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![](http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2008/01/29/radioactiveland_301008_wideweb__470x310,0.jpg)
Residents living in fear … Michael Richardson and Anthony Roberts at the contaminated site.
据2008年1月29日《每日电讯报》特别报道(Special Report),新州政府计划将悉尼黄金地段Hunters Hill一处秘密核放射物质埋放地的土壤重新挖掘转移到悉尼西部城区,而腾出的这块空地将出售给房地产开发商,因这块建地位置极佳,面临美丽港湾,因此预计售价将超过数百万澳元。
![](http://www.oursteps.com.au/bbs/attachments/month_0801/20080129_cf2e9a4996d4f9227c92A4H7hJvifz4B.jpg)
这处核放射物秘密埋放地位于Hunters Hill区的7 & 9 Nelson Pde,可追溯至1915年,当时这里曾是澳洲第一家铀矿熔炼处理厂,1916年关闭。1980年代这块空地被新州卫生部门接管。新州环境部门的纪录显示,这片土地含有铀238,釷230,铅230,镭226等放射性物质。
上个星期,《每日电讯报》聘请专业公司对空地周围进行测试后发现,该核放射性伽马射线超出可接受水平的10倍以上,与其相邻的一个海滩也被探测到含有已达危险水平的砷,铅及致癌的碳氢化合物。
但是,这块空地附近的居民并没有获得足够的警示,五年前在该空地隔两个门牌号买地兴建了自住房的居民Kathie Frankland表示,当时她只被告知那里曾经是一家钟表制造厂。
一份1978年的政府文件显示,30年来新州历届政府一直对该地含有大量核放射性废料一事讳莫如深或刻意隐瞒。
![](http://www.news.com.au/common/imagedata/0,,5863260,00.jpg)
Nuke disgrace .... Andrew Bellany and Adam Gamys (L-R) record radioactive levels just metres from family homes in Hunters Hill.
《每日电讯报》还爆料,新州卫生部打算挖走这块空地上埋放的近1000吨核放射物质土层,用卡车穿过悉尼的街道运送到西区重新埋放,预计悉尼西区的埋放地可能是几个大墓地的土层下面。(an estimated 1000 tonnes of radioactive waste buried under a few centimetres of soil.)
Fury at nuclear waste disgrace for Sydney
January 29, 2008 03:00am Article from: The Daily Telegraph
THE NSW Government is planning to excavate a secret radioactive dump on premium harbourfront real estate and truck the dangerous material to Sydney's western suburbs.
More than 30 years after discovering it was emitting significant levels of radiation, NSW Health is attempting to dump its nuclear problem on the people of western Sydney so it can sell a multi-million dollar block of land.
Decaying away on the modest residential block at Nelson Pde, Hunters Hill, 5km west of the CBD, is an estimated 1000 tonnes of radioactive waste buried under a few centimetres of soil.
According to the Department of Environment's records, the land contains tailings of uranium 238, thorium 230, lead 210 and radium 226.
Both the Department of Environment and NSW Health maintained the site was completely safe.
But a company contracted by The Daily Telegraph just last week detected radioactive gamma rays of up to 10 times higher than acceptable exposure levels at the site - which residents are now only learning was once home to Australia's first uranium processing plant.
"We were told it was a watch factory," said Kathie Frankland, who built a house five years ago two doors from the site.
To add to the problem, perilous levels of arsenic, lead and cancer-causing hydrocarbons have been detected on adjoining foreshore land which the Department of Environment only recently classified as posing a "significant risk of harm".
"This site is effectively a nuclear waste dump," said Liberal MP Michael Richardson, who obtained documents under Freedom of Information revealing authorities have known about it for decades.
NSW Health, which took over the site in the 1980s when it was transferred to its radiation branch, now plans to clean it up and sell it for housing.
And it proposes to dig up the fill and truck it through Sydney streets to a western Sydney tip.
Local MP Anthony Roberts claimed that the company contracted to remove it, GHD, said it was going to be taken to an industrial tip near Castlereagh.
He was told by the company: "Don't worry, it's going way out west."
Government documents dating back to 1978 reveal a 30-year history of inaction and cover-up by successive governments of the waste dump containing 1000 tonnes of radioactive tailings stockpiled on the site since 1915 by the then Radium Hill Company.
A NSW Health Commission warning of October 28, 1978 to a neighbouring resident revealed that testing uncovered radioactive readings twice the acceptable level on their property as well.
"I have to inform you that the NSW Government today resolved to arrange for decontamination of your property ... of radioactive material as soon as an agreement can be reached with the Commonwealth Government on a suitable disposal site," wrote the commission's chairman Roderick McEwin on 17 January, 1978 to a Nelson Pde resident. The land was never decontaminated.
CETC, a company contracted to The Daily Telegraph, last week tested five locations at the site. The highest reading was 10 microsieverts per hour of radiation. Risk assessments were triggered when 0.5 microsieverts per hour were detected.
Consulting scientist with CETEC Adam Garnys recommended in a report that a risk assessment be conducted.
[ 本帖最后由 villa 于 2008-1-30 01:52 编辑 ] |
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