nuclear tests.
- 1953
Atoms for Peace announced, the formation of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (U.N.) initiates campaigns to develop "Peaceful uses of
nuclear tech";
- 1954
(Mar) A bomb bigger than 1,000 Hiroshima bombs is exploded,
contaminating several inhabited Micronesian islands;
- 1955
(May) over 6,000 military personel are exposed without their knowledge
to a massive nuclear blast (Operation Wigwam);
- 1956 The Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards (ACRS)
and the AFL-CIO opposed the experimental Fermi breeder reactor. The
government went ahead with the facility which had a partial meltdown in
1966 and covered up until 1975 when "We Almost Lost Detroit" was
published.
- 1956
Dr. Alice Stewart clinically proves the link between cancer and
low-levels of radiation; A 50% increase in childhood cancers due to
fetal X-rays;
- Apr
Albert Schweitzer radio speech inspires Dr. Linus Pauling to recruit
concerned scientists for a push to end atmospheric testing;
- 1957 The committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) later
SANE-Freeze published an advetisement in the New York Times spurring
the nationwide anti-nuclear weapons movement.
- 1957
Large explosion at Lake Kystym in the Ural Mt. area of the Soviet
Union's nuclear weapons facility releases 20 million curies. The area
has been permanently quarantined off;
- Sep
Rocky Flats weapons facility near Denver has a fire that releases
25,618 micrograms of plutonium into the environment;
- Oct
The English Windscale #1 plutonium reactor catches 12 tons of uranium
on fire. The fire is out of control for over 24 hours. Millions of
gallons of milk were contaminated and had to be destroyed due to the
radioactive releases;
- 1958 Barry Commoner and other forms the St. Louis
Committee for
Nuclear Information;
- 1958
(Jan) Linus Pauling and activists collect 11,000 signatures from
scientists calling for a nuclear test ban;
- 1958 - A Santa Rosa Press Democrat reporter discloses
PG&E plan to build 4 reactors 1000 feet from the 1906 SF earthquake
fault zone. A 4 year battle ensues that stops the construction of the
Bodega Bay Nuclear Complex;
- 1959
The Federal Radiation Council is created to set radiation standards due
to public pressure from continued nuclear tests; 5 rems per year for
workers established;
- July
A small reactor melts down in San Fernando Valley (Los Angels Basin)
releasing radiation into the surrounding area;
- 1960 Rachel Carson expresses concern about the dumping of
nuclear wastes into the Oceans, linking pesticides and nuclear power as
being dangerous to the environment.
- 1960 Thousands turn out for a SANE rally at Madison Square
Gardens
- 1959-1963
First anti-nuclear reactor campaign succeeds at stopping Pacific Gas
and Electric's (PGE) plan to build a major reactor complex at Bodega
Bay Ca. (1,000 ft from the San Andreas Fault near the epi-center of the
1906 quake);
- 1961 Women's Strike for Peace is formed. The group would
hold rallies in over 60 cities involving 50,000 women.
- 1961
A B-52 bomber carrying the equivalent of 1600 Hiroshima bombs crashes
in North Carolina. Five of six safety switches broke;
- 1961 Physicians for Social Responsibility is formed. PSR
was instruental in getting president Kennedy to signing the Limited
Test Ban Treaty;
- Jan
The SL-1 reactor explodes near Idaho Falls Id, a control rod pins a
worker to the ceiling; 3 workers are buried in lead lined caskets due
to heavy contamination;
- Mar
A B-52 Bomber with nuclear weapons aboard crashlands near Yuba City,
Ca.;
- 1962 Ravenswood, Queens NYC stops planned nuclear station.
- 1963 6 year Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) radiation
safety study by Dr. John Gofman and Dr. Arthur Tamplin calls for a
tenfold reduction in dosage levels.
- 1963
Initial plans are made by PGE for the construction of the Diablo Canyon
reactor. The company has plans to build over 60 reactors, including a
floating reactor. Also planned is a major reactor complex near the 1989
quake epi-center;
- Mar
A nuclear experiment at a reactor without a containment area releases a
large amount of gaseous radiation into the environment at Livermore Ca.;
- Aug
Edward Teller testifies against the proposed Nuclear Weapons Test Ban;
- 1964
(Apr) A U.S. navigational satellite with a nuclear reactor on board
burns up in the atmosphere, releasing 17,000 curies of Plutonium-238;
- no date Meshoppen breeder reactor in Wyoming Cnty PA
stopped. The project is moved to Clinch River Tennessee.
