http://www.transcend.org/tms/2014/02/atoms-for-peace/

Atoms for Peace”?

BY TRANSCEND 
MEMBERS<http://www.transcend.org/tms/category/by-transcend-members/>,
10 February 2014

*by John Scales Avery – TRANSCEND Media Service*

“Atoms for Peace”, the title of US President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s 1953
speech to the UN General Assembly, may be regarded by future generations as
being tragically self-contradictory. Nuclear power generation has led not
only to dangerous proliferation of nuclear weapons, but also to disasters
which have made large areas of the world permanently uninhabitable because
of long-lived radioactive contamination.

The dangers of nuclear power generation are exemplified by the Chernobyl
disaster: On the 26th of April, 1986, during the small hours of the
morning, the staff of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor in Ukraine turned off
several safety systems in order to perform a test. The result was a core
meltdown in Reactor 4, causing a chemical explosion that blew off the
reactor’s 1,000-ton steel and concrete lid. 190 tons of highly radioactive
uranium and graphite were hurled into the atmosphere. The resulting
radioactive fallout was 200 times greater than that caused by the nuclear
bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The radioactive cloud spread
over Belarus, Ukraine, Russia, Finland, Sweden and Eastern Europe, exposing
the populations of these regions to levels of radiation 100 times the
normal background. Ultimately, the radioactive cloud reached as far as
Greenland and parts of Asia.

The exact number of casualties resulting from the Chernobyl meltdown is a
matter of controversy, but according to a United Nations report, as many as
9 million people have been adversely affected by the disaster. Since 1986,
the rate of thyroid cancer in affected areas has increased ten-fold. An
area of 155,000 square kilometers (almost half the size of Italy) in
Belarus, Ukraine and Russia is still severely contaminated. Even as far
away as Wales, hundreds of farms are still under restrictions because of
sheep eating radioactive grass.

Public opinion turned against nuclear power generation as a result of the
Chernobyl disaster. Had the disaster taken place in Western Europe or North
America, its effect on public opinion would have been still greater.
Nevertheless, because of the current energy crisis, and because of worries
about global warming, a number of people are arguing that nuclear energy
should be given a second chance. The counter-argument is that a large
increase in the share of nuclear power in the total spectrum of energy
production would have little effect on climate change but it would involve
unacceptable dangers, not only dangers of accidents and dangers associated
with radioactive waste disposal, but above all, dangers of proliferation of
nuclear weapons.

The more recent disaster of 11 March, 2011, may prove to be very much worse
than Chernobyl. According to an article by Harvey Wasserman (
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/02/03-3), the ongoing fallout from
the Fukushima catastrophe is already far in excess of that from Chernobyl.
Ecosystems of the entire Pacific ocean are being contaminated by the 300
tons of radioactive water from Fukushima that continue to pour into the
Pacific every day.

Meanwhile, the increasingly militaristic government of Japan’s Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe has passed a State Secrets Act that makes it an offense
punishable by 5-year imprisonment for journalists to report on the
situation. Under this cloak of secrecy, attempts are being made to remove
highly radioactive used fuel rods balanced precariously in a partially
destroyed container hanging in the air above the stricken Unit Four. If an
accident should occur, the released radioactivity could dwarf previous
disasters.

There are three basic reasons why nuclear power generation is one of the
worst ideas ever conceived: First is the danger of proliferation of nuclear
weapons, which will be discussed in detail below. Secondly, there is the
danger of catastrophic accidents, such as the ones that occurred at
Chernobyl and Fukushima. Finally, the problem of how to safely dispose of
or store used fuel rods has not been solved.

In thinking about the dangers posed by radioactive waste, we should
remember that many of the dangerous radioisotopes involved have half-lives
of hundreds of thousands of years. Thus, it is not sufficient to seal them
in containers that will last for a century, or even a millennium. We must
find containers that will last for a hundred thousand years or more, longer
than any human structure has ever lasted.

*The danger of proliferation*

Of the two bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, one made use of the
rare isotope of uranium, U-235, while the other used plutonium. Both of
these materials can be made by a nation with a nuclear power generation
program.

Uranium has atomic number 92, i.e., a neutral uranium atom has a nucleus
containing 92 positively-charged protons, around which 92
negatively-charged electrons circle. All of the isotopes of uranium have
the same number of protons and electrons, and hence the same chemical
properties, but they differ in the number of neutrons in their nuclei. For
example, the nucleus of U-235 has 143 neutrons, while that of U-238 has
146. Notice that 92+143=235, while 92+146=238. The number written after the
name of an element to specify a particular isotope is the number of
neutrons plus the number of protons. This is called the “nucleon number”,
and the weight of an isotope is roughly proportional to it. This means that
U-238 is slightly heavier than U-235. If the two isotopes are to be
separated, difficult physical methods dependent on mass must be used, since
their chemical properties are identical. In natural uranium, the amount of
the rare isotope U-235 is only 0.7 percent.

