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Boom Town: A Uranium Story
Alec Cowan
7 episodes
6 days ago
For 50 years Uravan, Colorado, was a uranium hub of America. Mining “yellowcake” was at the center of everyday life, where kids played on radioactive tailings and residents used mine waste for garden beds. Then residents started getting sick. Through interviews with historians, health experts, environmentalists, and uranium workers past and present, local documentarian Alec Cowan explores how uranium transformed the American West. As nuclear energy revives the controversial industry today, will the scars of uranium’s past influence the future? Or are some things best left underground?
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For 50 years Uravan, Colorado, was a uranium hub of America. Mining “yellowcake” was at the center of everyday life, where kids played on radioactive tailings and residents used mine waste for garden beds. Then residents started getting sick. Through interviews with historians, health experts, environmentalists, and uranium workers past and present, local documentarian Alec Cowan explores how uranium transformed the American West. As nuclear energy revives the controversial industry today, will the scars of uranium’s past influence the future? Or are some things best left underground?
Show more...
Documentary
Society & Culture
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Ep. 6: Underground
Boom Town: A Uranium Story
57 minutes 6 seconds
1 year ago
Ep. 6: Underground

With the promise of nuclear energy on the horizon, the demand for uranium is reviving a once-dormant industry. After a trip to a nearby uranium mine, it’s clear the region sees this development as a kind of deja vu. Residents are optimistic their prized industry can return. But can uranium mining be safer than it once was? Dedicated opponents upriver, and a decade of legal battles, may say otherwise.


Find transcripts, references, and photos for the series at ⁠⁠www.aleccowan.com/boomtown


In this episode:


George Glasier, President and CEO of Western Uranium & Vanadium


Mike Rutter, Chief Operating Officer for Western Uranium & Vanadium


Wendy Puderbaugh, Western Uranium & Vanadium


Steve Puderbaugh, Superintendent at Western Uranium & Vanadium


Bruce Norquist, General Manager of Mining Operations for Western Uranium & Vanadium


Jennifer Thurston, Executive Director for INFORM, the Information Network for Responsible Mining


Ann Maest, aqueous geochemist and scientist at Buka Environmental


Rodney Ewing, Senior Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Frank Stanton Professor in Nuclear Security, Professor of Geological Sciences, Co-director of the Center for International Security and Cooperation (Stanford University)


Sara Woods, physical scientist for the Department of Energy in Grand Junction, CO

Boom Town: A Uranium Story
For 50 years Uravan, Colorado, was a uranium hub of America. Mining “yellowcake” was at the center of everyday life, where kids played on radioactive tailings and residents used mine waste for garden beds. Then residents started getting sick. Through interviews with historians, health experts, environmentalists, and uranium workers past and present, local documentarian Alec Cowan explores how uranium transformed the American West. As nuclear energy revives the controversial industry today, will the scars of uranium’s past influence the future? Or are some things best left underground?