When nuclear vendors, who oppose the new liability law, are unwilling to stake their financial health on the claims of ‘100 per cent reactor safety,' why should local residents be asked to risk their lives?
As the local people determinedly continue to resist the commissioning of the Kudankulam reactors, the statements of the nuclear establishment have acquired a desperate edge. The chief of the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) claimed that a “foreign hand” was behind the protests. The former President, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, while assuring the locals that the reactors were “100% safe,” also wrote an article in The Hindu (“Special Essay,” November 6) arguing that nuclear energy is India's ticket to modernity and prosperity.
Such claims go back several decades; for example, Jawaharlal Nehru compared the “Atomic Revolution” to the “Industrial Revolution,” arguing that “either you go ahead with it or ... others go ahead, and you ... gradually drag yourself.” However, in the intervening half century, atomic energy has failed to live up to its promise, and the idea that it is linked to progress and economic success is now both clichéd and historically inaccurate.
Generation targets and reality
The grand hopes for nuclear power in India must be evaluated in the light of the history of the numerous pronouncements of the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) about the dominant role for atomic energy it envisioned — and failed to deliver. In the early 1970s, for example, it projected 43,500 MW of nuclear generating capacity by 2000, whereas what materialised was a mere 2,720 MW. Last year, the nuclear contribution to electricity generated in the country was 2.8 per cent. What little energy has been generated has been expensive. When viewed in the light of the ample financial and political support from successive governments, the nuclear programme has been a failure.
About thorium
The gap between pronouncements and achievement is the largest where thorium is concerned. In 1970, the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) explained that although “the programme [had] slipped badly,” the country would be in a position to start setting up thorium reactors in about 15 years. Forty years later, there is no thorium reactor in existence, and there is yet no solution to several serious technical problems with the thorium cycle.
Unlike uranium, thorium itself cannot be used as reactor fuel, but must be put through a nuclear reactor to first produce a fissile isotope of uranium, uranium-233. Uranium-233 has three key properties. First, it can be used to make nuclear weapons, being superior, in some respects, to weapon-grade uranium (lower critical mass) and plutonium (smaller spontaneous fission rate). Second, uranium-233 is produced in conjunction with uranium-232, which emits energetic gamma rays, and this is the main reason it has not been used to make weapons. The second property is even more problematic when uranium-233 is used as nuclear fuel, because it makes fuel fabrication hazardous to the health of workers and expensive. Thus, the very properties that make thorium unsuitable for weaponisation pose a greater hurdle to energy generation. Third, the DAE's plans for producing uranium-233 in bulk involve the use of plutonium-fuelled fast breeder reactors which, when compared to heavy water reactors, carry a significantly greater risk of catastrophic accidents and produce much more expensive electricity. For some or all of these reasons, most countries have abandoned thorium; India is a leader in this field by virtue of being one of the only participants.
In recent years, dreams of a nuclear-powered future got a fillip with the India-U.S. nuclear deal. The deal served as the flagship of the Manmohan Singh government's efforts to give its foreign policy a pro-Western tilt. For the United States, the deal was, in the words of Ashley Tellis, an important adviser to the Bush administration, intended to craft “a full and productive partnership with India.” But this relationship is not one between equals. India soon fell in line with U.S. strategic objectives, for example, by twice voting against Iran at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and halting the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project — an important potential source of energy.
Dr. Singh's government is also willing to pay generously to reinforce this “partnership.” As the former DAE head, Anil Kakodkar, admitted in an article published in a Marathi daily earlier this year, India must import reactors worth billions of dollars because “we also have to keep in mind the commercial interests of foreign countries and of the companies there.” It is these imports and the larger foreign policy shift that hasten the process of “neo-age imperial subjugation.”
Are concerns being heeded?
So the “foreign hand” is partly behind the nuclear expansion, not the local protests that have sprung up at every site earmarked for a nuclear plant. The conspiracy theory being peddled by the NPCIL amounts to dismissing genuine local concerns out of hand. The end result of this policy is visible in Kudankulam. The villagers, who have been opposed to the project since the beginning, were ignored and ridiculed till they finally escalated their protest in desperation. The public money that has been spent on the Kudankulam plant is imperilled not by the intransigence of the local residents, but by the failure of the government to heed their concerns earlier.
Residents have a right to be worried. Nuclear accidents can have very destructive public health consequences. The impacts of Fukushima can be gauged only over the long term but are certain to be grave. Although some nuclear advocates quote the absurdly low and misleading figure of 57 direct deaths in Chernobyl, the World Health Organisation (WHO) estimated about 9,000 excess deaths due to cancer globally. Many more thousands will have cancers that are assumed to be curable. The American Cancer Institute's recent study found that children who were exposed to Iodine-131 from Chernobyl are continuing to develop thyroid cancer. Other epidemiologists estimate even higher figures. Even today an area of about 10,000 square km around Chernobyl is under “strict control” because it is polluted by Caesium-137, which has a radioactive half-life of 30 years. A recent study conducted by a team of atmospheric scientists in Europe and the U.S. estimates that the multiple accidents at Fukushima released over 40 per cent of the estimated Caesium-137 emission from Chernobyl. However, because the wind was blowing towards the Pacific Ocean for a significant fraction of the period, the area polluted with the same concentration of Caesium-137 is estimated to be only about 10 per cent of the area at Chernobyl. The wind may not always be propitious. These figures should be of great concern in India since most people are dependent on the land and the sea for their livelihood.
Claims about the reactor
The claim that modern reactors, such as the VVER reactors in Kudankulam, are “100% safe” is scientifically untenable; every nuclear reactor has a finite, albeit small, probability of undergoing a catastrophic failure. More specifically, the VVER reactors have previously had problems with the control rod mechanism. On March 1, 2006, for example, one of the four main circulation pumps at Bulgaria's Kozluduy unit 5 tripped because of an electrical failure. When the system reduced the power to 67 per cent of nominal capacity, three control rod assemblies remained in an upper-end position. Follow-up tests of the remaining control rod assemblies identified that in total, 22 out of 61 could not be moved with driving mechanisms. Control rod insertion failures can seriously compromise safety in an accident.
Issue of liability is the test
There is a very simple indirect test by means of which even a non-expert can evaluate the question of nuclear safety. If there was really a “0% chance” of an accident, why would nuclear vendors work so hard to indemnify themselves? Atomstroyeksport, the vendor of the Kudankulam plant is protected by a special intergovernmental agreement, which would prevent victims from suing it in the event of an accident. Companies like Westinghouse are holding back on reactor sales to India, since the new liability law includes some very mild liability for suppliers. When nuclear companies are unwilling to stake their financial health on these claims of “100% safety,” how can the government ask local residents to risk their lives?
(The authors are physicists with the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace. M.V. Ramana is the author of “The Power of Promise: Examining Nuclear Power in India” — forthcoming, Viking Penguin.)
Correction
This article has been corrected for factual error on November 15, 2011
Keywords: DAE, AEC, NPCIL, KNPP, Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant


Comments:
Your last paragraph is the most powerful. The vendors should never be granted intergovernmental immunity (or whatever else it is called) that diminishes their liability in the event of an accident. If there is an accident on the site, they SHOULD BE liable. However, unfortunately, despite the payments, it may be too late for the locals who may lose their lives or, suffer life long health consequences. As we saw in Bhopal, these multinationals and/or rich companies should never be let off the hook.
As much as I respect Dr. Abdul Kalam, I have to agree with the authors here about the fallacy of claiming 100% safety in nuclear reactors. Dr. Kalam's one-day visit to Kudankulam can only be seen as a token visit at best. Only a detailed and transparent review of the project, and commensurate compensation to the local population including an option to relocate will win support for Kudankulam. Fukushima indeed cannot be ignored.
Excellent, excellent piece! This rips through the marketing ploy of Manmohan Singh via Kalam. There is so much evidence in favour of the line of thinking presented in this article that no sane mind could or would ignore it.
Political class have never created an environment where people of India can feel proud about themself. way they have manage LCA,Arjun tank is proper example.Indian people are being sidetracked by Indians only in scientific arena. I have always come up with the question that, when western scientist have not done this than what new you can do? this is the reason that have kept us behind in terms of technical development.Right now political class have learned that they can make money with infrastructure development. So they started looting tax payers in the name of development. latest example is airline bailout scam which is going on. Where we taxpayer will pay hell lot of money to private airliners and politicians, who are doing organised crime for eating taxpayers money. why we bailout this airliners when they are fail to manage? Same goes with this nuclear issues.i am really worried to know that when we will really get indipandent from this external looters who are looting India?
Authors are correct that the claim that the Koodankulam reactor is “100% safe” is scientifically untenable. No one, including former President, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, should have made such a statement. The arguments of the authors would be meaningful if they had raised specific issues related to the reactor safety rather than giving logically weak arguments. Sinking of Titanic has not stopped shipbuilding. They are not 100% safe; there is always a “finite, albeit small, probability of undergoing a catastrophic failure”. Still we have ships. While not trivializing the terrible nuclear accident, such accidents may happen and have happened in other sectors as well. Should oil companies stop drilling for oil because there was extensive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico? Should all chemical companies be shut down because of Union Carbide accident? Nuclear reactors, like any other area, are not “100% safe”. The key is sustainable use by taking all precautions as is technologically possible.
Excellent analyticle article but the authors fail to impress why a costly finished plant as seen in the photo published cannot be commissioned and there is no 100% guarentee for anything in life as we can see from japan experience.we should have thought all of this before building plant and authors seem to have a jaundiced view about west with no justification as India is biggest exporter of software to west.
With a typical 40 year lifecycle for a nuclear plant, tall claims like 100% safety and 1/(Infinity) probability for accidents are improbable if not impossible. Though we have new technology which takes care of the known failures, 40 years from now, we may be seeing new issues that were never anticipated. Even if you consider only the TMI(1979), Chernobyl (1986) and Fukushima (2011) accidents - the accidents happened in the 5th,9th,40th year of operation respectively. With just 3 accidents and in simple and pure probabilistic terms, the odds are (3/60), over 60 years(from 1951-the 1st plant Go-live),across 14,000 plants. If I am correct, one of the 14,000 plants is likely to have an accident, in a span of 20 years; though low, it is yet >>>> 1/Inf. It is better to be practical than to be idealistic. The recent financial meltdown showed how systemic risks were underestimated and occurence of even one of the low probabilty, high impact event could wipe all the gains from previous period.
Assuming this is safe. we should have nuclear reactors in all metros.
The authors have not stated what alternatives are available to an energy starved nation such as India if nuclear energy is abandoned. It is true that no one can give 100 percent guarantee that a nuclear accident will never occur. Can anyone give a 100 percent guarantee that a rail or car accident will never occur? Despite the tragedy that occurred in Japan, nuclear power plants are relatively safe. What we can and should do is to increase the safety features.
I go by the author of this article. The mere removal of the word "intentional" from the civil nuclear liability bill, made many countries to reconsider their proposed nuclear agreements with India, How can we people buy the Guarantee that the reactors are 100% safe.. In a country like India where even domestic waste cannot be handled effectively, how can the nuclear waste be handled and in case if a nuclear mishap happens, do the people know how to protect themselves or is the government well equipped to evacuate the people. I myself as a resident of a locality just 20 kms away from the reactors of koodankulam, knew well what the government is capable of the best example being hardships faced by the Government and people alike during the 2004 Tsunami. Disaster management is still in papers and not in action. Every disaster either big or small, shakes us and not wake us as we got used to tragedies like the bhopal disaster.
The German Government has decided to do away with all Nuclear Power Plants by 2022. Nuclear Technology either for peaceful or destructive purposes is dangerous. None of the Senior scientists who are giving tall assurances will be alive about 50 years from now. We are handing over a serious problem to our children and grandchildren. A scientist appearing on NDTV claimed that the 'air' outside will cool it. He called himself a designer. I shook my head in amazement. What sort of a scientist or designer is he? It was just unbelievable.
The piece seems just a long winded attempt to drag a red herring across current imbroglio on the safety of the Kudankulam project. There is no such thing as 100% safe in engineering parlance. All engineering projects undertaken by man to date have been fraught with dangers of failure, some more dangerous than others, but dangerous all the same. If the safety of trans-continental flights are taken for granted today, it is because all earlier catastrophic failures (innumerable as they are) have been meticulously studied and action taken to prevent its recurrence. It is an expected and established fact that components and sub-systems fail, be it in an electric oven in your kitchen or the interplanetary probe to Jupiter. All mission critical systems are designed in such a way that, while reducing the probability of failure to a minimum, a failure of any component would result in shift to a safe operating mode. The concept is called ‘fail-safe’ design and is widely employed wherever the economics of safety justify it. A nuclear power plant and specifically the one at Kudankulam is no exception. One should heed the sage advice of Dr Abdul Kalam, for he is knowledgeable and his words are not sullied by ulterior motives, be it home grown or foreign.
