http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/nuclear-energy-is-nearing-to-its-irrelevance/article4336430.ece#.UQAIgtLxCjg.gmail
  Mumbai, January 23, 2013 ‘Nuclear energy is nearing to its irrelevance’ Staff
Reporter


The nuclear energy throughout the world is nearing to its irrelevance, said
Dr. John Byrne, Director of the Centre for Energy and Environmental Policy
(CEEP) and a distinguished Professor of University of Delaware, U.S. on
Wednesday. Dr. Byrne has contributed to the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) since 1992 and shares the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with
the IPCC researchers.

Dr. Byrne, who is on a 12-day tour to India, held a meeting with the
villagers of area in and around the proposed Jaitapur nuclear Power Plant
(JNPP). “It seems the people have a number of unanswered questions. The
answers provided to them and the risks or other implications of the project
are not clear at all. People want to know the reason for bringing this
project here,” he said, in a press conference organised by Greenpeace,
after the meeting with villagers and anti-nuclear power activists.

Making his stand against nuclear energy clear, Dr. Byrne said, “This
technology (nuclear) has a record of unanticipated accidents because of its
complex nature. The economic investment required to build and operate the
plant is huge and the ecological risks associated with the nuclear plant
cannot be denied,” he said. In particular, he noted the repeated negative
advisories from credit rating agencies regarding nuclear power.
“Considering all the negative sides of the nuclear energy and the available
options of renewable energy sources such as solar and wind, the nuclear
energy is nearing to its irrelevance,” he said.

According to Dr. Byrne, the evidence from scientific community in Japan
shows that nuclear accident in Fukushima after the earthquake and tsunami
has its roots in the technology and management related issues. “These were
the problems which were not anticipated even by the well-learned
technicians from Japanese nuclear industry,” he alleged.

Comparing the option of solar energy to nuclear, he said the former is more
sustainable. “But right now the solar energy is restricted for individual
uses. There has been no cost-effective model in case of solar energy to
build a plant which will benefit larger population. We are working on such
model, but I am sure that in future, such model will be developed,” he
said.



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