I just received my annual TCP-1 letter from LLNS and a summary of the LLNS Pension Plan. Looked in pretty good shape in 2013. About 35% overfunded (funding target attainment percentage = 134.92%). This was a decrease from 2012 where it was 51% overfunded (funding target attainment percentage = 151.59%). They did note that the 2012 change in the law on how liabilities are calculated using interest rates improved the plan's position. Without the change the funding target attainment percentages would have been 118% (2012) and 105% (2013). 2013 assets = $2,057,866,902 2013 liabilities = $1,525,162,784 vs 2012 assets = $1,844,924,947 2012 liabilities = $1,217,043,150 It was also noted that a slightly different calculation method ("fair market value") designed to show a clearer picture of the plan' status as December 31, 2013 had; Assets = $2,403,098,433 Liabilities = $2,068,984,256 Funding ratio = 116.15% Its a closed plan with 3,781 participants. Of that number, 3,151 wer...
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LOL... Neville Chamberlain would never allow it ... especially since he's in charge of America at the time. After 2012, you might be correct.
March 23, 2010 7:22 AM
Not proven. The "bunker buster" warheads have never penetrated as far or had the explosive effect advertised. Shielding technology outpaces penetrating technology every time.
Bunker busters have never been used to take out nuclear facilities and besides, aren't you the guy who claims there is only a few KG of HE on the ICBM? Research before you post next time.
Right, a perfect reason to dump our nuclear weapons. The best and the brightest have spoken.
March 25, 2010 7:02 PM
Nope, not that guy. Why does it matter if a facility is "nuclear" or not? The only issues are amount of HE, amount of penetration, and amount of coupling to the geologic formation. None of these are sufficient to destroy a deeply buried, hardened target.
The reactors that would be targeted in this case are all siting above ground. Reactors have been taken out with conventional weapons successfully in the past. Israel is expert in this field. It is very difficult to build a weapon without the key component, uranium.I suggest you check into it.
March 27, 2010 7:41 AM
The targeted facilitities to take out Iran's nuclear weapon program would not be above ground nuclear reactors, but buried uranium enrichment facilities. Try to keep up.
Right...
Pu-239 is produced using the most common isotope of uranium, U-238. Pu is made in virtually all operating nuclear reactors.
I think I am way out in front of you on this one.
According to Paul Leventhal of the Nuclear Control Institute, if Iran were to withdraw from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) and renounce the agreement with Russia, the Bushehr reactor could produce a quarter ton of plutonium per year, which Leventhal said was enough for at least 30 atomic bombs. Harmon W. Hubbard raised similar concerns in an April 2003 article titled "Plutonium from Light Water Reactors as Nuclear Weapon Material" published by the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center (NPEC). Another report published by the NPEC in 2004 reiterated the concerns about light water reactors and plutonium production.
Right...
Pu-239 is produced using the most common isotope of uranium, U-238. Pu is made in virtually all operating nuclear reactors.
I think I am way out in front of you on this one.
March 28, 2010 7:12 PM
Right... If Iran were primarily interested in producing Pu for weapons, why are they building ever more underground centrifuges to enrich U above 20%? That makes no financial, or proliferation, sense except for a U weapon. A U weapon is much simpler technically (why little boy preceded fat man) and with a couple of sub-critical masses, can be made by almost anyone.
The answer is: Iran is not building underground centrifuges (unless you know something the rest of us don't).
You can't make stuff up and then peddle it as fact. Fact trumps fiction every time.