As an engineer I concur with the view of the author, anybody saying the reactor is 100% safe, is giving a mis-guided pseudo scientific opinion; The onus is on these public opionion formers to explain the 5-9s reliability index and mention that even if a product is 99.999% reliable, there is a good estimated chance it will fail for 6 seconds in an week; Anybody who says 100% safe is being political.
The authors while saying no to nuclear energy, should also tell what are the alternatives ? We don't have enough coal resources and Hydro is limited. Solar is more costly and is also more environment unfriendly (Acid used to store DC current). Wind power is limited. With population at 1.2 billion and a power hungry economy ,what are the alternatives. Also so far the nuclear reactors in India have a safe record and to my knowledge located in less seismic zones. We have to take calculated risks weighing the options we have and decide what is good for our country . We cannot think like Germany which is a power surplus state and have the luxury to stop nuclear power.
As a nation we are poor not only economically but also intellectually.Why are we having this discussions after investing around 2 to 3 billion dollars into the reactor ? Why didn't we (Government and the public) take it up a decade ago when it was planned. WE have wasted not only the money but also time. we can earn the money back but not the time ! Shameless India.
This opinion piece is quite a contrast to the op-ed piece by Abdul Kalam on many fronts. Dr. Abul Kalam is an expert with long and successful experience in the technical and scientific trenches of nuclear energy and defense technologies. Mr. Raju and Mr. Ramana are anit-nuclear activists. Dr. Kalam wrote the facts with supporting references. Raju and Ramana wrote their opinions derived from opinions of others. Dr. Kalam did not say or write that reactors are 100% safe. Raju and Ramana repeat the lie twice in this article. Nothing is 100% safe. Look at Haridwar a week ago where 16 people died in a stampede. This occurs very regularly in some corner of India. Trains kill about 50 people and injure 500 people on the average every year in India. Road accidents kill many more people every year. Raju and Ramana should inform us how many people are killed by nuclear plants in India... none. If Melas, Trains and Roads are tenable, why not Kundankulam?
This article, though incisive, avoids the main issue -- why are the Russian suppliers of the Kudankulam plant exempt from any liability? Why has the GOI connived to keep the Russians to be free of liability while it puts onerous liability clauses on non-Russian suppliers. The authors state -- "Atomstroyeksport, the vendor of the Kudankulam plant is protected by a special intergovernmental agreement, which would prevent victims from suing it in the event of an accident." What is the pay-off?
Whew, finally a very erudite analysis of the false promise of nuclear power in India not the blatant propaganda of Kalam, Banerjee or their ilk in the industry and Government. The authors have clearly shown the wastage of tax payer resources in chasing the nuclear mirage, I wish the authors had compiled the true costs since the inception of nuclear energy, the number of scientists and personnel involved in this gargantuan enterprise, their salaries and benefits. The public at large will then know why India is still a poor country that is unable to feed, clothe, educate, house or provide healthcare for the majority of its citizens. Our politicians and planners are the dregs of humanity for their myopic vision.
The authors have clearly shown that Manmohan Singh has caved into U.S. pressure in signing a deal which involved little or no liability from the nuclear reactor suppliers. In essence he was selling out the people of India and has not learnt from the Bhopal Disaster.
Flawed in multiple aspects. 1. When nuclear companies are unwilling to stake their financial health on these claims of “100% safety? Because they wont be running the plant themselves. Because they would have no control of the local situation and issues. Why should someone take liability for an operation, which they have effectively handed over to someone else. Lets assume these two authors run an airline. They will of course assure their passengers 100 % safe trip. They won't and can't say that there is a risk involved in flying their airline. But will they give a legally valid document that states that they have to compensate each and every family, incase of an accident,to the tune of 100 crores?. They wont and they will never do. 2. Everyone keeps quoting Chernobyl...Dont the two 'physicists' know that Chernobyl disaster was due to a human error..the test protocols and established test procedures were violated. 3. ‘Involvement of foreign hand’..Yes..we are buying reactors from abroad..we simply do not have the technology in our country to manufacture them ourselves. But so what?..Dont we buy millions of gallons of oil everyday ? At rising fuel prices over which we have no control? It has been proven that getting energy out of nuclear plants is much more efficient and economically viable than using fossil fuels..4. ‘Little achieved by the nuclear industry in our country---??-‘--..As said we didn’t have the technology with us..and the authors should and must have known that we were under sanctions.continuous sanctions from almost every nuclear power in the world for decades..how could we have grown, without having the technology ourselves and stopped to buy it from others?..5. ‘Promise of Thorium’...Its true that it has not lived to its promise..but thats precisely the reason, we need to invest more and promote the industry..instead of running away from it.
Thank you for explaining the Thorium fuel cycle in detail. As puppets of the Government a.k.a Kalam, Banerjee, Kakodkar, Chidambaram praise Thorium as India's ace in the hole. They have been promising the breakthrough since the 70's. As you said, they will need the toxic uranium to start the fission, and for uranium you will also be subject to the pressures of other countries. There is not a single commercial Thorium based reactor in the world. And as far as Fast Breeder Reactors are concerned, every single attempt has been a utter failure. France, claims to have superior technology but they abandoned the Phenix programme after wasting billions, ditto for the USA. Only Japan and Inda are pursuing this route. Japan has wasted over $12 Billion on its Monju FBR project, over 12 years it has operated for merely ONE hour! It hoped to reprocess its spent fuel from 54 reactors! This year the Government will stop the rot and cut the funds. India is not far behind.
It is disappointing to see The Hindu donating precious space to such a negative piece about nuclear energy. The main argument of the authors hinges on Chernobyl and Fukushima, where the reactor technology was about 4 to 5 decades than the new nuclear reactors being designed today. The reactors being developed today are certainly much more safer and credible than these. I was rather amused when the authors claimed that nuclear energy has nothing in common with economic prowess. Might I remind them that close to 75% of France's energy is generated from nuclear sources. Indeed, India already has over 20 nuclear plants currently functioning in the country, and there has been NO accident in our history. China plans to build around 20 nuclear plants in the near future, almost the rate of 1 new plant a year. At a time when it is obvious that we can't rely on imported crude oil for our growing energy needs alone, it is sad that people in our country think like this.
Regarding the nuclear liability law which the authors use to support their argument, yes, no industry would ever want to take any liability, but this does not imply that the liability is high and unwarranted by default. Anyone who has ever filed a corporate tender would know that the suppliers always have to submit a Letter of Credit through their bank along with their proposal, irrespective of the supplier's reputation or the number of times it has had business dealings with the authority issuing the tender. Ofcourse, the chances of the company defaulting on its promise might be negligible, but it is a legal requirement, and rightly so. This doesn't stop any company from participating in the business opportunity, does it? My only question to the anti-nuclear lobby is, why are questions on safety never raised for traditional industries? Why do they never call for a safety review of any coal-based power generation plant? Surely accidents can happen there as well?
The authors' arguments against the efficacy and reliability of nuclear power generation as a source of energy production are quite pursuasive and definitely need careful examination. However, given the demand for power in our industrialized world, is it not incumbent on all of us to think of means of properly harnessing and regulating all aspects of the design, construction, quality control and maintenanace of nuclear power generation plants as a source of our energy needs, rather than summarily rejecting them as being untenable?
I submit the views of shri Abdul Kalaam must be given due weightage and careful scrutiny. I feel that a national dialog between eminent scientists, environmentalists and civic leaders must begin NOW to settle this issue once for all. May I also inquire why these very concerns were not raised by the authors BEFORE THE KUNDALAM PLANT WAS EVEN CONCEIVED AND BUILT? After all, the scientific data presented by them had been available even then.
Our PM, who is not a scientist,got influenced towards Nuclear Power Plants during his tenure with the Atomic Energy Commission. The Indo American Nuclear deal was heavily biassed towards US selling their outdaed and unwanted plants to India without any liability to pay for accidents. Our country is short of electrical energy but has plenty of sunshine and wind.If proper efforts are made to harness these with proper research and collabaration with foreign countries we will have risk free souces of energy. Moreover we should think of smaller Power Plants and handing the control of energy to private parties. The State agencies have made a mess of it using electricity as a key to vote bank politics and making the life of genuine users miserable. Free electricity to farmers is being misused to power air conditioners and refrigerators and other lighting systems. The sale of phase changeover systems increased quite a lot when free electricity was given to the farm sector.
We need such articles and not the type of our former President to serve the vested interests. We must thank the author for enlightning the public on nuclear power issues.
Chief Minister Jayalalitha should be commended for being courageous to oppose these dangerous nuclear power plants. Following are the main reasons all new nuclear plants should be scrapped and solar, wind and natural gas energy should be massively expanded. * There is no guaranteed way to safeguard nuclear power plants against catastrophic natural disasters, accidents or terrorist acts. * As seen in Fukushima nuclear disaster, in the event of accidents, radiation keeps leaking for many months. * Most importantly, today solar and wind energy is cheaper than nuclear power plants. * With solar and wind energy, India will be energy self reliant and does not have to depend upon foreign powers to obtain nuclear fuel materials. * India, being a tropical country receives enough solar energy (more than 5KWh/m2/day) to produce most of our energy needs. * While Europe and Janpan plan to shut down existing power plants, why are they pushing dangerous nuclear energy India?
The Anti Nuclear lobby advocates that India give up its nuclear options. If India did not have nuclear weapons, then by now it would have been colonised by a foreign power. Completely abandoning nuclear plants is like giving up nuclear weapons, they have the same risk and same advantages. The problem with NPCIL is its secrecy and lack of transparency. The sites of future nuclear plants must be accompanied by development of roads, communication facilities, industries, employment, connectivity and security facilities. NPCIL and the government have neglected the overall development of the towns where future nuclear plants are planned.
The protests by these and religious groups should have been made years ago. Not now. Not after getting all benefits of roads and other infrastructure. The issue is something else which come out eventually; some sort of black mail.
Thanks for bringing facts to the public. Hope people realize that it's high time to unite as one to stop commissioning of new nuclear power plants in India.
All that nuclear energy does is boil water to drive turbines. In countries with high insolation rates like India, a safer, cheaper and more practical way is to go in for solar thermal power using reflectors. Europe is planning to use the sunlight on the Sahara to power all its needs; why are we shoring up the economy of the West by buying its outdated nuclear technology the West does not need anymore? The West's nuclear power for peace programme was a smokescreen for its nuclear weapons programme, as it has been for our Indian hawks. Our nuclear weapons progamme has weakened us dangerously, exposing India to potential threats from every nuclear power, and is draining the economy of the country. We should go for renewable energy solutions for power needs, including improving efficiencies of thermal power plants. We should go for regional diplomatic solutions within SAARC and including China for peace and stability.
I thank the authors and The Hindu for this lucid and informative article.
most of the labourers in kudankulam region renounced traditional agriculture work and started working for kudankulam construction for better income.so agriculture is destroyed now. if the plant become operational,the same labourers will be yearning for the same income that may not be available as the construction is over.And according to atomic regulatory guidelines new industries cant come up in the EPZ zones.so again poverty will strike the locals who were living happy life in spite of traditional poverty with agricultural income.surely fishing community and their consumers are going to be affected. Long tradition will be destroyed locally,power will go far away for some others prosperity.is this the power of capitalism?
What is good for goose must be good for gander. Why does the author not apply similar metrics of safety and numbers of people maimed, killed or otherwise harmed to other forms of energy production and oppose them?
By this logic, you should count people who die in backwater lakes of hydro electric stations and oppose Hydro? Count coal miner deaths and people harmed by horrible air pollution caused by coal thermal plants?
Care to compare the numbers?
The answer to the big picture question is very simple. How else is India going to get the energy to power her future ? Who cares what the companies do?. There are looking out for their best interests. They dont care if the people of India live without electricity or not. There is simply no open space left in India where you can cordon off a 10km radius as a human free zone. The "Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace" says it all.
if the nuclear plants are as safe as they are claimed to be, why the powers that be and the companies oppose a better liability law in par with that of US standard in India? May be Indians are lesser humans?
