Court of Audit Finds Chaos in Brazil’s Nuclear Installations

Brazil's nuclear plant Angra Published this weekend by Rio daily O Globo, a report by a Brazilian official organization criticized the lack of security at Brazil's nuclear installations, which range from electricity-generating plants to hospital equipment.

"The deficiencies signaled out by the Brazilian Court of Audit (which ensures proper management of federal public resources) go from a state of chaos in radioactive installations to the lack of enough adequately trained technicians supervising the power stations at Angra dos Reis, a seaside resort where two nuclear plants for generating electricity are located, the newspaper said.

The report obtained by the newspaper says that "of the 2,350 pieces of equipment (that use radioactive material) in the country, 1.269 of them representing 54% of the total function very irregularly and have no official authorization to operate."

The report also points out a notorious "lack of human resources" trained to work with nuclear material and "a deficient review of licenses," Augusto Sherman, a member of the Brazilian Court of Audit and author of the report, told O Globo.

Sherman said that the average age of technicians working in Brazil's nuclear sector is 52 and that close to 40% of them are almost ready to retire.

"The National Nuclear Energy Commission could collapse in a few years because of lack of personnel," the official said, adding that he believed "urgent precautions" must be taken for the sector to be adequately supervised because of the potential risk its operations entail.

Most electricity in Brazil is hydro generated, 78%, and nuclear power represents a mere 2%.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Price of Freedom: Comment in Blog Brings US$ 9,000 Fine in Brazil Court

Brazilian blogger and journalism student EmÀ­lio Moreno da Silva Neto, 33, was ordered by ...

Brazil to Adopt Rapid Strike Force as New Military Model

The Brazilian government neither intends nor is it planning a massive troop build-up along ...

At Least 7 Vying for House Speaker in Brazil. Election on Sep 28.

Preparations are underway for the election of a new president of the Chamber of ...

Mexican Coca-Cola Gets Another Big Gulp of Brazil’s Coke Market

Mexico-based KOF, also known as Coca-Cola FEMSA, the largest Coca-Cola bottler in Latin America ...

LETTERS

Investments into Brazil economy should reach $15 billion this year, almost as much as ...

Gulf Air Considering Brazil’s Embraer for Its Fleet Expansion

The Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer announced it has signed a preliminary agreement with Gulf ...

They Sell 95% of Brazil’s Neonatal Equipment to 91 Countries

Exports by Brazil's medical, hospital and laboratory equipment maker Fanem rose 35% last year. ...

Without a Revolution in Education Brazil Will Never Go to the Moon

We commemorated two anniversaries on the same day, July 16. In the United States, ...

Investigation on Central Bank Chief Drags Market Down in Brazil

Brazilian and Latin American receipts spent another day in the red, partly on regional ...

Housing and Agribusiness Boost Bank Credit by 15% in 2009 in Brazil

In Brazil, the volume of bank credit operations totaled 1.389 trillion Brazilian reais (US$ ...