This article was published in partnership with GlobalPossibilities.org.
We know many of our tragedies by name; in recent years we have met Andrew,
Katrina, Ike, Irene, and most recently, Sandy. They defied our expectations —
the lost lives, ruined homes, ransacked communities. There is little comfort
looking forward. We’re told to expect more storms, and worse ones. It’s hard to
imagine how bad things could get, but then, not everyone has to imagine. Some
people may remember Camille.
Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi Gulf coast on Aug. 17,1969, thrashing
communities with a tidal storm surge nearly three stories high and winds of up
to 200 miles an hour. Or so experts think — it’s hard to say, since the storm
destroyed all of the wind recording instruments in the region. When the storm
had moved on, many homes were underwater or on fire, and 143 people in Alabama,
Mississippi and Louisiana were dead. But Camille wasn’t done.
As the storm moved north, it grew weaker until August 19, when what was left
of Camille collided with another system of wet air by the Blue Ridge Mountains.
The result was a storm of immense magnitude that took rural Nelson County,
Virginia, completely by surprise. Stefan Bechtel explains in his book
Roar
of the Heavens, small communities in the mountains of central Virginia were
inundated with “one of the heaviest rainfalls ever recorded on earth” — in some
areas an estimated 31 inches of rain fell in less than eight hours.
“Humans, animals, trees, boulders, houses, cars, barns, and everything else
were swept away in a fast-moving slurry, a kind of deadly earth-lava that buried
everything in its path,” Bechtel writes. Birds drowned in the trees, people
struggling to stay alive had to cover their mouths from the rain to breathe,
homes floated away or were crushed by debris. An estimated 2,000 years of
erosion of the mountains took place in one night. As rivers rose, flash-flooding
occurred all over Virginia, and in Nelson County alone 153 people died, many of
their bodies never recovered.
This storm event was known as “probable maximum precipitation.” Thomas Leahy
has recently come to learn a lot about PMP storms, and he’s read all about
Camille’s wrath on Nelson County. Leahy is director of Public Utilities for the
city of Virginia Beach. His interest was piqued in 2007 when he heard about
plans to build a uranium mine and mill just south of Nelson County in
Pittsylvania County, Virginia. An intake valve for one of Virginia Beach’s main
sources of drinking water sits downstream from Pittsylvania County. What would
happen to our water, he wondered, if there was a uranium mine and mill in the
path of a PMP storm?
Using computer modeling, Virginia Beach spent $400,000 to
find
out. After all, we’re living in a world of extreme weather and it turns out
these massive rain and flooding events aren’t 1,000-year storms but have been
mapped by the USGS over the last 100 years across the U.S. Their findings reveal
a cluster of PMP storms along the Appalachian mountain range, including in the
mid-Atlantic region where three of the five most intense storms took place. Two
in Virginia, the 1969 storm in Nelson County, and a 1995 storm in Madison County
-- just north of Nelson – where 30 inches of rain fell in 14 hours. Smethport,
Pennsylvania was hit in 1942.
Extreme Energy
It’s not just weather that’s gotten extreme. So has extraction for fossil
fuels. The battle over hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, for shale gas has
gripped the East Coast. Due to the state's geology, fracking has had minimal
impacts in Virginia, but those in nearby West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio
can’t say the same. New York and North Carolina are both mulling decisions on
whether to allow fracking. Appalachian states like West Virginia have also long
endured coal mining, but in recent decades have faced increasing threats from an
even more extreme form of mining -— mountaintop removal mining, in which the
tops of mountains are blown to bits by explosives and the “waste” rock dumped
into mountain streams and valleys.
As extractive industries grow in the East, Virginians have realized their
state may be the bullseye of yet another energy industry — nuclear power. Large
deposits of uranium were discovered in the state in 1979. Throughout the 1970s,
employees of the Canadian company Marline Uranium drove all over Virginia with
Geiger counters, hoping to hit a uranium jackpot. They struck nuclear gold by
Coles Hill, just outside the town of Chatham, Virginia — an area of the state
known as Southside, less than 25 miles from the North Carolina border.
But just as they made their big discovery, nuclear energy was thrust into
national headlines as a partial meltdown occurred at Three Mile Island. Growing
public concern about nuclear energy, plummeting prices for uranium and a
moratorium on uranium mining in Virginia, enacted by the state’s General
Assembly in 1982, ultimately sent Marline packing.