The author has hit the nail on its head . Let the manufacturers of the nuclear plants answer this question first :"If there was really a 0% chance of an accident, why do nuclear vendors work so hard to indemnify themselves from being sued ?" This "Heads -I win- Tails -you lose " policy being practised by the manufacturers is not fair by any yardstick . The local people determinedly resististng the commissioning of the Kudankulam reactors is fully justified .
The concerns of local residents should not be ignored & brushed inside the carpet, we have witnessed couple of nuclear accidents in last few decades & the concern of general public at KK should be addressed with full seriousness. In this country we need absolutely efficient use of resources to attain our development goals, the feasibility study done on KK failed to gauge the concern of local residents fully. This has put precious public investments in danger which should not have happened.
There will be a risk in everything -- even commuting to work. Does the road contractor take responsibility for accidents caused by malfunctioning roads? Does a car manufacturer take unlimited liability for road accidents? Were such liability clauses invoked against generator manufacturers in Idukki hydroelectric plant when an accident left 2 engineers dead? Indemnity against accidents which can be caused by a natural catastrophe will be a natural demand by manufacturers. The locals are well within their rights to question a project that could jeopardize their lives. It is the elected governments and bureaucrats who are playing hide and seek - - they do not want to address the issues and be honest with people.
energy from the coal is having very short life; according to our economy other energy resources like solar or hydro ; so we should accept neuclear power..
Good article with a good and relevant question. It is time we get answers. Why would the Indian Government indemnify and not allow potential victims from suing in the event of an accident? We had Bhopal and it is the people who lost and the Government did nothing. The people of India need a credible Government that protects people's interest. I wish Dr Kalam had addressed these concerns instead of telling that he is satisfied with the safety measures in the plant. I am also surprised that the Government had not addressed the concerns of the locals before proceeding to build the Reactors. How much of these projects are based on corrupt money going to politicians than the real needs of the people? I for one think that India needs more power generation and Atomic Energy is something that I would like to include in that mix. But can we not design a power plant indigenously instead of purchasing it from vendors outside?
The Ramana-Raju argument, while very compelling prima-facie, masks some basic assumptions that we all make while adopting new technology. Their argument is akin to asking for all knives to be banned because knife sellers cannot assure you that no knife will ever harm a human being. By their logic all cars should be banned on roads for the pollution they cause which has a deleterious effect on dwellers in large cities etc. Every technology we have today has a flip side to it and we have to weigh the cons before we make a decision. By their own admission these nuclear reactors have a 'finite, albeit small probability of catastrophic failure'. We need to weigh this probability against the imperatives of our developmental needs and take decisions. And it is nobody's case that conventional power plants don't add to the greenhouse effect. Nuclear plants are easy flashpoints for political protests. My vote is for these nuclear plants that are as safe as modern technology allows them to be.
i carefully went through the article though the article is well constructed and smartly written but it cantains some flaws .It seems that the author is trying to justify his views in putting the halt to this nuclear programme citing historical facts .Technology always evolves during a period of time. Its not that the technology which is available now can not be transformed into better technology tommorow. Who knows that the thorium which is available in abundance im india might make india a Super power if tommorow a better technology is devised to produce uranium out of it. Actually author is trying to say that since DAE has failed to fulfill its claim so we can not trust DAE anymore and we should abandon all of our nuclear programme and indirectly he is encouraging to go back to non conventional source of energy like Natural gas from Iran. Though his views are needed to be taken seriously but it will be wrong to abondon nuclear programme.We need to make balance.Hope wisdom prevail.
Actually if we were to start the process of setting up a new nuclear plant today not a single person would probably support it. After having spent crores and setting it up as a power plant investment it is accepted that we should try to realise the benefits of investmentand since IAEA has declared it as safe to operate we should operate so that the benefits of science comes to the people.It is not good to cancel it as money spent is a collosol waste and it sends a signal that if even in a poor country it is seen as dangerous then all nuclear plants all over the world is threatened with closure though all seem to be operating quite safely at present except two or three like chernobyl,three mile island or fukushima which were accidents.
This article tries to convince us not by a rebuttal of every point Dr Kalam et al. had made in their previous articles etc, but by rhetoric. Dr Kalam never really said that reactors are 100% safe. In such things, there is nothing like 100% surety. And that is exactly why you have an elaborate safety procedure and mechanism in place. The authors have talked about the failure of DAE to generate 43,500 MW by 2000. But, just because we failed to reach that goal, because of many reasons, does not mean we stop striving. Also, just because some reactor has failed before in some foreign country does not mean that the same will happen here, because our designs, as Dr Kalam et al. pointed out in detail, are different. And, please don't quote random figures for Chernobyl deaths normally brandied about by activists. Science is not a democracy. People who are not qualified enough should not pass judgements. Also, Dr Suvrat Raju is a string theorist, & not a nuclear physicist or engineer.
I am fine with nuclear option but selling it as 100% safe is bogus. Science always has an error percentage!
It is heartening to read an article that is more in line with the real truth about Nuclear Power. Thanks to the authors for their bold and timely report when the more illustrious advocates of pro- nuclear projects have been brain washing the public on the merits of the Kudankulam Project and blatantly obscuring the demerits and the grave risks involved. It is clearly brought out by the authors that these projects are more in the strategic and commercial interests of the US and Western powers and their companies. The observation that “foreign hand" is behind nuclear expansion rather than the protesters, is also very relevant. Yes; colossal public money has been already spent on the Kudankulam project; but that shouldn't cloud reasons to call off the project considering the catastrophic consequences that far outweigh the money already spent. The Tamil Nadu government should go the Modi way in prospecting Solar Power that is more safe and viable to surmount power shortage.
People should understand the pitfalls of nuclear power.Accident of a nuclear power station is more debilitating than that black day in UCIL plant in Bhopal.Lastly competence of the top scientists in our government departments and laboratories is not in the subjects but in areas of management like obedience to bosses, ensuring of discipline etc.Collusion between these top people and foreign vendors are an open secret as we see in defence deals
India certainly has a desperate need for power generation. Nuclear power is the answer, but giving blanket immunity to vendors is foolish. It is only natural that foreign Governments will want to support their vendors to achieve maximum sales. Let us not forget that very recently, BP was forced by the US Government and public opinion to pay billions of dollars in compensation when its offshore oil rig exploded and caused an environmental catastrophe. In contrast, Union Carbide paid a paltry sum to the victims of the Bhopal tragedy, that too decades after the tragic incident. In one respect, I fully agree with President Kalam, in that the local people must have a stake in the project. This means local economic development. Why would anyone countenance a potentially dangerous plant in their neighborhood, when it does not benefit anyone in the vicinity? Dr.Kalam's suggestion of improving the lot of the people in the area, through development projects, is noteworthy and just.
Finally there is an opinion on nuclear energy from people who are actually technically knowledgeable. The authors make valid points, the most interesting being those related to the use of Thorium in generating nuclear energy. However, a few hard facts do need to be borne in mind. India needs development to attempt to pull her people out of poverty. Development requires energy and there aren't too many viable sources of energy, either financially or even technically, which will satisfy India's electricity demand without seriously impacting the environment. It is important that people stop criticising the lack of development if they are same people who oppose several means of energy-generation. Are they able to propose viable alternatives? If not, the least they can do is at least remain silent about the delay in achieving development objectives. That is not to say that we should not abandon nuclear as India's main source of electricity if it is indeed not worth the risks.
The international civil nuclear liability regime needs to be well understood fully. When a car meets an accident we do not sue the car manufacturer, but only the operator is liable. The operator has to make sure before buying the car that adequate provisions are built in the design to make sure that the accidents do not happen. The liability for compensation is that of the operator and not that of the manufacturer.
Indian situation in regard to nuclear resources is unique in terms of very small uranium and abundant thorium. For a variety of reasons, some of them strategic, import of uranium was not permitted till recently.So we have to manage with what the mother earth has given. So India's interest in thorium is paramount. No other country has needs to exploit thorium as long as plenty of uranium is available. The nations are aware of huge potential of thorium and are starting work but India is a leader. This position we have come to with considerable R&D effort, pain and patience. This is what is known as home grown technology. Other than space and atomic energy i am not able to see any other technology that is so much of our own and we should be proud of that.
With all the logic given against the nuclear power, may I humbly ask the editor - what is the solution for our energy security, keeping in mind the prohibitive costs as well as scalability of solar, wind and geothermal technologies and the lack of vast resources of coal & natural gas in India? Inspite of all the concerns of nuclear safety post fukushima disaster, its intriguing that protests at kudankulam have started when the plant is near commissioning. I can't understand why nobody protested in last 12 years when the plant was under construction! Even though various agencies and Mr. A P J kalam himself has termed the VVER 1000 reactors as the safest with most modern technologies available, the safety aspects can be evolved further to make them more fool proof but to use fukushima disaster as a case against nuclear power for India is not very reasonable considering the compulsions of our energy security architecture.
100% safe !! If we say nuclear plants are not 100% safe hence we are not supposed to use it.. then we should stop using Flight, trains, why them even two wheeler's are not 100% safe !! So what's the plan walking all the way home ? even that is not safe someone might rob you or anything might happen when ur walking in the road !! Again I agree on your last para though... yes Russians were clever to sell something without having any liability.. Any how after this all reactors will be form India...
Apart from the usual anti-nuclear rhetoric, there are no valid arguments in this piece. First, the article leads with the claim that India didn't live up to the claims of progress in nuclear energy in the past. Is that an argument for abandoning the current efforts? Of course, not. If anything, it's an argument for redoubling our efforts. There is no such thing as nuclear power plants (or for that matter anything else) being 100% safe. There is no need to belabor that point. The real question is: are they SAFE ENOUGH? (Dr Kalam convincingly argues that they are.) Have Chernobyl and Fukushima accidents caused a total flight from nuclear energy? Of course, not. Finally, the authors argue that India shouldn't pursue nuclear energy. Yet are completely silent on why many advanced countries continue to meet significant portions of their energy needs with nuclear power plants. Why shouldn't India pursue nuclear energy when others successfully do so? Is everyone outside India stupid?
Let the authors give a scientific explanation of how the safety measures drawn up for these reactors cant contain the cataclysmic scenarios they can visualize happening... say within a 100 year time span. Only then can they criticize the construction of these reactors. Till then their analysis is nothing more than the blind men feeling up an elephant, the symbolism of which has already been aptly depicted in the Hindu cartoon.
The fact that Germany is planning to shut down all it's nuclear plants by 2022 cannot be a precedent for India's nuclear ambition simply because both are different in many ways and we have many Germany within one India.Nuclear power along with other renewable energy sources will serve the needs of our population without polluting our environment and we have no option but to go ahead with the same.Insurances against damage are done to be guarded against the worst scenario and it is essential for innovative practises and this should not induce a feeling of suspicion among the population.The goverment both central and state have a role to play here , they should placate the worries of local protesters by examples of many nuclear plants which are working safely, guarding them against any possible mishap so that we can go ahead with the Kudunkulam Nuclear Plant which as described by former President A.P.J Abdul Kalam as India's ticket for modernity and Prosperity.
A very good justification put forth by the learned authors that the project is untenable. I truly believe that these people are not at all responsible for GOI & DAE to spend Rs 13 K Crore for the project. In democracy, peoples voice is paramount. The only option is to seal the plant for the time being and explore other sources of energy in a normal course with absolute discussions with all sections until a zero defect system is arrived at. Also low power solar and wind energies can be localised & tapped in the tropical region.
If nuclear plants are so safe, let Mr.Manmohan Singh and Mr.Abdul Kalam agree to build a nuclear power plant with the same VVER - 1000 reactors in New Delhi. Then, maybe, an aam aadmi like me will have faith that Nuclear plants are indeed safe.
Criticism without an alternative is easy. The authors should also say what is the alternative for India. Also it is too late now after so much money has been invested. If the locals had issues they should have raised them 10 years ago. Nothing prevented them from going to the courts. The government should now make all efforts to commission the plant as the people who are opposing now may have ulterior motives. I say this as a resident in a 30 kn radius of the reactor
This is a very genuine article and i feel the government will never be able to provide the kind of support if any tragedy happens if in 2/20/40 years... if a country like Japan (which has much more developed in all segments comparatively) has felt the terrific shock we cannot imagine the same in India. Though all safety factors are good in paper as its claimed, its just not possible to make any effort to restore the situation. everything will change and mainly the lives of 1000's of people in and around the area. Just because big money in invested, we cannot put innocent people's life at stake. such plans should never be approved in the first place unless we develop much more in terms of infrastructure as we do not even have basic needs met in many villages... Otherwise if it is 100% safe, as one other person has indicated here, why not build nuclear reactors in all metros which will give us surplus of energy! Safety is the first thing which cannot be compromised !!
