---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: S. P. Udayakumar <[email protected]>
Date: 5 July 2011 23:21
Subject: [भारत-चिँतन:5965] Close Down Koodankulam
To: Bharat Chintan <[email protected]>


PRESS RELEASE

For immediate release

July 5, 2011

People’s Movement Against Nuclear Energy (PMANE)

42/27 Esankai Mani Veethy

Parakkai Road Junction

Nagercoil 629 002, Tamil Nadu, India

Phone: 91-9865683735

Email: [email protected]



*The ‘Hot Run’ in Koodankulam NPP Coincides with a ‘Hot Report’ Published in
Russia*



The “Hot Run” of India’s largest and the first reactor in the Koodankulam
Nuclear Power Project (KKNPP) commenced on July 1, 2011 when anti-nuclear
activists from all over Tamil Nadu organized a day-long hunger strike and a
complete shutdown at Koodankulam.



The activists complained about the untested and unreliable VVER-1000 reactor
technology, the bad quality of the construction, and the serious impact the
plant may have on the right to life and livelihood of the local people. The
activists expressed their concern that the land, the sea and sea food all
may become contaminated because of Koodankulam reactors. They also
complained that the KKNPP authorities did not hold any mandatory mass safety
drills or inform the public about the safety issues involved in the running
of a nuclear power plant.



In the meantime, a report (
http://www.bellona.org/articles/articles_2011/rosatom_report) prepared for
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev by state agencies concerned with the
safety of Russia’s nuclear power plants in the wake of the Fukushima
disaster reveals that Russia’s reactors are completely under-prepared for
both natural and man-made disasters. The report has come from an amalgam of
sources such as the Ministry of Natural Resources, the Federal Service for
Environmental, Technological and Nuclear oversight, or Rostekhnadzor, as
well as Rosatom. According to chief engineer Ole Reistad of the Norwegian
Institute for Energy Technology (IFI): “The report reveals deficiencies
which have never before been mentioned publicly, nor reported
internationally.”


The report claims that Russia’s nuclear plants do not have relevant
regulations in place for personnel to know how to deal with large-scale
natural disasters or other serious contingencies. It also establishes that
electrical and safety-significant systems do not receive the attention they
need, resulting in a lack of required protection. The report questions the
capability of Russian reactors to remain safe for extended periods of time
if cooling systems fail. There is no guarantee that power backup systems
will be effective should this happen. Russian reactors are vulnerable to the
kinds of hydrogen explosions that tore through three reactor buildings at
Fukushima Daiichi.


In the light of the above report, the people of Tamil Nadu and Kerala demand
immediate termination of the ‘hot run’ and the closure of the Koodankulam
Nuclear Power Project.




-- 
Peace Is Doable

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