- 1965
(Jan) An accident at Livermore Labs releases 300,000 curies of
radiation into the air;
- 1965-75 2nd uranium mining boom starts attacking native
lands across the southwest, led by oil company land speculation;
- 1966
A B-52 bomber accidentally drops 3 nuclear weapons on a Spanish fishing
village(they didn't go off). Plutonium contaminates 640 acres of
farmland;
- Sep
A plutonium fire ocurrs at Livermore Labs near San Francisco;
- Oct
Enrico Fermi breeder reactor near Detroit Mi. has a partial meltdown
during its initial start-up. An alert to evacuate Detroit is made;
- 1967 plan to build reactor in Malibu Ca. stopped;
- 1967 - plan to build reactor near Eugene Oregon stopped;
- 1967
Plutonium from the Livermore labs leaks into the city's sewer system
for 3 weeks. The city was using dried sewage for fertilizer at the time;
- 1967 The Scenic Shoreline Preservation Conference (SSPC),
actually the San Luis Obispo chapter of the Sierra club, was formed 4
years after PG&E started planning a new reactor complex on the
central coastline of California. The group immediately called for
detailed seismic investigations for PG&E's $310
million plan to build two reactors. Twenty-one years later, PG&E's
Diablo Canyon reactors were ratebased: $3 billion for decommisioning
costs, $5.8 billion for construction costs and roughly $7 billion for
financing. Without the $2.5 billion EPA loan from the Reagan
Administration after the 1981 debacle where
it was discovered the company had build the seismic supports backwards,
the reactors would not have been completed.
- 1968
A B-52 with 4 nuclear bombs crashes in Greenland. The U.S. is required
to remove 1.7 million gallons of radioactives wastes from the crash
site;
- 1969 With the passage of the Natioal Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) activists legally challenged the dumping of hot water into a
nearby lake by the Calvert Cliffs nuclear facility, which led to a
court decision on 7-23-71 requiring all nuclear power plants to file
environmental impact statements.
- Aug: The United States announced a one-megaton nuclear
bomb test, Milrow, scheduled for October on Amchitka Island, in the
Aleutian Islands.
- September 29 SPEC (Scientific Pollution and Environmental
Control Society) Gwen and Derrick Mallard organized a demonstration
at the US Consulate in downtown Vancouver to protest the nuclear bomb
test. Bob Hunter made placards for the protest and came up with, DONT
MAKE A WAVE. Attending this protest were Bob and Zoe Hunter, Irving
Stowe, Bob Cummings, Lille dEasum, Paul Watson, Ben Metcalfe, Rod
Marining, Paul and Linda Spong, and others who would eventually form
the core of Greenpeace.
- October 1 SPEC and the UBC Alma Mater Society organized a
demonstration at the US/Canadian border. The same group was there,
blockading the highway. Irving and Dorothy Stowe held the Quaker
banner. SPEC brandished their DONT MAKE A WAVE signs. That night, the
Milrow blast was detonated 4,000 feet below the surface of Amchitka
Island. The blast registered a Richter 6.9 shockwave.
- October 25 Cartoonist Ron Cobb designed the ecology symbol
and published it in the Los Angeles Free Press. In December, Hunter
reproduced the symbol in his Vancouver Sun column. I venture to
predict, Hunter wrote, that it will become as familiar as the peace
symbol. In that same month, Marshall McLuhan, working for Torontos
Pollution Probe, said: In the 1970s we will see a rampage of
ecological prosecutions. McLuhans media theories had a profound
effect on Hunter, Metcalfe, and ultimately on Greenpeace.
- 1969
Dr. John Gofman & Dr. Arthur Tamplin demand a 10 fold reduction in
maximum permissable exposures to nuclear workers and the public;
- Jan
The Lucens underground reactor in Switzerland has a loss of coolant
incident and explodes;
- 1970's Women's magazinzes like Redbook and Ladies Home
Journal start covering nuclear issues;
- no date Carrie Dikerson cofounds Citizens for Safe Energy
which successfully stops Oklahoma Public Service's Black Fox Facility.
- no date Dolly Weinhold takes on Seabrook owners plan to
build reactors on over a faultline;
- no date Virginia school teacher, June Allen takes on
Virginia Electric Power Company over building North Anna over a
faultline.
