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Bruno Comby: An Ecologist For Nuclear Power In The Oilsands by Mike Byfield This article was originally published by the Daily Oil Bulletin on 27 February 2007 The original version of the article (with illustrations) can be accessed on the DOB web site : http://www.dobmagazine.nickles.com/columns/pulse.asp?arti cle=magazine/columns/070226/MAG_COL2007_FQ0000.html Bruno Comby is an engineer who writes health books, a son of the oilpatch who campaigns against global warming and an environmental activist who strongly favors nuclear power. "No technical subject is more misrepresented or exaggerated than radioactive waste disposal," asserts this Alberta-raised Frenchman. "Far from being the most dangerous source of energy, nuclear generation is demonstrably the safest, and it would be an environmentally clean source of electricity for the oilsands." Ten years ago, Comby (shown at left) launched Environmentalists For Nuclear Energy, a non-profit network which claims more than 8,000 supporters in 56 nations. The Parisheadquartered group, which goes by the initials EFN, has incorporated chapters in France, the United States, Canada, Japan, Britain and other countries. "We want the world to realise that there are genuine environmentalists on both sides of the nuclear question," says the French eco-crusader. One gram of uranium produces as much energy as one tonne of oil. Most of the nuclear fuel waste is either recyclable or easily handled because it has only very low levels of radioactivity. The remaining waste - non-recyclable and highly radioactive - is very low volume, according to EFN. The electricity needed for one human lifetime leaves waste of this type equivalent in size to a golf ball. "The aspect of low mass is tremendously important factor in its safe handling," Comby says. In his judgment, fission waste should be cast in glass, then encased in stainless steel or copper containers, and finally buried deeply in a stable geological formation. "This method, which has been exhaustively analysed, presents virtually no danger of underground leakage," he says. And if, against the odds, a leak does happen? In a recently published scientific paper, Comby cites data derived from 15 naturally occurring nuclear reactors (long dormant) within Gabon's uranium deposits. Research 1