What Marline walked away from was indeed mammoth — the Coles Hill deposit is
estimated at 119 million pounds of uranium worth about $10 billion. It may be
the largest find in the U.S. and one of the 10 biggest globally. But uranium
mining is all about economics and in 2005 the price of uranium rose high enough
that there was renewed interest in Coles Hill; this time from the owner of the
land himself, Walter Coles, whose family owns a 750-acre farm where the uranium
was found. In 2007 Coles announced the formation of Virginia Uranium Inc. (VUI)
and set off to persuade the Virginia Assembly to lift the uranium moratorium so
his company could begin mining.
Public Concern
Chatham, Virginia is a rural town struggling to thrive in the post-tobacco
and post-textile heyday. The downtown is a modest collection of a few
intersecting roads, brick and stone storefronts, a library, and a courthouse.
The government seat for Pittsylvania County, the economy is kept afloat by two
boarding schools, the all-girls Chatham Hall and the all-boys Hargrave Military
Academy. Agriculture continues to dominate in the adjacent bucolic
countryside.
Downtown Chatham, Virginia. (Photo by Tara Lohan)
The town is not down and out, but it is in the early stages of economic
re-invention. As such, it's the kind of place where someone offering jobs is
likely to be pretty popular. But Chatham residents are no fools, either. The
folks who live there and in surrounding communities in the Roanoke River
watershed have been doing their homework on uranium mining. Even though VUI has
promised jobs, residents have found ample reason to be concerned.
Our country’s history of uranium mining has been something of a horror story.
The first boom in uranium mining came in the '50s in response to our growing
nuclear weapons arsenal. A second boom happened in the '70s when many nuclear
power plants came online. These booms were followed by busts as uranium prices
dropped; when the market bottomed out, mining companies took off, creating an
epidemic of abandoned mines. Poor or non-existent regulations, including
allowing radioactive waste to be dumped into unlined pits, has left a legacy of
toxic pollution and poisoned communities in the West, many on tribal and federal
lands. (There are 520 abandoned uranium mines on
Navajo
land alone.) American taxpayers have been stuck with cleanup bills in the
billions of dollars.
Today, uranium mining proponents say regulations are better and new
technology makes the work safer. But it is still a massive industrial process
that leaves behind radioactive waste forever. You can’t see uranium in the rock
the way you can see a coal seam — to get to the good stuff, the rock needs to be
pulled from the earth by underground or open pit mines and then crushed. After
the mining comes the milling process, in which chemicals are used to separate
the uranium. The uranium is then dried and becomes the valuable commodity known
as “yellowcake.”
But the waste or "tailings" of crushed rock, water and chemicals is
problematic, still containing 85 percent of its radioactivity, including radium
and thorium. Tailings are usually put in lined impoundments that are stored
above or below ground (also known as below grade) for, well, all of eternity. In
that time, the liners are not supposed to rip.
Rose Ellen O’Connor
reported
for DC Bureau that Virginia Uranium plans to store some of the waste underground
and put the rest back in the mine. “Virginia Uranium spokesman Patrick Wales has
said the holding compartments will be state-of-the-art, lined with rock, clay
and tough synthetic strong enough to prevent leaching,” O’Connor
wrote.
Cale Jaffe, an attorney for the
Southern Environmental Law
Center, isn't convinced that the waste can be stored below grade because of
the area’s high water table. Another concern is that the tailings impoundments
aren’t capped until they are filled (they can be up to 40 acres in size), a
process that could take months or even years, so if heavy rains or storms occur
beforehand, there is opportunity for a catastrophic spill.
Before a tailings impoundment can be capped, all the water needs to be
drained from it and it needs to be completely dry, so there is no chance that
water could eventually leak out of the impoundment. “It seems to me it would be
impossible to dry out a tailings impoundment in Virginia where you have more
precipitation than evaporation,” said Sarah Fields, program director of the
Utah-based organization
Uranium Watch. “I
don’t know how Virginia Uranium could get around that technical detail.”