- 1970 As part of the fallout over the Sierra Club's
involvement in Diablo Canyon, the club's director David Brower quits to
co-found Friends of the Earth and make a national stand against nuclear
power;
- 1970
The National Academy of Sciences forms the BEIR committee to evaluate
existing exposure standards to nuclear workers and the public;
- Jan
National Environmental Policy Act takes effect, requiring the nuclear
industry to files Environmental Impact Statement's;
- February 8 Marie Bohlen, inspired by the Quaker boat
Golden Rule, came up with the idea to send a boat to Amchitka to
protest the nuclear tests. The Vancouver Sun announced the plan as a
Sierra Club campaign, but when the Sierra Club in California rejected
the idea, Vancouvers Dont Make a Wave Committee embraced it. At a
meeting at the Unitarian Church that week, as Irving Stowe flashed the
"V" sign and said Peace, Bill Darnell, replied modestly, Make it a
green peace.
- February 15 The Vancouver Sun ran story about the intended
voyage, dropping the Sierra Club reference and mentioning a boat to be
called the Greenpeace, the first time the term appeared in print as a
single word.Marie Bohlens son, Paul Nonnast, designed the first button
with the ecology symbol above, the peace symbol below, and in the
middle, the single word: GREENPEACE. The Dont Make A Wave Committee
published the first Greenpeace pamphlet in March 1970: Nuclear
Testing in the Aleutians, written by 71-year-old Lille d'Easum, an
executive of the BC Voice of Women.
- March Paul Cote met Captain John Cormack, 60, on a Fraser
River dock, and Cormack agreed to use his fishing boat, the Phyllis
Cormack, for the voyage. The boat was renamed Greenpeace for the
campaign.
- Aug
A livermore Labs accident releases 300,000 curies of radiation;
- Sep
A battle over the right of state's to regulate nuclear power gains
momentum;
- October 5 Joni Mitchell, James Taylor, Phil Ochs, and BC
band Chilliwack staged a benefit concert in Vancouver for the Dont
Make a Wave Committee, which raised $17,000. Thereafter, the Sierra
Club and Quaker groups in the US contributed funding to the campaign.
- 1971
(Nov) 50,000 gallons of nuclear waste is accidentally released into the
St. Paul Mn. drinking water supply;
- September 15 Tthe Phyllis Cormack, rechristened Greenpeace
for the voyage, departed Vancouver.
- September 30 The Greenpeace boat was arrested the US Coast
Guard at Akutan Island, charged with a customs infraction, and sent
back to Sand Point for formal customs entry. However, eighteen
crewmembers of the Coast Guard ship signed a document in support of the
protest. The Greenpeace boat never reached Amchitka Island, but the
furor it set in motion was decisive in halting the series of
underground tests.
- October 29 On the way back to Vancouver, Hunter and
Metcalfe proposed that upon their return, they should reconstitute the
organization as the Greenpeace Foundation. Hunter borrowed the term
Foundation from Isaac Asimovs Foundation Trilogy.
- 1972 Walsh-Healey Act passed enforcing unanium mining
standards.
- 1972 Nixon declares two national sacrafice areas, one at
the four corners of AZ, CO, UT, and NM, the other in part of the
Dakotas, WY and MT. These were areas where uranium mill tailings and
uranium mining were actively being developed;
- 1973 OPEC oil embargo shakes US economy. Nixon calls for
1000 reactors by the turn of the century.
- 1974 Serious HLW tank leaks at Hanford makes national news.
- 1974
Presidential spouse: Betty Ford's masectomy makes breast X-rays a fad;
- Nov
Karen Silkwood is killed on the way to a meeting where she was to
deliver documents exposing unsafe activities at Kerr-McGee igniting the
national movment. The National Organization of Women and the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers (OCAW) joined to fight the growing wareness
of exposure to nuclear industry workers. NOW supported November 13th as
National Karen Silkwood day from 1978 into the mid 80's;
- 1975
Colorado officials "discover" 5,000 houses and public areas where
radioactive tailings were mixed with concrete to produce sidewalks,
basements and streets in Grand Junction;
- Feb
Whyl, Germany -- The 1st mass civil disobediance protest against a
nuclear facility. 200,000 protestors from across Europe do civil
disobediance at the Whyl Germany nuclear facility. From this campaign
Germany's Die Grunen (Green Party) would form calling for the end of
country' nuclear power operations.;
- Mar
Brown's Ferry reactor (Alabama) experiencs a serious accident causing
$150 million in damages when a worker uses a candle that burns the
electrical connection between the reactor and computer controls;
- 1975 ECCS hearings exposes AEC coverups resulting in its
breakup. Its promotional duties were transfered to the Energy Research
and Development Administration (subsumed into DOE in 1978) while its
regulatory duties were reorganized around the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. Under the AEC, ERDA and DOE, the nuclear industry was the
leading reciprient of all research and development funds from the early
1950's up until TMI;
- 1975 Ralph Nader holds the "Critical Mass conference in
an attempt to organize a national antinuclear movement and the
formation his Critical Mass Energy Project.
