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November 7, 2019 Live from the Uranium One Trial, Feed Contracts May Be Loophole To Russian Arms

November 7, 2019  Live from the Uranium One Trial, Feed Contracts May Be Loophole To Russian Arms Phillip Newell's Article To Save Megatons To Megawatts



Centrus Part 10: Philip Sewell has been there since the beginning
By Paul Shannon -April 22, 2019

Philip Sewell has been part of the enrichment world since 1975, when he was first brought into the Department of Energy. He was part of the U.S. government team that went to Russia and saw what the nuclear program was like after the Soviet collapse. He moved over to USEC and was in charge of the Megatons to Megawatts program there. He has been there the whole way as USEC became Centrus and no longer enriches. Being the Chief Development Officer and a Senior Vice President means he has a lot of control in a company that is on the decline.

Short bio
Sewell got his bachelors from the University of Maryland and a masters from George Washington University. His degrees are in aerospace engineering and business administration. He went to the Department of Defense, where he worked on rocket propulsion projects. He then went to the Department of Energy, where from 1975 to 1987, he was part of the nation’s enrichment program. After that, he was the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Energy where he was in charge of the enrichment process for the entire department.

During his time as Deputy Assistant Secretary, he was sent to Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. He did not like what he saw, so he was one of the people who helped start the Megatons to Megawatts. He was part of USEC as it was privatized. He was also part of the effort to stop French imports of uranium. He is also one of, if not the highest, paid employees with the company. He is paid almost $2 million.

Anton Khlopkov, the director of the Center for Energy and Security Studies outside Moscow. He says Russia’s nuclear complex had nearly a million workers who weren’t getting paid a living wage.

Centrus Part 9: The criminal side of uranium
Centrus Part 8: The real reason Russia sold uranium
Centrus Part 7: The propaganda of buying uranium from Russia
Centrus Part 6: The current CEO, Daniel Poneman
Centrus Part 5: The dirty shutdown of the Paducah plant

George Webb is a Washington DC based journalist who discovered the stashed hard drives and blackberries of the famed DNC and DCCC servers, dampening the Trump Russia narrative of the DNC. George Webb produced a fact witness named Andre Taggart that testified that Imran Awan, the key consultant to DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, stored Congressional marked hard drives and blackberries at his Lorton, Virginia home. In addition, George Webb also produced a Congressional blackberry from an informant from the office of Senator Joe Biden coded named Deep Blackberry that may have been Trump Takedown leader, William Taylor. Webb has researched all the Imran Awan safe houses and has researched occupants and businesses associated with over a dozen Awan properties. For quick summary of the three year video series, we recommend watching the YouTube video playlist "Awan 911 - The Webb Report - What The Mueller Report Left Out" available here.


Phillip Sewell's Names Emerges As Architect Of Megatons To Megawatts





Overfilling Heated Depleted Uranium Cylinders To Ship "Feed" To From Piketon to New Orleans To St. Petersburg Can Cause Toxic Accidents

Among the accidents were a release of 17,800 pounds of liquid uranium hexafluoride from a ruptured cylinder that was being heated at a Government uranium plant in Peducah, Ky. in 1960, injuring 21 men. In 1966, one worker was hospitalized when 3,844 pounds escaped from a cylinder after a valve was improperly turned at a Government uranium processing plant in Fernald, Ohio. And in 1978, 21,125 pounds escaped from a ruptured cylinder that was being improperly moved at a Government plant in Portsmouth, Ohio. Five years later, seven more workers were injured in another incident at the Portsmouth plant, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

James T. Alexander, a spokesman in Oak Ridge, Tenn., for the Department of Energy, which owns the plants, said yesterday that after the 1978 incident, the agency prohibited the use of heat to drain overfilled cylinders. He also noted that the 1978 accident prompted discussion of the potential dangers. ''Under less favorable circumstances,'' it said, ''injury and possibly even fatalities could be expected from such a release.''

The cylinder that ruptured Saturday at Sequoyah held about 29,500 pounds of uranium hexafluoride, all of which was released, N.R.C. officials said. The tank was designed to hold 27,500 pounds, the officials added. Agency Renews License

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