---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: S Gadekar <[email protected]>
Date: 9 November 2011 09:41
Subject: answer to Kalam
To: "S. P. Udayakumar" <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]


Dear Uday,
This is my answer to Kalam's article [<
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/article2601471.ece?homepage=true>]. I
wanted to title it Misguided Missile Shoots Off but have decided not to
since that might offend some


Dr A P J Abdul Kalam and‭ ‬Mr.‭ ‬Srijan Pal Singh deserve a special thanks
for the two page article in the Sunday edition of The Hindu‭ (‬November‭
‬6,‭ ‬2011‭) ‬entitled‭ ‬“Nuclear power is our gateway to a prosperous
future.‭”‬ Although most of what they write is irrelevant to their topic
and the rest just plain wrong,‭ ‬the very fact that the establishment has
to bring out its‭ ‬‘Big Guns‭’‬ to answer the questions raised by the
Koodankulam movement,‭ ‬is a testimony to the success of the movement.
Originally I had intended to write a point by point refutation of their
article,‭ ‬but I have been deterred by the sheer length of the article.‭
‬What I intend to do here instead is to paraphrase their points and answer
them one by one.‭ ‬I would urge activists to visit the Hindu website at and
to read the article in the full. I make this request specially so that
friends can point out if I have been unfair in summarizing their work or
have missed something important.
Kalam and Singh make the following points:
       Because of its millions of times higher energy density,‎ ‏uranium
fuel requires much less material handling than coal.
       ‎“‏There is a distinct and categorical correlation between the
energy consumption and income of a nation‭ ‬-‭ ‬each reinforcing the
other.‭”‬
       The electricity demand will have to grow from the current‎ ‏150,000‎
‏MW to at least‭ ‬950,000‭ ‬MW by‭ ‬2030‭ ‬for economic growth.‭
‎       ‏The German decision to opt out of nuclear power‭ ‬“suits its
current scenario which goes beyond mere concerns of risk posed by nuclear
power.‭”‬ Besides,‭ ‬“Nuclear energy never fit into its goal of energy
independence‭”‬ since its uranium production was‭ ‬much smaller than
required.
       India has huge deposits of Thorium which is considered to be the
nuclear fuel of the future.‎ ‏Thorium has many advantages over uranium:‭
‬produces eight times more energy for the same mass,‭ ‬has a less toxic
waste stream,‭ ‬is more‭ ‬abundantly available.
       Most prosperous nations extract about‎ ‏30‎ ‏to‭ ‬40‭ ‬percent of
their power from nuclear.‭ (‬Accompanied by a table of nine countries,‭
‬the first eight top nuclear producers plus India‭ (‬15‭) ‬showing their
total nuclear capacity,‭ ‬its share in electricity production and their GDP
adjusted by PPP.
       The developed world has a habit to‎ ‏“Misguide emerging nations like
India,‎ ‏which are a potential challenge to their neo-age proxy-imperial
economic subjugation.‭ ‬What is needed for our India,‭ ‬we‭ ‬Indians have
to decide.‭”
‎       ‏Solar and wind are the greenest sources of power but despite
advantages are not reliable due to their dependence on weather conditions.‭
‬Nuclear on the other hand is dependable having more than‭ ‬14000‭ ‬reactor
years of experience and an international presence.‭
‎       ‏A nuclear plant is not a nuclear bomb.‭ ‬Our understanding of
nuclear disasters and accidents is coloured by our fears regarding
destruction caused by nuclear weapons.
       While there was a huge loss to property,‎ ‏there was no loss of life
either during the accident or in the efforts to contain it at Fukushima.‭
‬A lot of progress has been made in nuclear emergency management in the
last‭ ‬25‭ ‬years after Chernobyl.
       Radiation fallout causes no harm to future generations although it
does increase the cancer risk in the present generation.
       There are opportunity costs of not using nuclear.‎ ‏If nuclear is
stopped the gap would be filled by using more fossil fuel plants leading to
increased pollution and global warming.
       Only four major incidents have taken place during the six decades
long history of nuclear power generation Kyshtym,‎ ‏Three Mile Island,‭
‬Chernobyl and Fukushima.‭ ‬Of these,‭ ‬Kyshtym was due to underdeveloped
technology in fuel reprocessing,‭ ‬Three Mile Island‭ ‬and Chernobyl were
due to human errors and Fukushima due to extraordinary natural forces.‭
‬The occurrence of four accidents in six decades does not make a case for
abandoning our key energy source for the future.‭ ‬All technological
progress comes at an incremental risk.