- 1975 The Urban Environmental conference is held to link
workers and environmentalists in the campaign against nuclear power.
- 1975 The Mothers for Peace was formed around oposition to
Diablo Canyon, inspired by Abalone fisherman who were arrested after
protesting the first hot tests that killed 10 of thousands of Abalone;
- 1975 Environmentalists For Full Employment is formed,
publishing their Jobs and Energy book in 1977.
- 1975
In a nationwide evaluation of X-ray operators, 63% of those tested
failed to operate machines properly;
- Nov
A Soviet reactor has a serious accident that releases over 1.5 million
curies of radiation into the surrounding environment. The incident was
discovered by activists in 1992 and acknowledged by the Russian gov. in
Jan.1996;
- 1976 Opposition at Seabrook includes Sam Lovejoy's power
tower actions. The clamshell Alliance and does its first civil
Disobediance action in August, inspired by the Whyl Germany action. The
Quaker decisionmaking model of consensus is used by the direct action
movement, and which is soon called feminist
process.
- 1976 Californians for Nuclear Safeguards mounted a
statewide initiative campaign to ban all nuclear power development in
the state. When the vote started getting close, PG&E in fear
lobbied for and the state passed a counter measure that would dissallow
all further nuclear power development in California until there was a
place to store High Level Wastes. The initiative lost as opponents
spent millions of dollars in a major media campaign;
- 1976 Statewide initiative campaigns were also mounted in
Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Montana, Arizona and Ohio. All Lost.
- 1976 President Woodcock of the UAW comes out in opposition
to nuclear at the national conference on Environmental and Economic
Justice;
- Dec
The Joint Committee on Atomic Energy is finally stripped of its
cold war powers to push nuclear agendas in complete secrecy from the
public;
- 1977
(Aug) Jimmy Carter reorganizes the federal regulatory structure after
years of corrupt practices between the federal government and the
nuclear industry. The DOE and NRC are created;
- 1977 The Clamshell Alliance holds another action, with
1,414 people being arrested. The Clamshell action would inspire direct
action groups across the country: Abalone Alliance in California, the
Crabshell Alliance in Washington state, the Sunflower Alliance in
Kansas, the Catfish Alliance in 10 southern states
and the Palmetto Alliance in South Carolina. Direct Action as a
Ghandian strategy was started as it became clear that legal opposition
to nuclear power wasn't working to stop its expansion;
- no date The Solar Energy Research Institute is set up by
Carter.
- 1977 - 1982 Dozens of popular books on the subject of
energy issues are published.
- 1977 People Against Nuclear Power in San Francisco is
formed in January with Quaker help. At its peak PANP would have 13
neighborhood groups. PANP, PGE and Quaker organizers would decide to
use consensus process in the formation of the Abalone Alliance. At its
peak the Abalone Alliance would have over 60 organizations, including
Greenpeace and the Alliance for Survival that had offices in every
major city in California.
- May The newly formed San Luis Obispo group People
Generating Energy (PGE) holds a baloon launch protest at Diablo Canyon
with 2,000 people showing up. Abalone Alliance is formed at a statewide
conference of activists;
- June California activists hold the Conference for a
Non-Nuclear Future with Dr. John Gofman giving the opening address;
- August: The Abalone Alliance holds its first action at Diablo
Diablo Canyon in August, with 78 arrests and 1,500 supporters. Five the
arrestes were later discovered to be undercover police;
- 1977 The dirtiest nuclear reactor in the U.S., located in
Arcata California, was forced to close under public pressure when
plutonium was found on a school playground not far from PG&E's
Humboldt Bay nuclear power station;
- 1977 Amory Lovin's Soft Energy Path is published
promoting the idea of alternative energy as a viable option to nuclear
power.