If based on accidents we start closing down things,then after Bhopal case all pesticide units should have been closed or after every air crash you should start campaign against air travel.these are industries and accidents may happen and shutting down things isn't a solution. Improvement in safety provisions is.also to give up a thing you should have viable alternatives which are not available in case of energy demands if we give up nuclear energy.so the protesters should insist on additional safety provisions instead of their blind opposition to Kudankulam.
Give boost to solar energy by giving subsidy to solar cells
Writers like Mr. Ramana and his intellectual ilk, would all LIKE TO EAT THE CAKE & HAVE IT TOO! . Everybody wants the comfort of electricity in their home & elsewhere….but nobody wants its source in their backyard!. Everybody howls when power supply goes off, but wants 100% safe Industry. But, may I know, GOING BY HIS LOGIC, WHICH INDUSTRY IS 100% SAFE?. ANSWER IS NONE & NONE! We do not abandon aviation industry, just because, there’s air crash; we cannot stop travelling by trains, just because there’s a train accident, right. Just because there’s a stampede, we will not stop holding Kumbh Mela, right !. We are not going stop sending satellite to the orbit just because, one has crashed before…Right ? Why on earth then, we have this unbridled hypocrisy with Nuclear Industry, even when eminent scientists have certified it!
What is Nuclear Reactor? It has a primary side where water is heated
using nuclear energy. This water in turn is passed through heat
exchangers to remove the heat & to create steam in secondary side.
Steam is passed through steam turbo-generator to generate electricity.
Very simple. There are supplementary systems to maintain the water
quality in primary side, etc. For safety there are redundant & diverse
systems. E.g. for transport we have air, rail ,road etc options. In
KKNPP for each safety system there r 4 parallel trains. If one fails,
there is second, third, fourth option. For Tsunami worries, KK is
already at higher elevation. With max earthquakes possible in the sea,
max tsunami heights have been analysed in India and are less than KK
grade level. In KK there is a passive heat removal system which will
take care of the decay heat from the reactor for indefinite period.
This reactor has all the answers for all the queries. Thus 100% safe.
I remember in Mumbai there were lots of textile mills, now there is
nothing. These Unions closed all the mills. In WB, Nano gone, why? In
Haryana Maruti is almost gone, why? Just think. All these oppositions
were not for Nuke Power, nor these oppositions at KKNPP. All of us
know the reasons. Why in India peoples are behind some fake elements
in the society who will never help for the progress of the nation.
Somebody eats our nations 70000 cr, we r silent, somebody 170000 cr
and still we r silent and backing those who r resisting the progress
of the nation. Why? Think, be smart but not be fooled.
the comment by bharathi"
As a nation we are poor not only economically but also intellectually.Why are we having this discussions after investing around 2 to 3 billion dollars into the reactor ? Why didn't we (Government and the public) take it up a decade ago when it was planned. WE have wasted not only the money but also time. we can earn the money back but not the time ! Shameless India.
from: Bharathi
Posted on: Nov 12, 2011 at 03:52 IST
"
I think you could have expressed your opinion even without using the "shameless". Just because of some political policies you can't disrespect the nation, it shows your arrogance.
and it is very regrettable to find such a comment posted without moderation by The Hindu.
VVER REACTOR are safe reactors.it is having safety system which operates
in passive principle( do not need power supply to operate).It is having
system ATWS systems which is passive and can effective against control
rod failure accident.It is not having any safety issues.
That none of non-nuclear thing is safe is truism but what is the level of catastrophe would a reactor cause if something bad happens? Surely, it'd be less than road-accidents happening in India every week but ....
What is more disturbing that the level of success of Nuclear energy. India has the gift of sun but solar-energy is NOT A CLEAN ENERGY. Fabricating solar cells emit a lot of greenhouse gas and the energy consumed in making such cells is only compensated in years. And to store power, one need batteries which are a further headache. And left is wind energy. Do we have winds? I think there is a good plan of Indian government to go ahead in the direction of solar energy anyway.
Coming back to nukes. I think we should construct as many of them as possible and produce as much energy we can and hope that no natural catastrophe happens and when solar and wind technology is mature enough, we can shut them down and use them some sort of museum.
It is unfortunate that work is stopped
The authors are long-standing nuclear nay-sayers, probably on the pay
roll of the oil & gas lobbies. Their consistent poly is to bring out
paradoxial aruguments against nuclear energy whithout touching upon
the wider socio-economic contexts within which nuclear energy operate.
They do not bring into their arguments the need for cheap, relaible
and energy for the economic development of India - the need to sustain
9% growth over the next 20 years. No mention, for example, is ever
made by them on the cost of coal energy - in terms of coal imports,
pollution casued fatalities and mountains of waste it creates. No
mention is made of the fact that it don't have a role in providing
base-load energy. They don't mention the ecomonic and environmental
costs of nuclear roll-back that is being envisaged in Germany (read
for example the recent IEA report). The authors are not bothered about
the need of cheap energy in keeping the food prices affordable.
Since last few weeks, we are being inundated with anti-nuclear / anti-kudankulam articles and homilies, but have you wondered, while they are quite vocal against nuke projects, no body has offered any viable alternatives, how to make up the 2000 MW which will be lost!. The article by Mr. Raju & Raman is no exception & treads in same old path. It isn't easy either, becoz, simply there's no other solution. Mr Ramana & their tribe would do well to appreciate that, tenability of any project is to be discussed before its inception & not when food (Kudankulam) is ready to be served! Do you have any viable big power project of this magnitude at sight in TN right now, which would give electricity at a rate less than 3 rupees / unit ? Answer is resounding "no". Verdict is clear, INDIA NEEDS NUCLEAR POWER & TAMILNADU NEEDS KUDANKULAM POWER!
After reading all the articles and the comments I believe Dr.Kalam and vote for his views. We need nuclear power.
Hi,
I am against nuclear power as it produces waste which has no disposal and has to be stored with the hope that nothing goes wrong, also the claim that nuclear reactor are 100% safe to operate are mere eyewash, no technology is 100% safe neither can it ever be. Besides that Nuclear energy will never be the main source of energy for a country like India with the population over a billion. So why pursue such an expensive and dangerous source of energy. For those claiming the nuclear reactor to be safe kindly visit Bhopal and see with your eyes what Methyl iso-cynide did and how people are suffering due to human/system error. Besides that all those people including the politicians/bureaucrats and public figures who are supporting the nuclear plant should voluntarily stay in a 5 mile radius of the nuclear plant for the rest of their life and then only we will assured nuclear power plants are 100% safe!!
Continued in nest post
Continued from previous post.
I do understand that coal an gas are not the right way of generating energy and wind and solar energy are way to primitive in the current form to power a nation like India as there are no efficient means to store energy generated by wind and solar energy. It is these areas which should be areas for research and public money rather than nuclear power plants. What is interesting to see is here in UK where its over cast 300 days an year people/government invests in solar energy where as in India where we have 300 days of sun we don't invest in solar energy!!!
Also we need to look at the current appliances which consume energy as they have very poor efficiency. Just an example to illustrate my point a ceiling fan has about 1% efficiency (for every 100 Rupees electricity bill just for running a fan we get actual air only worth 1 Rupee!!!). Similarly all our commercial appliances are running at below 5% efficiency. These areas are where we need to improve!
The authors of this article are nitpicking what President Kalam has mentioned as way of parlance in his genuine attempt to mollify the public. Please don't belittle the intelligence of President Kalam by pointing out the 100% versus 99.99% difference in your argument. Yes, the 0.01% difference is all the concentrated risk the Indian population around Kudankulam have to take. Let's say for argument sake that the western corporations take full responsibility for the 0.01% chance of a nuclear disaster. Is that guarantee worth anything? Corporations are perishable and with that consideration the guarantee option is not worth as much. At the end of the day, the Indian masses have to take the risk and move ahead.
The Western civilization didn't transform to an advanced one through zero risk policy. They have taken chances and the result is for all to see. If you define advancement as "energy consumption growth" then Indian population have to take calculated risks in order to advance.
Kudankulam is untenable because human life is more precious than GDP growth.
The simple indirect test on liability exempts manufacturers because a
commercial company couldn't afford the insurance premium that another
commercial insurance company may demand, taking advantage of all
negative arguments. A sovereign government is the ultimate back-
stop, "the insurance agent of last resort."
The authors have only written a bunch of their subjective opinions and
attached vague political red herring issues like "foreign hand".
Nuclear trade is not a one way street. Ever since the Indo-US Nuclear
deal, even nuclear commerce has benefited India. India has now started
exporting Heavy water to South Korea. It is a matter of time before
India starts to register significant nuclear exports.
It is quite true that the Nuclear community of India did not do a good
job in developing indigenous technology. But the effects of sanctions
after Pokhran-I and non-development of other parts of the Indian
economy had their toll on nuclear development in the 1970s and 80s.
For example, we did not have siginificant steel and cement
manufacturing capacity in those autarkic decades. So it is wrong to
blame the nuclear parivar for non-development of nuclear capacity
during those decades.
One needs to take a look at France, generating 63 GW nuclear without
any issue since the past few decades.
I am fully agree with the author that kudankulam plant is not 100%
safe. Every technology has its own side effects. But with the growing
demand for energy in India for industrial as well as domestic use, I
urge the author to come up with the alternative solutions as just
critical analysis and citing the previous terrific incidents are not
enough. As India is boast of the one third of world's total thorium
storage, we must look for a sustainable and safety plan to use as
fuel.
How on earth a scientist like Mr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam has made such a naive statement "100% safety" of nuclear plant. Oh.. May be Manmohan Singh has lured him for another presidential term? The policies of Indian government are pro-western, Wikileaks disclosure has already shown how these policies are made, driving agent for these policies is corruption and arm twisting. We all witnessed, what happened in Bhopal gas case. Ultimately the poor people lost their life, they did not even got justice. Why so called indian govt. want to protect the foreign companies from their liability, where as the duty of a democratic govt. is to protect the interests of its own citizens. This suggests that indian policy makers are getting huge sum of money for this pro-western policy. Even if it is allowed the nuclear plant go ahead, Do we have confidence in our governments to manage a disaster like Fuckushima ?
Kudankulam reactors in the final stage of their construction are opposed now because the Chernobyl accident proved that nuclear power is not safe and there are several reasons which can contribute for its failure including electrical, mechanical and human failures. Hence the local people of Kudankulam began agitating against the nuclear reactors even in 1988. The latest Fukushima reactor accident once again proved that even by incorporating all the known safety measures based upon defence in depth strategy. The accident occurred due to simultaneous failure of both lateral and vertical safety systems due to both natural and man-made disasters. Hence Kudankulam people fully realized that safety of nuclear power plants is a myth. Hence Kudankulam agitators right in feeling that the loss of Rs.13,500 crores due to closure of Kudankulam is certainly cheaper than loosing Rs.4lakh crores of damage due to nuclear accident as estimated for Fukushima plant.
The author does not provide any short term or long term solution to the problem at hand (energy requirements for a growing India). I think it is easy to argue against something that raised some controversies recently. whether it is solar (costly), coal (pollution), or any other form, there is some risk in almost everything... It is like citing internet due to fraud activities happening and ask us to stop using it. We need to make sure we place sufficient counter-measure (safety) controls and go with it...
I am anti nuclear..i am really happy to see this article
France generates about 75 % of its electricity from Nuclear plants. It has not had any accident till now and has no intention of shutting down any of its plants. India should follow their lead and reduce dependence on oil, price of which is expected to continue to soar.
This is a pseudo-scientific analysis. This analysis lack of understanding on how much resources, land and highly polluting coal it will take to generage this level of electricity. Even more staggering lack of understanding of how starved we are for energy and how energy deficiency will dial this country back to where it was in 70's.
It is like saying for instance rice is not 100% good for you because it is rich in carbohydrates. We should be all eating high protein diet like tofu. While this may be a good suggestion it is not practical in a situation where majority of our country is actually starving.
This false sense of 'GDP growth inspite of global recession' is lulling us into thinking all is well in India. We have a serious energy deficit and this is going to lead to serious issues. There was a recent business week analysis which shows India is already the hardest place to start business in the world. Leave it to these guys to knock us back to stone ages.