Only a few tons of uranium

To get those few tons of uranium one needs to dig thousands of tons of ore
because the concentration of the uranium in‭ ‬the ore is very small.‭
‬Uranium Corporation of India‭ (‬UCIL‭) ‬claims that it is‭ ‬0.067%‭ ‬at
Jaduguda.‭ ‬However,‭ ‬as shown by me in a paper in Bulletin of Atomic
Scientists,‭ ‬this claim is erroneous since if true,‭ ‬there should have
been no shortage of uranium fuel in the country prior to signing of the‭
‬123‭ ‬agreement.‭ ‬The uranium concentration is more likely to be‭ ‬0.03%‭
‬at best.‭ ‬This means that each ton of ore that is dug one can at most get
a mere‭ ‬300‭ ‬grammes of natural uranium.‭ ‬The rest‭ ‬999.7‭ ‬kg ends up
as waste in places around Jaduguda where it shall continue to spew
radiation for thousands of years and‭ ‬cause horrific deformities in
children.‭

Mythical correlation between energy production and national income

Actually what this means is that the more energy you use,‭ ‬the richer you
are.‭  ‬It does not matter whether that energy is put to do useful work or
just frivolously‭ ‬wasted‭;‬ your wealth is assured by the very fact that
it is produced.‭ ‬In the old days,‭ ‬nucleocrats used to show a straight
line graph of energy production versus GNP.‭ ‬This held true for many
countries till the‭ ‬“imperial economic subjugation‭”‬ of the Arab lands in
the Middle East was able to hold oil prices to ridiculously low levels.‭
‬But after early‭ ‬1970s,‭ ‬when energy prices began to rise,‭ ‬this
correlation broke down as people even in the developed countries began to
use energy more efficiently.‭ ‬The energy consumption fell while the GNP
continued to rise.

No sharp rise in electricity demand,‭ ‬no economic growth

This is just a corollary of the earlier point except that Dr Kalam and
Singh have subtly substituted electricity for energy.‭ ‬Although,‭
‬electricity is one form of energy,‭ ‬it is not a synonym.‭ ‬In India,‭
‬electricity meets less than‭ ‬12%‭ ‬of the total energy needs and in no
country is this figure larger than‭ ‬30%.‭ ‬Nuclear energy can only produce
electricity and is thus in no position to meet our total energy requirement
of the future.‭ ‬At today‭’‬s levels,‭ ‬it can at best address only‭ ‬12%‭
‬of our energy needs,‭ ‬the rest‭ ‬88%‭ ‬is met by other sources.‭ ‬The
fact that it actually only meets‭ ‬2%‭ ‬of this‭ ‬12%‭ ‬today,‭ ‬is another
story.

The strange case of the German Merkel

I find it rather strange that Germany,‭ ‬no doubt a very rich and energy
surplus country had just kept seven nuclear power plants going although
they did not‭ ‬“fit into its goal of energy independence‭”‬ just to have
something to shut down when Fukushima struck.‭ ‬All the more strange
because just a few months before,‭ ‬the Angela Merkel government had
extended the life of these very reactors‭ ‬-‭ ‬a decision they were forced
to rescind following large public protests after Fukushima.‭ ‬India on the
other hand will of course,‭ ‬never compromise on energy independence,‭
‬though unfortunately we too produce far less uranium than our needs and
signed the‭ ‬123‭ ‬treaty and have been so active in changing our liability
laws.‭

The thorium carrot

The great advantages of thorium and especially our large deposits were well
known even fifty years ago when Dr Homi Bhabha first formulated the three
stage nuclear programme.‭ ‬The third stage envisaged‭ ‬large scale
utilization of thorium deposits within‭ ‬20‭ ‬to‭ ‬25‭ ‬years.‭ ‬Even
after‭ ‬fifty years we still seem to be at least‭ ‬25‭ ‬years away from
being able to‭ ‬realize‭ ‬this dream.‭ ‬Neither Americans,‭ ‬or the
French,‭ ‬Russians,‭ ‬Canadians,‭ ‬British,‭ ‬Japanese,‭ ‬etc.‭ ‬seem
interested in thorium technology.‭ (‬Why should they since it is we who are
sitting on the deposits.‭) Secondly thorium based electricity costs are
likely to be even greater than those based on uranium which are already
uncompetitive in the marketplace. ‬With nobody to buy,‭ ‬beg,‭ ‬borrow or
steal from,‭ ‬thorium dreams are likely to remain just dreams in the
foreseeable future.