- 1977 The Nuclear Information Resource Service is formed;
- 1978
(Jan) A nuclear powered soviet satellite crashes into Northwestern
Canada, spreading radioactive (500,000 curies) debris over thousands of
square miles;
- 1978 Sun Day is held across the country on May 3rd, with
25 million participaint in the event, promoting alternatives to nuclear
power. From this organizing, grassroots solar and energy conservations
groups sprung up.
- 1978 Montana and Hawaii pass limited anti-nuclear public
initiatives.
- no date Ronald Reagan, in his nationally syndicated radio
talk show program states that all of the nuclear waste generated in the
U.S. could be fit in his garage!
- 1978 Citizens-Labor Energy coalition is formed in April
with the support of the International Aerospace & Machinist's Union.
- 1978 Grace Paley and 10 other womean unfurl a banner on
the White House Lawn that says "No Nuclear Weapons--No Nuclear Power --
USA
and USSR".
- 1978 Jimmy Carter stops the U.S. Breeder Reactor program
over nuclear proliferation issues;
- 1978 The first Construction Work in Progress (CWIP)
campaign in Missouri loses in an attempt to stop public subsidization.
- August 6 (Hiroshima bombing anniversary) 5,000 people
protest and 487 are arrested at an Abalone Alliance blockade at Diablo.
- August The American Indian Movement (AIM) organizes the
National No Nuclear Strategy conference in Kentucky.
- 1978 Women of all Red Nations (WARN) is organized to
oppose nuclear development and allying themselves with the Black Hills
Alliance to oppose uranium mining in the Black HIlls of SD.
- 1978 16 major building trade unions signed no strike
deals with the four major nuclear industry construction companies:
Bechtel, Stone & Webster, Ebasco Services and United Engineers
& Constructors.
- 1979 Just weeks before TMI hits Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon
star in the hit movie China Syndrome, educating the general public
about the dangers of nuclear power for the first time.
- no date The Power Tower movement in the upper midwest
starts taking down power towers.
- 1979
270 million X-rays were taken of U.S. citizens during the year;
- Mar
Three Mile Island (Pa.) has a reactor core meltdown. Government and the
nuclear industry coverup the fact about the meltdown for years;Protests
start erupting across the country with actions at Wall Street, Rocky
Flats, Harrisburg PA, even in Texas. (More details??!!! on these events
needed)
- April 7th Over 25,000 people come to a People Against
Nuclear Power rally in SF.Joan Baez and Jackson Browne perform
- April The formation of the American Indian Environmental
Council in the southwest takes placel.
- May 65,000 people rally against nuclear power in
Washington DC;
- June 6 Over 50,000 people show up at a rally outside of
Diablo Canyon where California Govenor Jerry Brown announces his
opposition to nuclear power.
- July
16 The largest nuclear waste spill in U.S. history occurs. 100 million
gallons of radioactive water spill from United Nuclear Corporations
waste storage pond near Church Rock New Mexico, contaminating the
Dineh' peoples water supply from the Rio Puerco river;
- Aug
Radiation is released from a top secret Tennessee facility,
contaminating over 1,000 people in the surrounding area;
- 1979 Women's groups opposed to nuclear like Women's
Pentagon Action N&S, DONT, LUNA, WONT and WAND spring up across the
country. The Handbook for Women on the nuclear mentality is published.
- 1979 The YWCA reverses its support of nuclear power, with
the League of Women Voters calling on a moratorium on new facilities.
- 1979 1,600 workers at the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
Plant in Piketon Ohio strike over safety issues at the facility.
- 1979 The AFL-CIO helps finance and organize against a
statewide Texan referendum to shut down the South Texas Nuclear
Project. Texas activists push for a "people's energy Movment".
- 1979 Anti-nuclear resolutions were passed at local,
regional and national levels of the country's Unions.
- 1979 Holly Near mounts her Nuclear Free Future nationwide
singing tour.
- 1979 Greenpeace activists scale the Rancho Seco (TMI Twin)
gates and are arrested.
- 1979 Abalone Alliance activists hold sit in at California
Govenor Brown's office.
- No Date No Nukes Concert in NYC brings out 1 million
people. Movie documenting the event is made. Seldom shown.
- 1980 GE Stockholder's Alliance against Nuclear Power
formed to demand that General Electric get out of nuclear power. Start
of Boycott GE Campaign;
- 1980 - The Women and Life on Earth: Ecofeminism conference
is held.
- May 8th A coalition of 25 women's anti-nuclear groups
calling themselves the Northeast Wymen's Alliance held a conference in
Connecticut in a protest against United Techonologies.
- May 24th The Clamshell holds another action at Seabrook.