The amount of waste will also be massive. “This mine site is a large deposit
but they don’t mention that while the size of ore body is large, the grade of
ore is poor,” Jaffe said. “The average grade is 0.06 percent, which means that
99.94 percent is other stuff. To get the 63 million
pounds of
yellowcake they want to get out they have to manage 28.9 million
tons
of waste. VUI talks about energy independence for Virginia, but yellowcake will
get shipped to an out-of-state enrichment facility. Our prize is the waste. It
is really a question of Virginia being the uranium waste disposal capital of the
East Coast.”
Where will all the waste go? An
economic
assessment prepared for Virginia Uranium by two engineering firms in June
2012 said, “Tailings planned for surface disposal, employing regulatory
guidelines, shows that there is currently inadequate surface disposal acreage
within the current surface land control area.”
Significant Hurdles
After VUI began pushing for the moratorium to be lifted, the public pushed
back. The resulting compromise was that the Virginia Coal and Energy Commission
authorized a
study
(paid for by VUI to the tune of $1.4 million) from the National Academy of
Sciences. “It had buy-in from all sides,” said Jaffe. “There were experts from
all sides and public comments and an independent peer review committee.” The
intention of the study wasn’t to provide a recommendation for whether the
moratorium should be lifted, but to offer evidence for the public and for
legislators to draw their own conclusions.
One of the biggest red flags point out that almost all uranium mining has
taken place in arid parts of the country, but in rainy Virginia, the report
found, “federal agencies have limited experience applying laws and regulations
in positive water balance situations.”
Again, an issue of more rain than evaporation. There are also other concerns;
the Southern Environmental Law Center found that in the last century, Virginia
“has been hit by at least 78 category-strength hurricanes ... In 2011, at least
37 tornadoes were recorded in Virginia, including one in Halifax County about 20
miles from the Coles Hill site. And in August 2011, an earthquake of 5.8 rocked
Virginia; its epicenter was just 125 miles from Coles Hill.”
Then there is the issue of the tailings that will remain after the milling
process and pose a contamination hazard for thousands of years, even with modern
technological improvements. The “long-term risks remain poorly defined” the
report said, and failings “could lead to significant human health and
environmental effects.”
The report noted that there are some serious health risks from silica dust,
diesel exhaust and radon decay that have been linked to cancer. Workers are most
at risk, but the surrounding public could be exposed to cancer-causing chemicals
as dust blows from the site or wastewater leaks. And it is possible for the
contaminants to enter the food chain, too.
Ultimately, the study concluded that if Virginia does decide to lift the
moratorium it will face "steep hurdles" to ensure that the environment, public
health, and workers are safe.
Focus on Water
Coles Hill sits on the Bannister River, a tributary of the Roanoke River,
which travels over 400 miles from the Blue Ridge Mountains through Virginia,
dipping into North Carolina, and finally reaching the ocean at the Outer Banks.
In 2011, the proposed uranium mine earned the Roanoke a spot on American Rivers’
annual list of the
most
endangered waterways in the country. "The potential health impacts of
exposure to uranium and mining chemicals are well-documented, and include
cancer, birth defects, hormone disruption, and damage to vital organs," the
organization said. "Developing a uranium industry in Virginia is considered
especially risky because of the region’s high rainfall and frequently severe
hurricanes and storms."
While the Roanoke doesn’t flow through Virginia Beach, it is impounded in
Lake Gaston, from which the city pumps water — and that water is mixed with
other sources to supply Virginia Beach and neighboring communities like Norfolk
and Chesapeake. Virginia Beach found through its computer modeling that a major
failure of even just one above-ground waste impoundment would be bad news for
their community — even though they’re hundreds of miles downstream.
The water column will eventually clear, said Public Utilities director Thomas
Leahy, although Virginia Beach would have to stop pumping water from one of its
main sources for up to two years. The toxic sediments that fall out of the water
column could affect plants and bottom-dwelling fish for perhaps hundreds of
years. If the city had to stop pumping, Leahy says it would be “a bad time for a
year or two with severe economic issues” as well as a public relations
nightmare.
If the impoundments are put below grade he says, and there is a failure the
effects would be more in the immediate environment. “Surface water would be
protected at the expense of groundwater.” But Leahy says there is no guarantee
that below grade impoundments will be feasible. “The Marline company said the
water table was too high for below grade impoundments and so did the engineering
study,” Leahy said. “In Virginia, all landfills are above ground because of
water contamination.”