Prosperous nations rely on nuclear

Although I looked hard at the table provided by The Hindu,‭ ‬the only
‘prosperous’ countries having‭ ‬more than‭ ‬30%‭ ‬of their electricity
coming from nuclear were France,‭ ‬Ukraine and South Korea.‭ I was
surprised by the prosperity of Ukraine. It turned out to be ranked at 102
in the list of prosperous nation by GDP (PPP) per capita, although the
share of nuclear in its electricity is 48%. ‬All the others in the table
including US,‭ ‬Japan,‭ ‬Russia,‭ ‬UK,‭ ‬and‭ ‬Canada‭ ‬had their nuclear
share of electricity production less than‭ ‬30%.‭ The most ‬prosperous
countries by per capita GDP were Qatar, Luxembourg, Singapore, Norway, and
Brunei, none of which were to‭ ‬be found anywhere in the table presumably
since their nuclear shares are not outstanding.‭ ‬Thus,‭ ‬to conclude that‭
‬most‭ ‬prosperous countries‭ ‬have nuclear share of‭ ‬their‭ ‬electricity
production in the‭ ‬30‭ ‬to‭ ‬40‭ ‬percent range is poetic license.

‎“‏Proxy-imperial economic subjugation‭”

In my youth,‭ ‬there‭ ‬used to be a song,‭ ‬“A spoonful of sugar makes the
medicine go down‭”‬.‭ ‬In a similar vein I find a spoonful of patriotism is
helpful in selling otherwise‭ disreputable‬  ideas.‭ ‬In the context‭
‬(Koodankulam protests‭) ‬in which the Dr Kalam and Singh  article has been
written,‭ ‬I find‭ ‬this invocation rather rich,‭ ‬since while foreign
inspiration for the protest are purely speculation,‭ ‬the fact that the
plant‭ ‬has been made by foreign money‭ ‬and‭ ‬expertise is undeniable.‭
‬It does not‭ ‬behove those‭ ‬like the nuclear establishment in India,‭
‬who have been moving heaven and earth to save foreign suppliers from
liability, even for‭ ‬willful‭ ‬negligence to wrap themselves in the flag
so‭ ‬blatantly.

Dependability thy name is nuclear

Strange countries like Germany and‭ ‬Denmark‭ ‬find‭ ‬solar and wind‭
‬dependable‭ ‬enough‭ ‬despite their‭ ‬intermittent‭ ‬nature and produce
around‭ ‬20%‭ ‬of their electricity dependably from‭ ‬these‭
‬‘undependable‭’‬ sources,‭ ‬while our rulers,‭ despite ‬our surfeit of
Sun,‭ ‬seem to think that there is no alternative to nuclear. But even
here, just during the last two decades, wind has already built capacity one
and a half times more than nuclear has managed to do with all the
mollycoddling ‭ of the last sixty years. ‬Japan is currently realizing the
true dependability of nuclear since more than a third of its reactors are
currently out of action following the earthquake and tsunami in March. They
are likely to remain in this state of limbo, for quite some time due to
‘irrational’ public opposition to restarting them.

Nucleophobia

The destructive might of an atom bomb‭ ‬is‭ ‬because of the blast,‭ ‬the
heat and‭ ‬also‭ ‬due to radiation.‭ ‬This was observed‭ ‬and documented in
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.‭ ‬While most nuclear reactors will probably not
explode like a nuclear bomb‭ (‬no bets on fast breeder reactors like the
one under construction at Kalpakkam‭) ‬the radiation contained within is
hundreds of times larger‭ ‬than that within a bomb.‭ ‬So the radiation
contamination of surrounding countryside is hundreds of times larger than
that produced by the bomb.‭ ‬Hiroshima and Nagasaki are thriving cities
today but the area surrounding Chernobyl and Fukushima will not permit
human habitation for centuries.

Nuclear emergency management‭ ‬2.0

The main ‘lesson’ nuclear establishments all over the world learned from
Chernobyl was that ‘radio-phobia’ is a bigger danger than radiation.‭
Ignorance is bliss. ‬Keep the people in ignorance‭ ‬through
misinformation.‭ First say nothing. Next, if forced to say something give
out a very low figure by ‘mistake’. ‬If your lies are detected, apologize
profusely but keep repeating a variation of the lie.‭ ‬Increase‭ ‬‘safe‭’‬
radiation limits twenty times.‭ ‬Whether this management method is‭
‬‘better‭’‬ or worse only time would tell,‭ ‬but if‭ ‬it does prove to be
the wrong course,‭ ‬then goodbye, Japan.‭ ‬The country would have
sacrificed its already few young on the alter of‭ ‬‘better‭’‬ nuclear
emergency‭ ‬management.‭ ‬As far as,‭ ‬“Not one person died at Fukushima‭”‬
myth,‭ ‬the tsunami has conveniently wiped out the evidence. Many keep
dying doing the cleanup but TEPCO’s mastery of disinformation techniques
has successfully kept their deaths hidden from the mainstream media.

