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Uranium leaks into 2 southern France rivers

Solution spills from reservoir; authorities place bans on water use

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updated 3:28 p.m. ET July 8, 2008

PARIS - Liquid containing traces of unenriched uranium leaked Tuesday at a nuclear site in southern France, and some of the solution ran into two rivers, France's nuclear safety agency said.

Authorities banned the consumption of well water in three nearby towns and the watering of crops from the two rivers. Swimming, water sports and fishing were also banned.

A spokeswoman for the nuclear safety agency, Evangelia Petit, said about 7,925 gallons of solution containing uranium spilled at a factory at the Tricastin nuclear site, about 25 miles from the historic city of Avignon.

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Another nuclear safety agency official, Charles-Antoine Louet, said the liquid contained about 794 pounds of unenriched natural uranium, which he said is toxic but only slightly radioactive.

"The risk is slight," he said.

The factory handles materials and liquids contaminated by uranium, the fuel for nuclear power plants.

The liquid spilled from a reservoir that overflowed. It leaked both into the ground and into two rivers, the Gaffiere and the Lauzon, the nuclear safety agency said. It said the cause of the spill was not yet known. Local authorities said the leak happened during the washing of a tank.

The nuclear safety agency said uranium concentrations in the Gaffiere river were about 1,000 times the normal levels but were dropping rapidly.

Anti-nuclear group Sortir du Nucleaire, or Abandon nuclear power, protested that authorities were being too reassuring about the leak.

"It is impossible that such a spill, containing uranium, does not have important consequences for the environment and for the health of local people," it said.

It said the uranium, while not "very radioactive," is "excessively dangerous" for people if ingested.


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