As a result of the study, the Virginia Beach City Council opposes lifting the
moratorium. The AP
reported
that, “The Virginia Association of Counties and the Virginia Municipal League
have endorsed legislative positions seeking to keep the ban” as well.
“Regardless of what anyone says, if you run a mining operation there will be
releases,” Leahy said. “Most of that would be a local issue. Our concern is more
of the catastrophic accident.”
But there are many close to Coles Hill who are concerned about the local
impacts, as well as the 1.2 million people who get their drinking water from the
Roanoke and Bannister rivers.
Olga Kolotushkina's family owns a home 12 miles from the Coles Hill site. She
said, “There is a small risk but huge consequence if there is a catastrophic
event of rain and flooding — everything will be washed down. But another risk is
the long-term chronic degradation of water. What is going to be the cumulative
impact?”
A
site-specific study commissioned last year by the Roanoke River Basin
Association found that 250 private wells could be at risk in just a two-mile
radius from the Coles Hills site. Water contamination could result from leaking
mill tailings, but could also come from water that would need to be drained from
the mine and stored on-site before being treated and released. “Such a project
would cause long-term, chronic degradation of water quality and increase water
competition in the region,” the report found.
"Virginia Uranium says it will mine safely, just as BP said it would drill
safely," attorney Cale Jaffe
told the
Roanoke
Times. "The lesson here is that things do not always go according to plan,
and we should not be playing high-stakes roulette with a waterway.”
But sometimes it isn't the catastrophic accident that is most damaging, but
slow leaks from cracks in impoundments, said Jaffe.
Writing
for the
Richmond Times Dispatch, Jaffe elaborated:
In Colorado, a Cotter Corp. mill has been leaking for years, despite repeated
efforts to address the problem. The mill was declared a Superfund site in the
1980s, but a 2004 report found it continued to release "millions of gallons of
leachate into the environment each year." Cleanup was estimated to cost up to
$500 million.
Accidents continue to this day. As recently as 2006, flooding overwhelmed a
uranium mine site in Saskatchewan, Canada. According to a nuclear-industry
publication, that flood raised "questions for some analysts about whether [the
mining company] could devise plans to prevent future floods."
Closer to home, uranium was extracted in Florida as a byproduct of phosphate
mining. In 1997, a spill at one Florida phosphate mine released 50 million
gallons of wastewater, poisoning 35 miles of the Alafia River and killing up to
3 million fish. The cleanup of a second spill from the same company cost state
taxpayers $144 million.
Robert G. Burnely, a former director of Virginia’s Department of
Environmental Quality, says the state doesn’t have the experience or the
know-how to effectively regulate uranium mining. Not only that, it simply
doesn't have the money. "Virginia consistently spends less than 1 percent of its
total annual budget on environmental protection," he wrote in an
op-ed
for the
Danville Register & Bee. "A fair conclusion to be drawn
from this statistic is that the environment has not been a high priority for the
legislature ...The forced triage of regulatory duties means that agencies must
often rely on industry self-reporting — a prospect that should be unthinkable
for an industry as risky as uranium mining and waste disposal."
Political Climate
Whether Virginia embraces uranium mining will likely be decided in the next
year by the General Assembly. Most people thought it would come to a vote during
the beginning of 2012; the National Academy of Sciences study was completed in
December 2011 and it was thought to hold all the information legislators would
need to make educated decisions about whether to vote yes or no on lifting the
moratorium. But instead, Virginia’s governor Bob McDonnell asked the legislature
to wait until he could form a task force to examine the issue. Proponents of
keeping the ban cried foul, believing that the governor’s handpicked Uranium
Working Group and the private consulting firm he hired were tasked with drafting
uranium-mining regulations for the General Assembly and not fact-finding about
the potential hazards — which were already well documented.
The governor has
declared
his intentions to make “Virginia the energy capital of the East Coast.” He has
said, “Energy is the lifeblood of our nation's economic growth. More energy
means more jobs and we need to use all of our domestic energy resources.”