Radiation‭ ‬does‭ ‬cause great harm to future generations

The radio-nuclides released from catastrophes like Chernobyl and Fukushima
like caesium-137‭ ‬and strontium-90‭ ‬for instance‭ ‬have long half lives.‭
‬They shall remain in the environment for far longer than one generation.‭
‬There is no doubt that our children and their children will ingest and
inhale them and suffer the consequences.‭ ‬Even the most die-hard
nucleocrats,‭ in ‬the French and US nuclear regulatory agencies have
accepted the need to move beyond Hiroshima Nagasaki data of the RERF for‭
‬radiation‭ ‬effects.‭ ‬The mutagenetic effects of radiation‭ ‬have been
known since they‭ ‬were first demonstrated by Hermann Muller‭ ‬in‭ ‬1926‭
‬and‭ that ‬later‭ ‬won him a Nobel‭ ‬prize. It is not that genetic effects
of radiation are not well known and documented. They have just been ignored
time and again so that the world was not denied the ‘benefits’ of nuclear
power.

Opportunity costs of‭ ‬using‭ ‬nuclear

Dr Kalam and‭ ‬Singh have enumerated what they term the opportunity costs
of not going nuclear.‭ ‬However,‭ ‬they ignore the opportunity costs of
going nuclear.‭ ‬Even a staunchly pronuclear publication like The Tech,
(MIT’s oldest and largest technology newspaper) has published an article
that admits that by any realistic‭ ‬reckoning‭ ‬new nuclear costs are
likely to be at least more than twice as much as the costs from a new gas
fired electricity generation in the US and cannot be commercially
competitive.‭ ‬For India to follow a sensible energy path,‭ ‬the first
priority must be to meet the real needs of the poorest section of the
population. The biggest use of energy in the country is for domestic
cooking. Electricity has no role to play in this. Heating using electricity
is extremely inefficient. Since nuclear energy can make only electricity,
it does not answer to our real energy needs. Even if one ignores the 88% of
our energy requirements which are met by sources other than electricity and
concentrates on the electricity sector alone, the first priority should be
to provide electricity to the 400 million people who have no access to it
today. Nuclear energy due to its inflexibility to follow demand, does not
meet this need at all. Today, Kerosene has to be subsidized since otherwise
a large section of the country would be condemned to live in darkness since
not everybody has access to electric lighting. But Kerosene subsidy implies
diesel subsidy as well to prevent adulteration which leads to the obscene
phenomena of diesel luxury cars gobbling up this subsidy ostensibly meant
for the poor.  All the energy sources used by the rich today  are
subsidized while none used by the poor are. It is this “Somebody has to pay
the price of development but it better not be me,” kind of development that
people in Koodankulam are protesting about.

Only four!

I feel embarrased to point to such eminent personalities that there is a
mistake in their counting. Even if we confine ourselves to the incidents
picked by Dr Kalam and Singh, Fukushima daiichi is not just a single
reactor. There are actually six of them, four of which had explosions, one
of them even though it had been emptied of fuel long before the tsunami.
Seven major accidents (incidents is the classic nukespeak) in just 14000
reactors years means an average of a major catastrophic accident every 2000
reactor-years. Since there are some 437 operating power reactors in the
world, this means that an accident on such a scale is likely  every four
and a half  years. Seen in this context, the safety record of nuclear
industry does not seem to be something to be proud of.
Dr Kalam and Singh rhetorically ask, “Whether we will allow an accident in
a 40 year old reactor to derail our dreams to be an economically developed
nation? I shall first only point out that while reactor 1 was indeed 40
years old having started in 1971, there were accidents in reactors 2 (1973)
and 3 (1974) as well and the spent fuel storage area of reactor 4 (1979)
also. Secondly, that our dreams need to be inclusive of everybody and not
just the fat-cats. Thirdly, the risky vehicle that they have chosen to turn
their dreams into reality is likely to turn the dream into a nightmare from
hell.



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Peace Is Doable

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