A paper published in 1939 by Niels Bohr and John A. Wheeler indicated that
it was the rare isotope of uranium, U-235, that undergoes fission. A bomb
could be constructed, they pointed out, if enough highly enriched U-235
could be isolated from the more common isotope, U-238 Calculations later
performed in England by Otto Frisch and Rudolf Peierls showed  that the
“critical mass” of highly enriched uranium  needed is quite small: only a
few kilograms.

The Bohr-Wheeler theory also predicted that an isotope of plutonium,
Pu-239, should be just as fissionable as U-235. Both U-235 and Pu-239 have
odd nucleon numbers. When U-235 absorbs a neutron, it becomes U-236, while
when Pu-239 absorbs a neutron it becomes Pu-240. In other words, absorption
of a neutron converts both these species to nuclei with even nucleon
numbers.

According to the Bohr-Wheeler theory, nuclei with even nucleon numbers are
especially tightly-bound. Thus absorption of a neutron converts U-235 to a
highly-excited state of U-236, while Pu-239 is similarly converted to a
highly excited state of Pu-240. The excitation energy distorts the nuclei
to such an extent that fission becomes possible. Instead of trying to
separate the rare isotope, U-235, from the common isotope, U-238,
physicists could just operate a nuclear reactor until a sufficient amount
of Pu-239 accumulated, and then separate it out by ordinary chemical means.

Thus in 1942, when Enrico Fermi and his coworkers at the University of
Chicago produced the world’s first controlled chain reaction within a pile
of cans containing ordinary (nonenriched) uranium powder, separated by
blocks of very pure graphite, the chain-reacting pile had a double
significance: It represented a new source of energy, but it also had a
sinister meaning. It represented an easy path to nuclear weapons, since one
of the by-products of the reaction was a fissionable isotope of plutonium,
Pu-239. The bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 used U-235, while the
Nagasaki bomb used Pu-239.

By reprocessing spent nuclear fuel rods, using ordinary chemical means, a
nation with a power reactor can obtain weapons-usable Pu-239. Even when
such reprocessing is performed under international control, the uncertainty
as to the amount of Pu-239 obtained is large enough so that the operation
might superficially seem to conform to regulations while still supplying
enough Pu-239 to make many bombs.

The enrichment of uranium, i.e. production of uranium with a higher
percentage of U-235 than is found in natural uranium is also linked to
reactor use. Many reactors of modern design make use of low enriched
uranium (LEU) as a fuel. Nations operating such a reactor may claim that
they need a program for uranium enrichment in order to produce LEU for fuel
rods. However, by operating their ultracentrifuges a little longer, they
can easily produce highly enriched uranium (HEU), i.e. uranium containing a
high percentage of the rare isotope U-235, and therefore usable in weapons.

Nuclear power generation is not a solution to the problem of obtaining
energy without producing dangerous climate change: Known reserves of
uranium are only sufficient for the generation of about 25 terawatt-years
of electrical energy (Craig, J.R., Vaugn, D.J. and Skinner, B.J.,
“Resources of the Earth: Origin, Use and Environmental Impact, Third
Edition”, page 210). This can be compared with the world’s current rate of
energy use of over 14 terrawatts. Thus, if all of our energy were obtained
from nuclear power, existing reserves of uranium would only be sufficient
for about 2 years.

It is sometimes argued that a larger amount of electricity could be
obtained from the same amount of uranium through the use of fast breeder
reactors, but this would involve totally unacceptable proliferation risks.
In fast breeder reactors, the fuel rods consist of highly enriched uranium.
Around the core, is an envelope of natural uranium. The flux of fast
neutrons from the core is sufficient to convert a part of the U-238 in the
envelope into Pu-239, a fissionable isotope of plutonium.

Fast breeder reactors are prohibitively dangerous from the standpoint of
nuclear proliferation because both the highly enriched uranium from the
fuel rods and the Pu-239 from the envelope are directly weapons-usable. It
would be impossible, from the standpoint of equity, to maintain that some
nations have the right to use fast breeder reactors, while others do not.
If all nations used fast breeder reactors, the number of nuclear weapons
states would increase drastically.

It is interesting to review the way in which Israel, South Africa,
Pakistan, India and North Korea obtained their nuclear weapons, since in
all these cases the weapons were constructed under the guise of “atoms for
peace”, a phrase that future generations may someday regard as being
tragically self-contradictory.

Israel began producing nuclear weapons in the late 1960′s (with the help of
a “peaceful” nuclear reactor provided by France, and with the tacit
approval of the United States) and the country is now believed to possess
100-150 of them, including neutron bombs. Israel’s policy is one of visibly
possessing nuclear weapons while denying their existence.