Does this mean Gov. McDonnell is willing to use his political muscle to lift
the ban? It’s not clear, but Virginia Uranium and its lobbyists are working hard
— and may be seeking an alternate strategy instead of a straight vote on the
ban. O’Connor
reported
for DC Bureau, "Whitt Clement, head of the state government relations team
at Hunton & Williams and one of 19 lobbyists employed by Virginia Uranium,
told a closed-door meeting of Virginia business leaders in Williamsburg last
month that the company is working on legislation that would authorize state
agencies to draft regulations to govern mining rather than voting directly on
the project."
The Uranium Working Group’s findings were
released
just this week and it was news that State Senator John Watkins would be
introducing legislation during the 2013 session to lift the moratorium. In a
news release on December 3 he said, “I have made a request to Legislative
Services for legislation that adheres to the principles outlined by the UWG
(Uranium Working Group) and intend to be the patron of such a bill.”
If Virginia does vote to lift the moratorium it would only be for uranium
mining – the milling would be overseen by the Nuclear Regulatory Committee,
unless Virginia applies to be an “agreement state” and take over the monitoring
of milling. In either case, Virginia Uranium would have many more hoops to jump
through before its project could be approved by state and federal
regulators.
A Matter of Economics
At a public meeting convened by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the
Uranium Working Group in Chatham during August, longtime resident Eloise Nenon
told the audience she’s been fighting uranium mining in Virginia for 52 years.
She started the first area organization with six women sitting around her dining
room table. She believes that most of what would be mined in Virginia would be
headed overseas; she said China is the primary market for Virginia’s
uranium.
Signs displayed at the August UWG meeting in Chatham, Virginia. (Photo by
Tara Lohan)
The U.S. imports about 90 percent of the uranium that is used in nuclear
reactors, leaving many people to point to uranium mining in Virginia as a key to
energy independence. But, as with fossil fuels such as coal, gas and oil, just
because they are mined or drilled in the U.S., doesn’t mean they’ll be burned
here. The energy industry operates on the global market, as Scott Harper
reported for the
Virginia Pilot:
Dominion Virginia Power, the state’s largest electric utility, operates the
North Anna and Surry stations. Asked about possible uranium mining in the state,
a corporate spokesman was ambivalent.
“We are trading in the world market for fuel and able to secure uranium at
competitive prices to help keep our costs down for our customers,” Jim Norvelle,
a Dominion spokesman, said in a statement. “It’s hard to know right now whether
having a uranium mine in Virginia would be economic for us.”
During the Chatham meeting, resident Ian Kelly said he believes it’s best to
know where one’s energy comes from, even if it’s eventually shipped overseas,
and he likened it to the farm-to-table movement of local foods. It’s a sentiment
similar to what Walter Coles himself has offered. He
told
the
New York Times, “The country needs uranium. We need it for our
ships, we need it for our nuclear power utilities. It’s better that we exploit
our own natural resources as opposed to importing it.”
Virginia Uranium has hoped the “local” aspect of the operation will gain
support for the project and the company, which despite being founded by Coles
and another area resident is not really a mom-and-pop business, but a
Canadian-owned corporation now part of
Anthem
Resources Incorporated. “Behind Virginia Uranium Inc. is a complex web of
Canadian corporations, including an executive from the former Canadian company
that failed in the 1980s to win approval for uranium mining,” O’Connor
reported
at DC Bureau.
VUI (which did not respond to requests to be interviewed for this story) says
that “a full-scale mining and milling operation at Coles Hill will support over
1,000 jobs for the 35-year life span of the mine, generate $5 billion in revenue
for Virginia companies, and generate $112 million in state and local taxes.”
Virginia Business puts the number at 325 full-time jobs with salaries
between $50,000 to $70,000.
The jobs angle has gained the company some support in the region, but not
from everyone. Other business leaders have a different vision for jumpstarting
the area’s economy, including the
Alliance for Progress in
Southern Virginia, a “pro-economic development coalition of businesses
farmers, community leaders, property owners” that is against lifting the
ban.
Virginia Business interviewed
Chatham business owner Ben Davenport Jr., a group member who is also past rector
of the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors and a past chairman of the Virginia
Chamber of Commerce. Davenport believes the uranium mine would threaten area
businesses, particularly the boarding schools.