What are the alternatives for India if we do not pursue nuclear energy. India's energy needs will not be met by fossil fuels is a hard established fact. Any suggestions....
I dissent authors view.As far As safety measures are concerned,it is
impossible to assure 100%.What has happened in chernobyl it could be
considered as failure of system but the recent fukushima incident caused
due to natural calamities.We have developed much advance technology to
tackle any disaster.We are energy deficient country,we need to be self
sufficient for our energy requirement,Nuclear Technology is way to
emerge out as great power in world stage.With great reverence to Mr.
Kalam,i agree with his view "Nuclear Technology gateway to prosperity".
Its not fair to exaggerate on past civilian nuk accidents which were
happened when technology was at a nascent stage(even fukushima reactor
is more than 20yr old).That creates a kind of paranoia in the minds of
people which is undesirable.Every technology would have its own
advantages and perils.Yes,nuclear tech. has its inherent threats of a
higher degree.Instead of overcoming those limitations ,to put a full
stop for the progress is a bad idea.
The fact that a nuclear reactor cannot be accident free should lead to the question whether the associated risk (where 'Risk'= 'probability of the accident' X 'consequences of that accident')is acceptable to our densely populated and poor country. If a type of Fukushima/Chernobyl type accident were to occur what will be the impacts on our communities. Since it is well known through many official reports that our disaster preparedness is bad can we afford such an accident?
An objective analysis of all the costs to our society as compared to meager benefits can establish that the nuclear power is not the best option to meet our electricity demand. Overall efficiency of our power sector is very low. Improving efficiencies to an optimum level, and effective use of distributed type renewable energy sources can meet most of our energy demand as per studies.
A holistic look at the welfare needs of all sections of our society can provide us much better options than nuclear power option.
The article highlights pertinent points. 100% reliable, there is no
system designed by men.One can say,with required confidence level of
60 or 75% reliability will be less than 1 for any system. Failure mode
analysis is based on many assumptions and previous success/ failures.
Factor of safety or margin of safety is a factor applied to any design
to take care of unknowns/ uncertainity in design methods, load
estimates, effect of environment on system behaviour and so on -
another name for this is Factor of ignorance.Anyone claiming 100% have
to ask themselves again. When the mandate is given and the task to
clear is fixed in the beginning and analysis/ review takes
place,discussions will be towards how to accept it only. Electricity
is required at what cost?Whether we will welcome such things in our
vicinity. Gap between promise and achievement is a common thing for
all our departments without exception. To get budget allocation,
Projections, will always be a rosy one.
No one is addressing the issue of war with Sri Lanka ? We can't rule this out.Tamils and Sri Lankans have never been the best of friends given the fact that the Sri Lankan military had committed war crimes against the tamils.The tamil rights has not yet The Sri Lankans are historically known to have been at odds with the tamils.We can rule out Sri Lanka being at war with India one day .If this does happen, Kundakulam in Tamil Nadu would be a target to be bombed by the Sri Lankan government.The death then would be of epic proportions .We can't rule out India and Sri Lanka being at war one day .The Sri Lankans have been repeatedly killing tamil fishermans today.There has been scores of such incidents.The kundakulam nuclear reactor in Tamil Nadu would now restrain India from taking justified military actions against Sri Lanka as India with the nuclear reactor has now more to lose.India wil now be a hostage to Sri Lanka and more tamil fishermann across the staits will continue to get kille
This article geniune one. One time telephone is costly. Now cell phone used by all. Similary we have to build solar power projects. Initially it will be costly. Later it will be used by all.
People life important than money. I think latest projects are build using modular technology. Disassembling will be easy. KK can be reexported to russia. If 100% safe shift it to delhi. Then we will analyse it.
If we are going to wait for the day when we will have 100% safety from
nuclear power, we may as well close the shop and walk away. A smart
energy policy for India which is rather starved for other natural
sources of energy is to include nuclear as a viable option and try to
make sure that it is as safe as possible. This requires not only top
class design but also top class engineering, construction and
maintenance. Perhaps, many people who are opposed to nuclear power
(in this column) are doubtful that such capability exists in India
and given the overriding corruption in the country, I don't blame
them!
The Hindu could have done better by presenting a spokesperson for the
other view, side by side.
If terrorist attack with nuclear weapon, it will not withstand. All defence scientist know the power of nuclear bomb.
I was very keen about the progress of this country from developing to developed status. Every country make their energy plan based on the resources available and its respective maturity of technology. Energy security is also very important factor while planning the above.
So the countries GDP growth hall match with energy growth. Accordingly thrust on Nuclear power was planned for implementation. Every technology has its inherent risks but the technology will take care of it. So there can be 100's of lame excuses and faults that can be found out. So we must look at the things with a positive mind and positive attitude for the nations growth. So every citizens of this country shall work towards the same.
We need power. In large quantities. Any proposal or project has risks and cannot be hedged 100%. What is needed is a reasonable hedge. The stakeholders interests would only be varying and gets served differently based on their bargaining strengths. Hence the arguments of authors are that of incurable pessimists. While Thorium project has not progressed as anyone would have longed for,there is no need to be so pessimistic as to advocate its abandonment. The authors seem to be advocates of the theory of least resistance. No innovation, growth or progress would ever come with such ideas miring the society.Let the energy flow in lending a helping hand. Let us light a candle instead of cursing the darkness.
This excellent article is by genuine Experts who know what they are speaking on the minor role of Nuclear plants that produce only less than 3percent of our electricity while having the potential to cause economic damages worth Rs.4 lakhs crores due to a maximum credible accident as estimated by Japan for its Fukushima accident.For accidents caused by aeroplane crashes,it is not the common people that are sacrificed for the benefit of the company that runs aeroplane for its profits.Even then,its effects only one generation but the damage does not extend for many generations as Radio activity has several decades and centuries of half-lives and the costs of damage and decommissioning and waste handling is enormously expensive that no nation can bear.Even the plant owners and insurance firms do not believe in their safety and so force national Governments to pass laws to force common people to subsidise damaging costs of a failed reactor for Rs.60,000 crores under Price-Anderson Act
the article was nail on head but it is only one side of the coin most of them agree
that not everything about the plant is revealed but we have to also see the other
side that is the uses and how much we require it.the govt is distancing itself from
people by not directly interacting with them directly.im sure that if govt interacts with
people address their queries and fears all these speculations can be passed
off.rather than talking how unsafe they are we can make it more productive if we
discuss how to make it a safer project.
Dear Author,
Where did you find "100% safe" in Essay you mention in the very outset of your article?
Please don't twist the words and play with subtleties of message in the essay. He used word "safer" and you need to go back and read the article again to validate this.
You have missed the whole line while writing this text. If you read
that article, you will find that, it is counter argument to your
argument and not the argument to which you are giving the counter
argument.
Very unfortunate indeed. We Indians, most of us, know so little and whatever we know we use it to destroy, delay, disagree, dispute, deny and divert attention from the real cause. An accident at Nuclear reactor may or may not be a possiblity but slow destruction of India, owing to energy crisis, is definitley on cards. We are so proud to know that we know that accidents do happen at Nuclear plants and no amount of assurance will satisfy us, but we are not wise enough to know the alternative to it or consequence of not doing anything to bridge the gap between supply and demand. We are not willing to trust our own experts and we are not willing to trust outsiders. I want to know from the learnt Author that if companies accept liability conditions willhe be happy ? Can Doctor give 100% gaurantee to a pregnant woman that she will give birth to a healthy baby if all the tests are normal ? which science is 100% correct 100% of times ?
As an Electrical Engineer able to understand and agree with respectful Dr Abdul Kalam about the safety.However the article by Mr.Ramana & Mr.Raju explains about the concerns of reactor at time of failure, only the cooling pumps (electrical/battery/manually operated) can save us from accidents. Dr.Kalam has breifed that the 3rd Generation technology will help us and with atmospheric air they can be cooled. All these for and against are technological arguments. Huge Investment in the plant and already commissioned allied infrastrure (Abishekapatti Station and EHV Lines) what we are going to do with it? Years back there were many public debates at Madurai etc., and there was no such hue and cry. Only after Japan incident.Now after the technical debate it is responsibility of Govrnments to make it understandable for a layman and the poor villagers instead of blaming one another in a Nation of ENERGY DESERVING COUNTRY.
Analyzing the problem with the statements that each year there will be a leakage for 6 seconds is absolutely wrong and ludicrous (as mentioned above in another post). Its insane to think in that way. Even the hard disks for PCs have some probability of failure, does anybody say that each year the hard disk will fail for 30 seconds? Sun and wind are not reliable and these technologies depend heavily on the weather conditions. The advancement in the nuclear technology is way more than in solar and wind technology. It is unwise to think that those two technologies would be pollution free as it takes great amount of resources to construct the infrastructure for solar and wind technology. Nuclear Tech seems to be the best solution in hand.
There is no such thing as 100% statistical probability. Hence there can be no 100% safety! This applies to not only nuclear but also other forms of energy! The plain fact is that India's present and future energy needs cannot be satisfied without nuclear energy --- as things stand now! Would we commit energy-industry suicide in the quest for the unachievable 100% safety!
"India 2010: A Reference Annual" states that installed power generation capacity on 31.07.2009 comprised of "36,917 MW hydro, 96,295 MW thermal including gas & diesel, 4,120 MW nuclear based power plants and 13,242 MW from renewable energy sources including wind.(p263, par-3. Min. Information & Broadcasting, GOI). The renewable sources accounted for 4 times than that from nuclear energy and there exist enormous opportunity to augment it. Only the people with vested interests fail to see it. Why the rural people be made to live with the risks, even if perceived, for the wasteful energy consumption practices of urban elites. Why not build these less polluting energy plants nearer their users, i.e. cities. The people opposing Kundakulum have lived there for generations and will continue to live there for hundreds of coming generations. This is contrary to the urban elites who, themselves or their next generation will emigrate to greener pastures in some developed country.
It is absurd to compare risk from trains, airplanes etc. conventional sources with that arising from nuclear hazard, which renders area uninhabitable for hundreds of years, and causes genetic mutations in flora & fauna including humans. The existing western model of wasteful energy use, that we are blindly aping in the name of development, is inherently unsustainable. Minimizing energy use and recourse to renewable energy is the alternative that India as a 4000 year old civilizational country must focus.
This article is an honest attempt at explaining the hidden dangers and the false claims about its economic benefits. The authors of the article must be congratulated for calling the bluff of Manmohan Singh government and other votaries of nuclear energy as well as the cronies of foreign corporates. It is clear from Kakodkar's article in the Marathi paper that the primary objective of Manmohan Singh is to help foreign, especially American, corporate houses.
The important thing is the liability of the Atomic reactors manufacturing companies,it must be enhanced reasonably so that they consider the safety of the reactors as there utmost priority. And of course, as Sheela Iyengar mentioned above the solar energy is one of the excellent option, but right now it is in it's nascent stage, so more R&D is still required to increase the efficiency of the solar powering equipments. And after all when we compare the coal fired power plants and nuclear ones than it is quite evident that the later one is better but still I would like to emphasise here that the nuclear reactor's vendor must be held liable when it comes to compensation in case of a disaster in full, govt must not take their liability.
Sure, there is risk in everything, so we should all live in darkness, use oil lamps, but wait even oil refineries pose a risk.
Though the article has not talked about spent fuel disposal, it is another big headache. When countries with big land mass like United States are facing road blocks in disposing spent fuel, for countries like India, the future certainly lies in solar and wind energy only. They have to put lot of research interests in these areas than trying to act like I am at par with the old riches.
Till Date,there has been 4 major nuclear accidents.Fukushima Daiichi (2011), Chernobyl (1986), Three Mile Island accident (1979), and the SL-1 accident (1961). Out of the 4,only Chernobyl and SL-1(it was an experimental reactor for the U.S. military) has caused direct deaths.Chernobyl caused 64 direct deaths(a report in 2008) and several thousands due to cancer.The worst estimate is 985000 deaths over a period 18 years,but this estimate is not conclusive at all and was reported by an anti-nuclear agency. The SL-1 caused 4 direct deaths.The other 2 disasters did not cause any deaths.The first instance of nuclear power generation happened in 1951 and till date there has been 4 nuclear accidents that has been rated between 5 to 7 in the International Nuclear event scale.The number of deaths due to Air pollution is not an area of serious study ,but there are estimates which state that 6 lakh deaths occur in India every year.
