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Published February 10, 2012, 05:02 PM

Group suspects nuclear contamination could affect water

Wisconsin News
Environmentalists are announcing new research which shows that nuclear power plants are putting drinking water at risk. Environment Minnesota and the Gopher State’s Public Interest Research Group say water and food supplies within 50 miles of an active nuclear plant can be contaminated if there’s a leak or an accident.

Environmentalists are announcing new research which shows that nuclear power plants are putting drinking water at risk. Environment Minnesota and the Gopher State’s Public Interest Research Group say water and food supplies within 50 miles of an active nuclear plant can be contaminated if there’s a leak or an accident.

The report noted that the Prairie Island nuclear plant at the Minnesota-Wisconsin border at Red Wing released a radio-active form of hydrogen last Friday and in late November.

The environmental groups said 935,000 Minnesotans could be adversely affected by a nuclear leak. And presumably, thousands of Wisconsinites would also have the same threat, since Prairie Island is almost right next to the Badger State.

The Mississippi River provides cooling water for both the Prairie Island and Monticello nuclear plants in Minnesota. Nuclear power supporters have not commented on the new study.

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