- 1980 A consortium of 30 municipal power coops in Western
Mass. reduced its financial backing for Seabrook.
- 1980 Barry Commoner starts the Citizen's Party, modeling
it after Germany's Die Grunen Party.
- 1980 The national Survival Summer Campaign is launched
with rallies in SF and on the east coast.
- 1980 The Alliance for Survival in Los Angeles grows to
100,000 members and joins the Abalone Alliance.
- 1981 The Black Hills Alliance holds a national gathering
in the Black Hills with thousand across the country attending.
- 1981 An EPA lawyer helps the Alliance for Suvival legally
stops the MX missile production in California, through a contact
initially made with PANP;
- 1981 The 18,000 strong local 1010 steelworkers in Chicago
join the Bailly Alliance in opposing the construction of the Bailly
nuclear facility near Gary Indiana.
- March 28 15,000 union members sponsored by 12
international unions held a march against nuclear power in Harrisburg
PA. The AFL-CIO publicly attacked the rally;
- August Less than 1/3
of U.S. states require licensing of operators of X-ray machines
(radiologists);Congress finally passes a law regulating radiologists;
- September
The Largest single act of civil-disobediance against a planned reactor
occurrs at Diablo Canyon Nuclear Facility by the Abalone Alliance :)
with nearly 2,000 arrested, and tens of thousands of protesters;
- Oct
Just after the Diablo Blockade, a 25 year old PGE engineer discovers
that the seismic blue prints on the $2.1 billion reactors were reversed;
- 1982 A new initiative campaign organized by Californians
for Nuclear Safeguards was booby trapped by the founder of Nuclear
Freeze Campaign. The Freeze movement was the reawakening of the
anti-nuclear weapons movement when the Reagan and NATO allies attempted
to put nuclear tipped cruise missiles across Europe.
- 1982
President Reagan quietly loans PGE $2.5 Billion in EPA money to help
rebuild the Diablo Canyon reactors (for the 3rd time since 1963);
- Feb
A study done by a Center for Disease Control scientist indicated that
up to 95% of cancers contracted by cigarette smokers could be due to
radioactive polonium-210 that comes from commercial fertilizers used on
tobacco. A 1-1/2 pack a day smoker receives the equivalent of 300 chest
X-rays a year;
- 1983 PG&E takes the 1975 state law to the U.S. Supreme
Court in an attempt to oveturn it but fails. Up to that point the
company, the largest electric company in the country, had been planning
on building over 60 nuclear reactors in its service area. Opponents
blocked active attempts to build reactors in Kern
County and just north of Santa Cruz. Citizen opposition to the Santa
Cruz reactor complex was located a few miles from the epicenter of the
1989 earthquake that shook the San Francisco Bay area causing over $10
billion in damages.
- 1984
Forbes magazine publishes a stinging documentation of the American
nuclear industry, calling it the biggest financial disaster in American
history;
- 1985
The German company Nukem sells South Africa equipment necessary for the
production of nuclear bombs;
- Sep
The Rocky Mountain Intitute publishes a report in the Wall Street
Journal exposing the fact that nuclear power was getting 34% of all
federal R&D funding for energy but producing less than 2% of the
total energy used by americans.
- Dec
Rancho Seco experiences a near meltdown accident. The accident is
covered up by officials until Chernobyl;
- 1986 Nader's natiowied Citizien Utility Board (CUB)
movement is killed by a first amendment lawsuit by PG&E;
- 1986
A 30,000 pound cylinder of Uranium Hexaflouride at a Kerr-McGee nuclear
fuels facility ruptures, killing 1 person, injuring 100 and spewing
radiation into the surrounding community;
- Apr
26 The Chernobyl reactor explodes, blowing the lid of the U.S.
nuclear industry, and releasing over 100 million of curies of radiation
into the northern hemisphere;
- May
A fire at the Browns Ferry reactor in Alabama destroys a cooling tower;
- 1986 A Question of Power, the documentary covering the
battle to stop Diablo Canyon is released. Its only been shown on PBS
and that years after its release.
- May The first time an anti-nuclear power activist is
given an interview on TV news in the SF Bay;
- May Point Reyes Bird Observatory says 2/3rds of the 1986
Northern California coastal baby bird population died from Chernobyl
fallout;
- 1986 Berkeley California votes to become a nuclear free
zone, a nationwide movement to grows to an international scale;
- 1986 FAS holds a coast to coast debate on Nuclear Power
- 1986 San Francisco's KQED holds a heavily moderated debate
on nuclear power.