If I argue that airlines aren't 100% safe, do we need to ground our entire civil aviation fleet? Since when fear and paranoia has started dictating our public policy decisions ? By the way it is interesting to note both the authors are from leading universities in the US (a Google search will show)...it is easier to preach such grand talk from such cushy settings..they must come here and experience the 2-3 hours power cuts everyday here in our TN cities here....
This is meticulously designed article by the authors. I respect A.P.J. Abdul Kalam very much but i think that to declare that nuclear plants are 100 percent safe is fallacious and misleading to some extent. I like the last paragraph most in this article. Foreign multinationals should not be allowed to wash their hands off if some untoward incident takes place. There should be stringent policies to cater to such kind of liability issues. But if we look at other facet of coin, we have to have nuclear power generation for better and developed future. So, we should continuously invest in nuclear safety so that accidents can be avoided and human life can be saved. We should innovate new technologies which will insure safety and mitigate the risk of accidents. We'll have to use nuclear power so as to meet the pressing demand across India. We will have to take risk and go out of our comfort zone.
I always wonder where the Indian Nuclear plants store their unspent fuel. World over there are huge concerns, US has Yuka mountains and recently Germany has decided to forego Nuclear energy plants. As far as Dr. Manmohan Singh is concerned, he was trained as Economist and For Mr. Abdul Kalam, I find his statements ridiculous and from science fiction. I am thinking of using RTI to know the DUMPING ground of Nuclear fuel, and remember that many elements and containers of Nuclear plants should have lifespan of 80,000 year. Should be adopt a mindless concept of modernization or Gandhian approach to sustainability? I think, Indian Scientists, Engineers and Politicians never give "logical reasoning" and consider ordinary human life as "Smart Dust".
Government view is same as on Inflation ,its keen interest to safe guard intreset of Private Companies & here is Foriegn Companies.
How many nuclear accidents happened in India ? None. Is kudankulam project seismic prone? well, odds are here too 1 over infinity. What do we have as alternative energy sources ? People talk about solar energy as India being a tropical region. But is that enough for the growing energy needs of India but we are not talking about lighting a bulb or two for household. And how much have we spent on this project ? The arguement of having or not having the project running is out of question. We need to fullfill our energy needs and most viable way is to go for Nuclear energy.
Nuclear power probably cannot be ignored from the economic development point of view and should definitely be explored albeit with caution. Great article especially the last para cannot be ignored. With the unfortunate political limitations India faced from the past till now and the grant scale of corruptions where our politicians/coroporate sector has showed prowess, common man has no option but to distrust. No government in India has shown any capability to stop disasters like Bphopal tragedy but unfortunately no one till date has even shown any willingness to bring this corpoate murder to justice. And this is not going to change any time sooner in fact we have seen it worsen. Hence there ought to have contractual agreement from participants in the nuclear reactor's building & maintenanc to share liability & first a seperate fund to be established which can then be used to tackle funds required in an event of a future disaster. Vendor's indemnity should not be an option at all people.
Recent developments over koodankulam were wrongly perceived as that people were against the development. The development what our government strives for is too far away from the development what people needs .These are the worst manifestations of our 'unclear' aggrements . Development should not undergo without the concern of the local people.Instead of creating a permanent solution,intellectuals were mobilised to justify their mistakes.
No reactor can be 100% safe,at least not against an asteriod or meteorite hit which can blow the entire hundreds of tons of uranium into the atmosphere bringing death and destruction to the entire country compounding the relatively minor destruction caused by the meteorite a millionfold.After the event it would go down in history books as another rare incident like the Fukushima Sunami as an unforseen,extremely rare accident to serve as a lesson for others.
The only real alternative energy option-as Krugman has pointed out in a recent N.Y.Times opinion article-is Solar Energy notwithstanding the opposition to it by vested interests like the Fracking lobby in the U.S. or the Nuclear lobby in India.The Sun with its 1Kw/square meter of energy delivered to the surface of our planet is an inexhaustible energy source.All the money being spent on nuclear reactors could profitably be diverted to schemes for utilising the Solar Energy bonanza that Nature has given freely to us all.
Sir,
It was widely expected that the Central govt. under the pro-west Manmohan dispensation will do anything to satisfy the nuclear vendors. And Abdul Kalam is a tool for them. Many of us need to know that Kalam is not a nuclear scientist, rather he was only doing administrative work during all his years. Even the great indomitable Einstein regretted for making the atom bomb and he was kept away from the Manhattan power project. Little did many of us know that he was under the surveillance of FBI and accused of being pro-communist. Right from the beginning, there was not an iota of fair play for the locals at any part of India. The ruling govt. adopted its own methods in disrupting and dispensing a favourable report through media and the corridors of power. Such space was denied to the people. How can we, the people of India trust the govt. which has never been transparent in its nuclear policy? Will it allow an independent observers inside the reactors? Alas, it will not.
Why nuclear energy is tenable and the criticism illogical:
1.Generation targets and reality: in early 1970s no one anticipated
that there will be a ban on nuclear technology transfer to india. this
is a big thing since you have to rely on nuclear data and operational
experience from all over the world. regarding the doubts on rate of
making nuclear reactors one can study the case of china.
2.About thorium: U-232 indeed creates a problem. but most of the
gammas(99%)are low energy and can be handled by the use of proper
technology.and in any case radiation from ashes produced by thermal
power plants are much higher than that from the operation of nuclear
reactors.
3.Are concerns being heeded?: no industry is as open to discussions
and committed to transparency as nuclear industry.you mention the
increase in cancer cases due to chernobyl. has mobile industry done
any such case study? the dose from mobile phones are much greater.
Nice to read articles of so-called intellectuals, who are possibily writing these sheets under cool ambiemce of British Council or USIS, they could have argued on Kundankulam project till 1999, because since 1989 till 1999, the project remained on papaers only and also find some IIT Funda to help the nation with necessary energy.
4.Claims about the reactor: zero risk is impracticable. the value of
risk in nuclear reactors is millions of times smaller than our daily
activities and is decreasing day by day.
5.Issue of liability is the test: I would also like to suggest a test.
In france the energy share of nuclear power plants is 77% for many
decades now. The number of fatalities in nuclear accidents is nil.
Even the latest accident in marcoule reprocessing site has nothing to
do with nuclear technology. this is the proof that it is safe enough.
6: Final comments: we as human beings are not bayesian. we do not
think rationally. If one does, there will be no opposition to nuclear
energy at all. We should not imitate the protests going on in europe
because they have other options and we do not have any other option
than nuclear energy. talk to the chinese workers who have worked for
solar energy. it is one of the most hazardous industry in the world.
likewise there are problems associated with other options.
Its nice to read such articles week in week out, especially with two teams for and against nuclear energy, but some of the numbers presented by both teams differ so vastly that it confuses a naive neutral reader as to what the real truth is.
It is true that opinions can differ but at least the facts should be comparable. (eg:number of direct deaths!).
i wonder why scientific community and political community are trying at their will to coommerate a nuclear reactor, although enough money spent on it. As some body pinpointed about alternative energy sources, India is surrounded by vast sea. If same efforts can enforced on Tidal energy, we can ensure or even surpass the nucliar energy, at the expense of cost. One more source of energy genration is saving itself.when we incurr a loss of more than 20% as transmission losses, we could easily compensate the energy generation by nucliar energy( a mere 2.8% of total energy). here is another oppurtunity. However abandoning the newly built reactor is not appreciable, except demanding for higher liability, in case of any mishap.I appreciate the author to bring some seroius issues to debate and discussion.
Let the government come out clean on why there is a cap on liability if all the reactors are safe. Why it is not adopting the principle of polluter paying for the mess created. Can any one from the Union Government ensure that the cap on liability will be removed?
As pointed out by the authors is the risk worth taking? Even by 2020 nuclear energy would not contribute to 4% of the energy needs.
All the technical experts who are supporting this project should spell out clearly the stand taken by them on the liability.
According to writers I have some conclusions...
1) Nuclear energy
2) Walk on road
3) Travel by bus, train and air
4) Living in low line flood prone area
all these are dangerous.
.
.
even taking some food and taking breath in cities is dangerous
Then simple solution according to writers we should leave all these
things.
Now I want to know the view of writers for death in India due to
Stamped, riots, terrorist, cast war, honor killing..
OK we should not use nuclear energy and our requirement will not be
fulfill only with hydro, solar and wind so our maximum dependent will
be on coal and crude oil. Is it OK for our environment who will take
care of neutral disaster and mass death due to that?
I have a rough idea for fuel required for same power generation, in
coal plant require 100 truck coal in each day, for fast reactor 1
truck fuel is sufficient for 60 years.
Imagine its benefit with improved nuclear safety technology.
or
less energy = max unemployment = max hunger death
Very good and informative article. This would help people to appreciate both the sides of the coin. While each progressive step man takes has a risk we need to weigh several factors before going ahead recklessly towards progress. Just because no such thoughts were given importance, today we say pollution is creating a grave environmental problem. Global warming and its dire consequences, hole in the Ozone layer and millions of deaths due to lung problems and cancer. We need to look at all alternatives and consider options of solar power, wind power and power from the atmosphere more seriously through better R & D efforts and give impetus to all of these. We also have to look at more other unknown sources of safer power. We all know that even Japan a professionally managed country with great discipline struggled we need to think of the worst having known what India is in dealing with disasters.Lightning generates huge amount of electricity. Is there a way to capture energy from it?
Thankyou The Hindu, for finally stating the opposing case. But nobody is talking about how wasteful nuclear is in terms of water. India is on the brink of catastrophic water scarcity. It is simply not tenable for us to be using such water intensive forms of energy production. I was concerned by how the former Indian president trivialized the tragedy of Fukushima in his opinion piece last week. I wonder what the people of Fukushima would say if they had the choice.
Any project can be implemented before to start it that Government has to take both first safety for local community in means even to to conduct survey,second Technological aspects like local area conditions like local laws,third social concept including economic condition of the local people,fourth non-interference of local government,fifth non-inclusion of nuclear laws in the state,sixth out come of problems can be solved by Local GOVERNMENT in the agreement between both governments,seventh strict action for better implementation and production,eighth international safety measures may be implemented lastly every one of the stage once again come into force for normalization of the project.
The discussion today could have been held years ago. We all know that the nuclear plant was being built. Money in millions (if not billions) have been spent on this. The parties who are today saying they are protecting the peoples safety have been in power earlier also. Why is this suddenly an issue when it was not there years ago? Or is it that suddenly we have become nuclear technology savvy?
IT is clear that there are vested interests trying to use any excuse to delay or completely stop the plant from starting to function. This is mere lip service to the people.
I do not have any science background but with little practical knowledge the plant should be allowed to progress with any additional safety features that may be required to be put in place.
Trust wisdom prevails and we are not left to the mercy of likes and dislikes of individuals.
I must start by admitting to the fact that none of the reactors in this world are 100% safe. But along with this bold statement I have to say that the reactor NPCIL is building in collaboration with the Russian Federation at Kudankulam is the safest reactor mankind has ever seen, with the latest developments both from Russia and India being incorporated in equal measures. And all of the VVER's running all over the world have an equally impressive track records even without the special features at the KKNPP like PHRS and extra safety train.
In terms of nuclear accidents the core melt is the worst possible accident and it has happened only twice in the 50+ years of nuclear life which is a significantly small number if you consider the deadly accidents caused by chemical industries or other industrial fire or the transport accidents. Most of the reactors in the world have a core damage frequency of 10^-5 whereas for KKNPP its 10^-7. This statement should shed some light on your doubts
If the people in Kundankulam don't want a nuclear reactor, what in God's name where they doing for the past decade while the plant was being built and the plants were being drawn up!
This obstructionism by naive and ignorant people with no real understanding about nuclear reactors is not only illegal it is also anti-national and treasonous.
How many more Coal fired electric plants can India build ? There is already a massive shortage of coal in this country due to rapid growth of coal-fired power plants. Further, the growing power shortages are crippling the Industrial and services sector in many parts of the country. With land a premium in our country, the ONLY answer to our problems is nuclear energy.
The ignorant and the foolish continuously harp about the "risk" of nuclear power but what of the risk of building coal fired plants ? Already poor air quality in India is causing grave health effects costing billions. Even driving a car has risks, "risk" is a hollow argument.