South Africa, with the help of Israel and France, also weaponized its civil
nuclear program, and it tested nuclear weapons in the Indian Ocean in 1979.
In 1991 however, South Africa destroyed its nuclear weapons and signed the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

India produced what it described as a “peaceful nuclear explosion” in 1974.
By 1989 Indian scientists were making efforts to purify the lithium-6
isotope, a key component of the much more powerful thermonuclear bombs. In
1998, India conducted underground tests of nuclear weapons, and is now
believed to have roughly 60 warheads, constructed from Pu-239 produced in
“peaceful” reactors.

Pakistan’s efforts to obtain nuclear weapons were spurred by India’s 1974
“peaceful nuclear explosion”. As early as 1970, the laboratory of Dr. Abdul
Qadeer Khan, (a metallurgist who was to become Pakistan’s leading nuclear
bomb maker) had been able to obtain from a Dutch firm the high-speed
ultracentrifuges needed for uranium enrichment. With unlimited financial
support and freedom from auditing requirements, Dr. Khan purchased
restricted items needed for nuclear weapon construction from companies in
Europe and the United States. In the process, Dr. Khan became an extremely
wealthy man. With additional help from China, Pakistan was ready to test
five nuclear weapons in 1998. The Indian and Pakistani nuclear bomb tests,
conducted in rapid succession, presented the world with the danger that
these devastating weapons would be used in the conflict over Kashmir.
Indeed, Pakistan announced that if a war broke out using conventional
weapons, Pakistan’s nuclear weapons would be used “at an early stage”.

In Pakistan, Dr. A.Q. Khan became a great national hero. He was presented
as the person who had saved Pakistan from attack by India by creating
Pakistan’s own nuclear weapons. In a Washington Post article (1 February,
2004) Pervez Hoodbhoy wrote: “Nuclear nationalism was the order of the day
as governments vigorously promoted the bomb as the symbol of Pakistan’s
high scientific achievement and self- respect…” Similar manifestations of
nuclear nationalism could also be seen in India after India’s 1998 bomb
tests.

Early in 2004, it was revealed that Dr. Khan had for years been selling
nuclear secrets and equipment to Libya, Iran and North Korea, and that he
had contacts with Al Qaeda. However, observers considered that it was
unlikely that Khan would be tried, since a trial might implicate Pakistan’s
army as well as two of its former prime ministers.

There is a danger that Pakistan’s unpopular government may be overthrown,
and that the revolutionists might give Pakistan’s nuclear weapons to a
subnational organization. This type of danger is a general one associated
with nuclear proliferation. As more and more countries obtain nuclear
weapons, it becomes increasingly likely that one of them will undergo a
revolution, during the course of which nuclear weapons will fall into the
hands of criminals or terrorists.

There is also a possibility that poorly-guarded fissionable material could
fall into the hands of subnational groups, who would then succeed in
constructing their own nuclear weapons. Given a critical mass of
highly-enriched uranium, a terrorist group, or an organized criminal
(Mafia) group, could easily construct a crude gun-type nuclear explosive
device. Pu-239 is more difficult to use since it is highly radioactive, but
the physicist Frank Barnaby believes that a subnational group could
nevertheless construct a crude nuclear bomb (of the Nagasaki type) from
this material.

We must remember the remark of U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan after the
9/11/2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. He said, “This time it was not
a nuclear explosion”. The meaning of his remark is clear: If the world does
not take strong steps to eliminate fissionable materials and nuclear
weapons, it will only be a matter of time before they will be used in
terrorist attacks on major cities, or by organized criminals for the
purpose of extortion. Neither terrorists nor organized criminals can be
deterred by the threat of nuclear retaliation, since they have no territory
against which such retaliation could be directed. They blend invisibly into
the general population. Nor can a “missile defense system” prevent
criminals or terrorists from using nuclear weapons, since the weapons can
be brought into a port in any one of the hundreds of thousands of
containers that enter on ships each year, a number far too large to be
checked exhaustively.

Finally we must remember that if the number of nations possessing nuclear
weapons becomes very large, there will be a greatly increased chance that
these weapons will be used in conflicts between nations, either by accident
or through irresponsible political decisions.

The slogan “Atoms for Peace” has proved to be such a misnomer that it would
be laughable if it were not so tragic. Nuclear power generation has been a
terrible mistake. We must stop before we turn our beautiful earth into a
radioactive wasteland.

___________________________

*John Scales Avery, Ph.D. is a member of the TRANSCEND Network and
Associate Professor Emeritus at the H.C. Ørsted Institute, University of
Copenhagen, Denmark. H**e is chairman of both the Danish National Pugwash
Group and the Danish Peace Academy and received his training in theoretical
physics and theoretical chemistry at M.I.T., the University of Chicago and
the University of London. He is the author of numerous books and articles
both on scientific topics and on broader social questions. His most recent
book is *http://www.learndev.org/dl/Crisis21-Avery.pdf.




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Peace Is Doable

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