“I guess we’re being asked to take the risk not knowing the outcome [of
uranium mining] while knowing on the other hand the penalty if one or both
[schools] were to fail,” he said. “I’m on the board of Hargrave, and we say, ‘If
you’ve got to explain that [uranium mining is] not a problem, you’ve already
lost.’ All at once we’re no longer this quiet little Southern town … now it’s a
town that is a mining town… [We also] have a vibrant agricultural economy that’s
actually on the upswing. Do the farmers feel threatened? Yes. If, in fact,
somehow their product gets stigmatized, it could be devastating to them.”
The
Virginia
Farm Bureau has recently come out in support of keeping the moratorium and
Olga Kolotushkina says she believes the schools don’t stand a chance if uranium
mining and milling is green-lighted. “The main concern is the stigma — for
agriculture and for Chatham Hall and Hargrave Academy,” she said. “There is no
doubt — no one would risk their children’s health. I have two little kids. I’ve
invested so much money, blood, sweat, and time in this house that I wouldn’t be
able to sell, but I also wouldn’t want to bring my girls there.”
Kolotushkina said in recent years there has been a growth in organic farming
and wineries, and further downstream in North Carolina the region is dependent
on tourism from the Roanoke River.
Some wonder if the economy will be sacrificed for an unstable industry. In
April 2003 the price of
uranium
was selling for $10 a pound. By June 2007 the price had skyrocketed to $136
a pound, but two years later it had fallen to less than $42. It has gone up and
down since and is now around $45. At what point does it no longer become a
profitable enterprise for VUI?
In the larger economic picture, is it ever profitable for the American
people? “All such large-scale uranium projects involve trade-offs, usually some
short-term jobs, etc. in exchange for long-term impacts (environmental,
socioeconomic, etc.), most of which are paid by future generations,” concluded
Robert Moran in his
site-specific
assessment of Coles Hill. “Thus, many of the long-term costs will be
subsidized by the public.”
Ultimately, it will fall on the American taxpayers. “You have mining there
and those tailings impoundments will be there
forever and have to be
under government control
forever,” Uranium Watch's Sarah Fields
said.
And for what gain?
The fate of nuclear energy still seems in limbo as countries like Germany and
Japan are swearing off it. In the U.S. the story is more complicated. The
average age of our reactors is an elderly 32 years, but in February the OK was
given to build the first new nuclear reactor in the country in 30 years. The
nuclear industry generally seems one catastrophe away from collapse, and yet the
industry clings to life in the U.S. only because of the generous will of
taxpayers. What happens if the nuclear lobby falls out of favor in Washington
due to public pressure or shifting economics?
Crossroads
In many ways, Virginia may be indicative of where our country’s energy future
is headed. The state has dabbled in wind energy, but its attempts thus far are
dwarfed by gas drilling, neighboring states’ fracking operations and mountaintop
removal coal mines. If Governor McDonnell has his way, residents will also begin
to see drilling in their coastal waters. Despite the best science indicating
that the ramifications of climate change mean our energy policies are paving a
road to a dead-end, we continue to drive full speed ahead. Proponents of the
uranium mine echo similar sentiments as the pro-fracking and coal contingents —
it’s about jobs and energy independence, they say.
But opponents see rural towns being turned into industrial zones. They fear
not just for existing jobs, but are concerned for the air, water, food, quality
of life, their health, and their homes. They worry about what will be sacrificed
at the expense of an industry that will take what it wants, sell it for the
highest price wherever that may be, and move on.
As fracking has spread throughout the East, some worry that the Coles Hill
mine could be the first of many uranium mines in the East Coast.
“Geologists suspect that the Coles Hill deposit is not isolated,”
writes
Andrew Rice for the
New Republic. “Scientists argue about the origins
of the ore, but it’s most likely a remnant of the same ancient tectonic
processes that created the Triassic Basins--meaning that there could be similar
deposits up and down the East Coast. Robert Bodnar, a geochemistry professor at
Virginia Tech, has spent the last two years studying how the uranium got to
Coles Hill. ‘I think there’s a very high probability that there are other
deposits of the same size, same grade, as Coles Hill located in the eastern
United States,’ he told me.”
In an email to the
Associated
Press, Susan Hall of the U.S Geologic Survey wrote, “A common scenario in
mineral exploration is that a large discovery such as Coles Hill is followed by
an influx of exploration companies who comb the countryside and discover
additional deposits.”
In the coming months, Virginia legislators will decide the fate of uranium
mining in their state, but the vote may well be a harbinger for our energy
future.
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