Nuclear Energy is less than one percent of total energy and less than 3 percengt of Electricity produced in India.QWe do not need Nu clear plants because they have the potential for great risk to health and economy of the country as proved by the Chernobyl and Fukushima Explosions.Although immediate direct deaths may be few,indirect health effects like cancer run into lakhs of people including interdiction of vast areas of land and economic damages estimated at Rs.4 lakh crores as estimated for Fukushima accident by Japan.This s power can be generated at a cheaper cost and in a more safer way by using
Natural gas,Hydro-power , coal and lignite abundantly available in Indian mines.That Nuclear power is highly risky is admitted indirectly by Nuclear plant suppliers and operators because they are unable to get insuranced for accidents and they are unduly influencing the National Governments in USA and India to tax the common man to pay the victims of Nuclear plant accidents,if any.
The arguments put forth in your article are only a reiteration of the anti-nuclear lobby that has been voiceforous in recent times. However it once again fails to enunciate what is the credible alternative for nuclear power. The environmental damage caused by coal and hydel power plants are increasingly becoming clear both at the mining head and in the perimeter around coal based plants. Also with even the existing coal plants struggling to get fuel linkages and even the assured quantity of coal not coming in what is the alternative. Gas based power plants are non-starters for the same reason of non availabiltiy of fuel. The authors' argument that the Indian establishment have made promises on the nuclear capacity front but not delivered is disingenious as this would not have been possible without the recent nuclear supply agreements with the West signed recently. The thought that suppliers should also have altruistic motives and not protect themselves from libel is also weak in logic.
So many comments mentioned about solar energy. Yes, it is available in abundance for nearly 280 days and more in India, but the millions of Indians have not honestly put to use this free energy. Through RTI Act I asked for details from Sholinghur Town Municipality-631102 (Tamilnadu) about the number of marriage halls and installtion of Solar Water heaters. I got the written reply that not one of 38 marriage halls installed this solar water heater. Per Town & Country planning Dept rules the solar hot water system is one of the requirement to obtain permission. Inspite of bringing this to the concerned officials of Tamilnadu Govt (including the Renewable Energy dept) no action has been taken for the past three months. Imagine how much solar energy is wasted in India. I dont know how many protestors of Kudankulam nuclear plant have adapted solar energy equipments for lighting (solar lantern), cooking (parabolic cooker) and hot water (solar water) in their home. It is all empty talk.
Atomic revolution is highly dangerous and devstating despite the prosperity it can bring. A life has to be lived in a normal and proper manner, so why not our technocrats and scients explore tenable methods and technology and make a revolution in wind energy and solar energy. Prevention is better than cure and atomic disaster will be highly devastating. No doubt our most respected former President being faithful to our nation always dedicated his time and energy for the prosperity of our nation, but I am sure he can reexamine the risks before giving a clean chit. We must always remember the disaster of Hiroshima and Nagasaki whether it is a bomb or technical achievement in disguise.
Agree that nuclear power is a potential source of energy, though not the sole one while there are still unleashed possibilities of solar and wind energy and even the water has not been exploited effectively,for the future India. But the question raised by the authors can never be ignored: "When nuclear companies are unwilling to stake their financial health on these claims of “100% safety,” how can the government ask local residents to risk their lives?". The doubt that it is all about business and has not much to do with energy is relevant. Everything should be transparent, and the first step towards transparency is liability -- companies should be responsible for their mistakes too. Also one more question is there: what should be our priority, nuclear projects or the lives of our people? If we are ready to take this much risk on this nuclear issue, why not on the elimination of poverty?
While there is the lurking fear of a catastrophic accident from the nuclear plants, the question remains can we meet our future energy needs without them? If we take a 50 year horizon, there would be no oil or gas left and making coal environmentally acceptable would remain a question mark and expensive. Wind and solar energy can only supplement as one has to exclude them for meeting the maximum demand on a day. For instance, the installed power capacity has to be designed to meet the maximum demand (MD)during the peak hours of the day, i.e between 6 pm and 10 pm. However much solar power one may have, that is not available during that period. Likewise one cannot be sure of wind being available always during that period. Further both wind and solar poor plant load factor of around 18% making their capital cost prohibitively expensive in real terms. So one cannot see an option but to live with nuclear energy and the challenge is in making it as safe as feasible.
i oppose the people who are all oppose the nuclear plant plan. if they don't admit them to work on then govt. should not give current to them.
many have plan to avoid our india's development even the govt. also not take any serious steps.
i will support the things whichever good for India........
The Author clearly states that 100% safeguards on nuclear plant are impossible. The Nuclear reactor suppliers limit their compensation claims through “Nuclear Liability bill” in case of any accidents. How we believe Reactors 100% safe? India is the country having high credentials of not punishing corporates for the Accident. EX: Bhopal Gas Tragedy.
Government’s new propaganda of there is a “Foreign hand” on nuclear plant opposition. The article cleverly point out who is the “Foreign hand” behind the support of nuclear energy that is Multinationals, they want to sell their reactors.
People who opposes the N-Plant not against the so called “Development”. Development should be line safety of life and Livelihood of the Locals. Government should hear the concerns of people.
The article is well written and gives glimpses of nuclear development in the
country with the promises made and broken. I agree with the broader question of
untenability of Kudankulam not purely because of the liability issue and others
mentioned in the article, but also because of our failed safety measures in
operation. We are a country were accidents are part of life and acceptable as long
as it does not affect us. We are lousy with safety standards and see it as waste of
time. We look to save by cutting on essentials and passing the damage onto
unsuspecting and weak. It is true that we don't often have accidents in the scale of
Bhopal but various incidents that put the life's of people in danger due to breech
of standard and safe protocol go unheard. The reports of Kalpakkam atomic power
plant using contract labours from Orissa for some of its risky activities and the
diseases they contract never come to public light. So the challenge is if we are
going to acknowledge and address
Why we hell bent on only nuclear power plant, which is highly hazardous, critical and time consuming to install. Koodamkulam has initiated in 1988. Still we are yet to commission. Why don't we go for eco-friendly,economical, viable long lasting hydel power potential (over one lakh MW) which is available a plenty in the Himalayan region. Why government is dead against since when the idea was suggested well over 30 yrs back.
The authors have latched on to '100% safe' comment to put down the nuclear energy argument. I think this is totally disingenuous on their parts. As they well know that nothing in engineering science is 100% safe. From pressure cookers to aeroplanes, nothing is 100% safe. So what do we do, go back to stone age? France derives 75% of its energy needs from nuclear power, US gets 28% of its needs. The much derided Japan still gets more than 20% of its needs from nuclear plants. Even if we accept that 9000 people died in Chernobyl, does it hide the fact that more than 4000 people die in Chinese coal mines every year trying to dig fuel for thermal power plants. The arguments against nuclear energy are fallacious and it does not even give an alternative. Activists are known only to obstruct.
The Author clearly states that 100% safeguards on nuclear plant are impossible. The Nuclear reactor suppliers limit their compensation claims through “Nuclear Liability bill” in case of any accidents. How we believe Reactors 100% safe? India is the country having high credentials of not punishing corporates for the Accident. EX: Bhopal Gas Tragedy.
Government’s new propaganda of there is a “Foreign hand” on nuclear plant opposition. The article cleverly point out who is the “Foreign hand” behind the support of nuclear energy that is Multinationals, they want to sell their reactors.
People who opposes the N-Plant not against the so called “Development”. Development should be line safety of life and Livelihood of the Locals. Government should hear the concerns of people.
I found some of the assertions in this discussion quite astounding. For instance, PM Manmohan Singh and Dr. Kalam are supporting the NPP due to enrich the foreign companies, did it ever occur to these people that China is building one NPP each year to meet their energy needs or that France meets more than 75% of its electricity from NPP sources! Or that some renewable sources like solar or wind power can be alternative to NPP or coal-fired plants, do these people understand that the energy production capacity from a solar or wind power plant pale in comparison to coal or nuclear power, or that both wind and solar power sources are dependent on the weather condition. For a developing country like India with its exponentially growing energy needs it has to harness all sources of energy including coal, natural gas, nuclear and renewable. Add to that the fact that India is lacking in coal and natural gas not to mention the severe polluting and global warming consequences of fossil fuel.
good article.
There are so many risks to survive a human being.In fact survival of
human beings is a miracle.Thousands of people are killed by road
accidents or by political clashes everyday.So should we give up vehicles
or politics? No,because we have no alternative,but we can make it more
safer through our continuous efforts.To meet the future power demand
Nuclear Energy is the only alternative.Otherwise we have to give more
penalties due to shortage of power in near future.
No technology is perfect but we cannot effort to do away with nuclear energy. In the comming years India would require more energy to keep up her economic growth. India is not the only country scavenging for energy. It would be a big strategic mistake if we put aside nuclear energy and believe oil and gas would alone power us in the future. Iranian , Pakisthan , India pipeline was put aside due to security reasons. I would like the author to give solution too for energy crises we may face in the future.
Stupidity if u ask abt atomic energy to a scientist who working in the same field then 100% he will support that.That is happening in kudankulam now everyone used tell 100 % safety when some unfortunate thing ill happen that time these people wont be there to answer.Better to go for Solar Energy and wind energy.Shut down all the Nuclear Power station.For few scientists salary and daily bread and butter our govt playing with innocent peoples life.This is not about safety its all about life of our People.So respect to people opinion.System and govt made for people system has to change accordance with people not the people to adjust with the system.Our govt expecting the adjustment from people not from the govt which is formed by people for people.
What does electric power give people? Electricity does not create jobs - it does not bring in prosperity. Most of our grandparents lived without electricity. Do you mean to say that they had a terrible life and they were not happy because of the lack of power?
If electricity brings in greatness, why are still "developed" countries like USA, Greece, UK battling with unemployment issues?
Stop the though process that links prosperity with modernization. These corporations want people to think that by having more electricity, they can lead a better life. Of course, the corporations want nothing, but profits.
Like most people say - if these corporations proclaim that these reactors at 100% safe, then why not accept liability for any problems? Let the CEO live next to every reactor he is selling for a couple of weeks every year.
Or ask them to place nuclear reactors near politician's houses. Why does the poor person have to suffer? Always?
The amount of recent scams makes everyone to think the amount of safety
procedures would have been compromised. No one knows. It is better to
think twice before going further. India can not face Fukashima type
accidents.
A new volcano in the making! Kudos to eminent physicists, Suvrat Raju and M.V.Ramana, for their excellent article, most needed at a time when some of our nuclear scientists are trying to hoodwink the people of the area with false assurances on the safety of nuclear installations and are hell bent on pushing the Kudankulam plant down their throat at any cost.
Are the learned authors arm chair or experimental physicists or have they been involved in any design or operation of any industrial or power plants. There are always inherent risks. Accidents still do happen in Chemical and Power Plants. But the improvements in Technology have enabled the design and operation of huge sized plants with much reduced risks and per unit product cost than in earlier years. Development is not possible without calculated risks. An agenda of Nuclear Disarmament cannot be used against peaceful use of Atomic Energy. No doubt a responsible Govt of any Political persuasion has to safeguard the interests of its people while providing all essentials like energy,water etc. Why now, when ready to produce
Some excellent points there! The last para nails it in the head. If the Government is so sure about the safety of the reactors, why are they shielding the vendors from being sued in case of an accident? Also, the Government itself would end up paying a pittance to the accident victims (Remember Bhopal?). Nuclear energy maybe the way forward, but only after the Government takes steps to reassure the citizens about their commitment towards safety.
There is no such thing as 100% safe. It is a utopian idea which sounds good but can never be expected to be achieved.Moreover, all those people who speak about soalar energy must know that technology is not yet perfect and only 20% of the enrgy can actually be utilised by this method
The latest news is that the Japanese have started one nuclear reactor in Fukushima on November 1, just 13 days back, silently. The opponents MUST react to this news! They should NOT quote Japan from NOW onwards. What is going to happen in Germany will be known only after 2022! You can argue that case only after 2022, and not NOW! After atomic bomb testing in India by Indira Gandhi, the international nuclear powers have black listed India. We are not able to get any assistance from any major nuclear industries. That is why there is a big delay in achieving targets. The authors of this article, if there are really eminent nuclear experts, should have known these facts. They are simply wants to confuse the readers with un-substantiated hearsay! The “foreign hand” is deliberately spreading the news that the whole of southern Tamil Nadu will be wiped out if there is an accident! I want this authors to vouch that statement, with scientific facts.
yes , author is right in expressing his views about safety of reactors,
but still , we need to think about energy security of our country,
maximum security of reactors must me ensured along with redressal of
grievences of local people, we cant go back... we need to march forward
...towards development and prosperity..