- 1986 The Columbia Inter-tribal Fish Commission calls for
the shutdown of Hanford.
- 1986 The Committee to Bridge the Gap succeeds at getting
Hanford's N reactor, a Chernobyl type reactor without a containment
vessel shut down.
- 1987
The largest ever liquid sodium spill ever occurrs at Eurotom's
SuperPhoenix Breeder Reactor in France;
- Jan
A Nuclear bribery scandal rocks the European nuclear industry. The head
of Transnuklear commits suicide after disclosures of illegal activities;
- 1988
The committee in charge of investigating exposure impacts for
Hiromshima and Nagasaki victims calls for new exposure limits 4-16
times lower than currently allowed; UK responds and lowers allowable
doses. US attacks findings and ignores them completely.
- 1988 UC Berkeley's Etcheverry experimental reactor is
decommissioned when it was disovered the reactor sat on top of an
active faultline;
- Aug
A coverup of a serious accident at the Savannah River Weapons facility
is the final straw in the collapse of the DOE's nuclear weapons
program. Incident after incident that have been never covered properly
by the media finally come out. Initial estimates for cleaning up the
mess hit $150 billion.
- Nov
Just prior to President Reagan's term of office expires, he signs an
executive order that overrides a Massachussetts ruling that blocks the
Seabrook nuclear facility from operation. The reactor is started up
soon afterwards without adaequate evacuation plans. The ruling also
allows Shoreham to go online;
- Dec
After 5 years and over $100 million legal fees spent by PGE, the Ca.
PUC gives the utility a $54 billion contract to operate Diablo Canyon.
The media covers up the scale of the deal, calling it good for the
public;
- 1989
The American Solar Energy Society completes a study indicating $4.3
billion in yearly hidden costs to Americans from nulcear wastes;
- Mar
On the 10th anniversary eve of the TMI accident, Rancho Seco
experiences another shutdown, all but sealing its fate;
- June
Sacramento residents vote to close down Rancho Seco permanently:
- June
The owner of the $6 billion Shoreham reactor agrees to sell it to New
York for $1. The reactor was completed but never allowed to operate;
- 1990
(Jan) Limerick 2 nuke begins operating, ten years behind schedule and
billions over budget;
- Mar
A DOE study uncovers the danger of an explosion at 20 plutonium storage
tanks at Hanford;
- Mar
The Final shipment of the mangled core of Three-Mile Island is sent for
the Idaho National Engineering Labs for storage. RIP;
- Mar
DOE proposed budget calls for $3.3 billion to melt high level waste
into cylinders carrying 400,000 curies of radiation for disposal;
- Apr
Areas of New Jersey are selected as a superfund site, calling for $250
million to haul away 325,000 cubic yards of radioactive soil;
- Apr
The Italian parliament votes to close its last two operating nuclear
reactors, in accordance with a public vote to close them;
- Apr
A GAO report, issued at the request of Senator John Glenn, shows that
the U.S. military services have no idea how much low-level nuclear
waste they have produced and stockpiled;
- Apr
The Vogtle reactor in Georgia suffers a "station blackout" when a truck
carrying nuclear fuel backs into a power pole, cutting power to the
reactor;
- May
A New government report shows vast amounts of mercury and cesium in
sediments of a 39,000 acre reservoir system around the Oak Ridge
weapons production plant;
- May
The USFDA approves food irradiation for poultry products;
- May
East Germany agrees to shut the Griefswald reactor, its largest, which
suffered a core melt accident in 1989;
- May
Turkish residents form a 24-kilometer human chain in opposition to that
government's plans for its first nuclear reactor. Soon thereafter, the
government abandoned its plans;
- May
The Gdansk region of Poland votes by an overwhelming margin, 86%, to
close Poland's first nuke, Zarnoiec;
- May
A West German tribunal shuts the nation's oldest reactor, which had
been operating for 20 years wihout a legitimate license;
- May
The Spanish government, after over a year of public protests, closes
the Vandellos I reactor, which had a serious fire in 1989;
- June
Congress votes down a proposal for $65 million to build a new plutonium
processing facility at Rocky Flats;
- June
The Center for Disease Control announces it will conduct a thyroid
morbidity study at the Hanford weapons facility;
- July
The DOE petitions the NRC to allow exposure rates for workers at high
level waste facilities to increase to 5 rem per year, even as the
International Commission on Radiological Protection seeks a three fold
decrease in exposure levels:
- July
A two year cleanup of a DeKalb County, Georgia
sterilization/irradiation plant contaminated by radioactive cesium will
cost taxpayers more than $30 million, state and federal officials
reported;
- Aug
A European Community opinion poll on nuclear power shows overall
opposition in Europe at 51%;
- Aug
Increasing seismic activity near the Chernobyl facility have experts
worried that a major tremor could crack the sarcophagus encasing the
damaged reactor core, releasing more radiation from the tomb;
- Sep
The NRC proposes rules allowing them to okay 40-year licensing
extensions to the nation's operating reactors;
- Sep
A S.F. Chronicle report on toxic wastes shows the highest percentage of
people polled, 70%, are most concerned about nuclear waste;
- Sep
A Hydrogen explosion and fire at a nuclear fuel facility in the soviet
republic of Kazakhstan causes the eastern region to be declared an
ecological disaster area due to beryllium fallout;
- Oct
The Union of Concerned Scientists releases a report by MHB Associates
on "inherently safe" reactors which concludes that there is no such
thing. All reactor designs studied had some potential of releasing
radiation;
- Oct
57% of residents around the Fukushima nuclear reactor in Japan vote to
keep the troubled reactor shut down. The reactor was shut in Feb., 1989
due to a serious accident. Tokyo Electric reopens the facility anyway;
- Nov
Scientists from the Austrian Institute for Ecology find the Czech
uranium ore processing facility (Mape) heavily contaminated with
Radium-226;
- Nov
Forty-three member countries of the London Dumping Convention, a treaty
organization that regulates the dumping of waste at sea, agree to phase
out dumping of all industrial wastes in the ocean by the year 1995;
- 1991
A new survey shows that 62% of Americans are now opposed to the
development of nuclear power, up from 20% in 1975;
- Feb
The EPA releases a study indicating that up to 75% of homes in several
regions of the country have excessive radon gasses;
- Mar
Public Citizen releases a study based on NRC documents indicating
34,000 incidents at U.S. reactors in the previous 10 years, with
832,000 exposure to workers;
- Apr
On the 5th anniversary of Chernobyl the IAEA releases a study claiming
that most of the illnesses experienced by people in contaminated areas
around the Chernobyl dissaster area are psychosomatic;
- Nov
The USGS uncovers a radioactive aircraft carrier that was used as
target practice for the 1946 Bikini Island nuclear blast just west of
San Francisco where 47,000 barrels of nuclear waste were dumped;
- 1992
(Feb) The Russian government dumps 12 Soviet reactors into the Kara Sea
along the Artic Ocean. The London Dumping Convention prohibits the
dumping of nuclear wastes into the oceans;
- 1993
(Aug) A large crane collapses during refueling onto the reactor core at
the Wylfa facility in England nearly causing a meltdown. The incident
was finally disclosed by the BBC in Sept. of 1995;
- 1994 Estimates for the cleanup of the country military
weapons facilities reach over $100 billion.
- 1994
(Dec) One of Canada's Pickering reactors dumped 140 tons of radioactive
water into the containment vessel. An earlier incident in 1983 cost
$800 million to clean up;
- 1995
(Dec) The $5.9 Billion Monju breeder reactor was closed for at least 2
years after a serious accident released 2-3 tons of liquid sodium which
ignites when it comes into contact with oxygen. A cover-up by officials
to hide the serious nature of the accident resulted in a top official
involved committing suicide. The U. S. media has refused to cover the
serious accident which has crippled Japan's massive breeder reactor
program. A program similar to one being promoted by the nuclear
industry in the U.S.;
- 1997 the 1983 censor
National Institute of Health study on the impacts to Americans from
U.S. atmospheric nuclear weapons tests up through 1971.
This is
dedicated to Dr. John Goffman who has spent 25 years fighting for the
safety of humanity. Sources: Steven Aftergood, Anna Gyorgy, Harvey
Wasserman, New England Journal of Medicine; U.S. EPA, Glen Barlow,
Abalone Alliance Archives and Professor
Harry Cleaver's: The rise of the antinuclear movement Rex
Wyler's History of the beginnings of Greenpeace
Note: This new version of the nuclear timeline is a 2007 update from
the original 1995 document. It is currently missing all major events
after 1995, including the mamouth nuclear weapons movement across the
country. Got an history event you think should be included? send it to
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when we get enough of them, we'll update it
again.
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