Yes, there is some problem with nuclear energy but at present time
anyone can suggest any other option to fulfill our energy need. In our
most villages only 0-25% electricity supply is available of what they
require. Due to less energy supply we can't use our work force fully
so result will be unemployed, poor and hungry our own people. we have
limitations on hydro,wind,solar and other conventional source of
energy. Coal and oil reserve are limited and it is also global warming
agent. So who will take care of natural disaster and death due to
global warming agent. We should go for nuclear energy and concentrate
ourselves to remove shortcoming associated with it as much as
possible. Our existence on earth is only due to we have ability of
solving problems. Environment friendly Nuclear power can fulfill our
energy need for long period of time, in-between we can search other
environment friendly sustainable source.
1kg coal = 1(kW·h)of electricity
1kg uranium = 50,000 kW·h electricity
India has been successfully operating the nuclear plants for many years. When technology advances the “risk mitigation” capabilities will get enhanced.
Risks are there in every day life, be it driving a bicycle or car, traveling in a train / plane / ship, even when using a gas stove in our kitchen etc. We do not stop using all these services in spite of the accidents that do occur occasionally. We equip / prepare ourselves to face any potential eventualities.
In no business the concept of “unlimited warranty” liabilities are accepted. We buy a branded product say a “mixie” at home. We may use the product for 10 to 20 years. But the manufacturer warrants the product for any manufacturing defects etc. just for one or two years. Hence, the authors are “wrong” in challenging the likes of Russian & American companies on this warranty issue.
Every effort must be taken by all parties to settle the current crisis created by misinformed people.
Koodankulam, as we all pray, must not be a scar in the nuclear history. It has to be a success story! No matter whoever opposes it, the GOI will take all measures to implement the project in full swing. Let us all pray for the safety of the reactor, do we have anyother options?
By all accounts, the U.S.bred writers, WOULD LIKE TO EAT THE CAKE & HAVE IT TOO! Everybody wants the comfort of electricity in their home & elsewhere, but nobody wants its source in their backyard!. Everybody howls when power supply goes off, but wants 100% safe Industry. But, may I know, GOING BY THIS / THEIR LOGIC, WHICH INDUSTRY CAN BE SAID TO BE 100% SAFE?. ANSWER IS NONE & NONE!
Above all, untenability of any project is to be debated during its inception and not ten years later, when the food is ready to be served on the table for a power starved - hungry nation!
people are divided the local district people are in fear and many in other parts are supporting to have the nuclear power at Kudankulam. probably we can swap people that all supporter of nuclear plant can come and stay around kudankulam and the people around kudankulam can shift their home to the safe places of people who oppose them.
All those who give opinion against the nuclear programs are 'foreign agents' and others are bharat ratnas. Most industrialists just say they are economically dying because of lack of power but real deaths of villagers are not important to these big guns. Thank god people are able to question everyone with solid facts. Couple of decades back few government notings would have done the magic of ignoring public opinion.
Why do we need to take the extreme steps to make the government hear our concerns EVERYTIME? Right to Speech and Right to get heard seem to have huge gap!
Prevention is better than cure is adage and overlooking the massive destruction risk in the pursuit of developing nuclear energy without achieving its safety measures is suicide attempt risking the life of all.
In support of the kudankulam power plant, the indian parliament be moved near to kudankulam with all the ministers residence around the plant. As per my understanding, All nuclear sites are away from state capitals. The only solution to this impass is to buy all the property around the plant by pro growth pro nuclear activists.
Better to have load shedding than to have a nuclear power plant (totally unpredictable) breathing down your neck.
As always, it is great to receive detailed information and thanks to the author of this article. However, it seems also to have fed into people who have already made up their minds about nuclear power based on some misconceptions. First of all, why should vendors accept any kind of liability, when they are only supplying fuel and components? The functioning of the plant will be in the hands of the Government of India, which, by virtue of its track record, sets rather dubious standards for efficiency. Secondly, Fukushima is not a nuclear disaster - it is the fallout of an extremely powerful earthquake and tsunami. Fukushima was designed to withstand a 7.4 quake on the Richter. They got 9.1 on the fateful day, and a tsunami followed. If Kudankulam gets hit by a 9.1 quake and a tsunami, nuclear fallout will be our smallest fear. What is most evident in this affair is our natural inability to put faith in anything the government(s) of India can do. Alternatives anybody?
I don't know what the future of this(nuclear reactor) would be ,but reading to many of my friends I simply came to a conclusion what the great Einstein had with his words that "21 st century will see a world that would be characterised by proficiency of means but confusion at the ends".
Sorry, your case is poor....Lets ban Mobiles- radiation issues; Cars- more people die of accidents; Multi storey builidings- Fire, earthquakes etc, are major killers, people cannot escape; Internet- bad influence on Nextgen, major traffic users are Porn;etc.. everything that we use now has a negative side.. If the argument of Nuclear energy is carried thru, even the existing light that we have now will be extinguished in future as there will be no electricity, hurrah, let us go to the stone age.. wonderful..
Many of the commentors are justifying Nuclear plants saying that no technology is 100% safe. They also ask how many nuclear accidents have occured in India. What they do not ask is why are radiation effects felt in Kalpakkam and other places even under normal working scenario. Accidents are one things, nuclear fall outs can never be justified. 10 people dieing in Haridwar, coal mining accidents etc represent a shameful system that allows these things to repeat. They can be prevented by government will. In a nuclear scenario, even one time leak event is not just an accident - but a fall out that will be felt many years afterwards. The effects are not just 10 people or 1 day - but an entire local population and entire generation. Nuclear should be replaced by Solar, Wind power, Vibration power and other means all of which should be eventually made compulsory by law.
Sustainable development, that's the key. As long as we are able to convince
the majority of Indians, the current lifestyle and expectation can not be
achieved without taking proportionate risks through science and technology -
nuclear power, Genetically modified seeds, stem cell research....and such similar
advancements, we set the clock back say by at least 100 years. Does it mean
that people who do not enjoy refrigerators and air conditioners and even basic
electricity based appliances in their homes.... should opt for green lifestyle as
practiced by the well-to-do sections of society in India and West? Who makes
these decisions on their behalf? Or at the other end of the spectrum, should
we go headlong, unmindful of the pitfalls of ONLY science and technology
based development...? Very very hard question.... answers won't be easy at
all.. BUT the present protagonists and antagonists seem to be become
dogmatic, digging themselves in to huge trenches and firing indiscriminately
This argument about safety should be started before the plant is built and not after. What happened to so called consultations with local people before starting any industry of this scale. Whatever might be the concerns, nuclear power has become a cheaper alternative for generating power with the ever growing population. Green energy is all good but does need lot more investment and cannot generate power as much as it is required. Safety for any manufacturing plant has to be revisited almost every month and there is no escape from that. I am surprised when media takes the name of Fukushima plant when did not affect anyone and as such I dont think any one died because of Fukushima nuclear leak or radiation. People in Japan died because of earth quake and flooding and no one can stop that but can keep a close eye so that warnings can be raised.
Excellent Article. The protestors should ask this simple, to-the-point question in the last paragraph to the supporters of this plant like Hon'ble Mr.Kalam, PM, The Scientists/head of Kudankulam et al.
thanks to the article. It has changed my perspective and a real eye-opener.
Though the author tried to make it into a persuasive tone it is clear that there is subtle blaming message cooked into this article. Just because it is dangerous he is saying that it is untenable, how safe are roads then? how safe is electicity? how safe is radiation generated by coal mines? how safe is erosion caused by hydro electronic plants? and few comments and the author are talking about 0% risk free, search corectly you will never find such a perfect system of energy generator. there is risk in everything even in living also. there are precautionery measures we can trust them. and about the surveys mentioned in the article please give us the links for reference to the surveys we will also have a glance at them and understand the surveys.
In reply to Mr. Soriappan for his comments on "cool-ability of reactor by outside air"
Yes, air outside the reactor can cool it. In the event of power supply failure from the grid and also from station diesel generators (which are 4 in numbers) reactor will shutdown itself and nuclear power will come down to less than 2% in few minutes. Steam generators are located above the reactor core and contain water. Due to thermo-syphoning reactor decay heat will be transported to Steam Generators and this heat in turn will be removed by Passive Heat Removal System (PHRS) which a unique safety features of Kudankulam plant. These PHRS heat exchangers are located outside the secondary containment and inside the tertiary half-dome build at a height, which help to create an air draft. Due to this natural air draft finally outside air is removing the decay heat. Hence, the designer is right saying that air can cool the reactor. This design was demonstrated practically during commissioning recently.
Where were these fellows for the last ten years when the nuclear plant was constructed spending more than Rs13,000 crores of tax payers money. India is a poor country as well as power starved .Can we afford such huge amount spent go down the drain. These arm chair critics are liabilites to the country.
Architect of Reactor 3 warns of massive hydrovolcanic explosion, Fukushima Diary by
Mochizuki, November 19, 2011:
Nov. 17 interview with Uehara Haruo, former president of Saga University and architect of
Fukushima Daiichi Reactor 3
“He admitted Tepco’s explanation does not make sense, and that the China syndrome is
inevitable.”
“He stated that considering 8 months have passed since 3/11 without any improvement, it is
inevitable that melted fuel went out of the container vessel and sank underground.”
“If the underground water vein keeps being heated for long time, a massive hydrovolcanic
explosion will be caused.”
SOURCE: news.livedoor.com (Japanese)
DATE: 2011 November 18th 19:16
Fukushima is a continuing accident where billions of lethal doses have already been
delivered. Thus Fukushima by continued nuclear fission is going to deliver unacceptable
radionuclide hotspots for many million years far in excess of any internal contamination that
is already being delivered. Ban nukes forever
Some 30 workers at fukushima have received a exposure between 100 to 250 milli Sievert. This is much less than a deadly exposure of 4000 mSv, though a dose of 4000 mSV over six weeks is used for cancer cure.None of the 140 workers at Chernobyl who received a dose of 2000 mSv died of acute radiation syndrome. No member of public has been exposed to harmful radiation. This all results from the very conservative limits put by the nuclear authorities globally. So no fatality whatsoever because of the Fukushima nuclear accident and none is likely in future. Let us get the facts straight
Thakur is painting a false picture of both Fukushima and Chernobyl. The expected deaths from cancer alone for Chernobyl is 1.4 million. See llrc.org for scientific data and results. Similarly for Fukushima the ultimate cancer deaths are in fact so high as to be inestimable at present but for study by Busby see the URL mentioned above. Thakur is ignorant of the work done by Yablokov's et al on worldwide effects due to Chernobyl. A free download is available of the New York Academy of Science publication at the llrc site. People like Thakur are misleading the public about the public health effects of Chernobyl. Similarly about Fukushima. Read www.enenews.com and be informed.
A well written misleading article. No, the facts aren't wrong. However the conclusions are. Nuclear accidents have happened earlier and will happen in future too. Nobody can provide a 100% guarantee against that. However it doesn't mean we stop our pursuit for a source of energy which can make us a power surplus nation with the least amount of adverse ecological effect.
The other option is to generate hydro-power at a large scale. That is surely a good alternative. However our "extra-motivated" green activists won't let the government do that either. Medha Patkar and her minions have been touring all over the country where proposals for setting up dams have been made and have been exhorting the masses to oppose such activity as it will destroy their lives and livelihoods.
So what is the solution to our energy crisis? Are we to remain a third world country with embarrassingly low living standadrs forever?
O ENLIGHTENED ONES!!!! Please provide the solution.
More than 90% of those writing here live in places far away from Kudankulam, and hence, have an in-built sense of safety from a nuclear accident. Many equate other industries to nuclear power plants. Then, why, like other industries, the nuclear plants are NOT located near their consumers? The argument that the plant is not controlled by the supplier and hence the supplier won't stand guarantee should also be applied to all military hardware. Alternatively, will the government of india insure everyone living in a radius of 50km from the plant for a sum of 1 crore (inflation adjusted) against nuclear radiation risks? Maybe, all those great "scientists" working on the project should be given land near the plant (a fast developing, safe, clean place to live in) as part of their wages. Obviously, the mentality of educated Indians has become so corrupted that they are willing to sacrifice thousands of fellow citizens to make themselves comfortable and rich !!!
To those who have asked why the locals have protested only now...the
locals have been protesting for over 25 years! It is only now, after
the Fukushima incident, that our media has stepped forward to cover
the protests. The present Koodankulam site itself is not compliant
with regulations such as distance to residential areas, schools,
hospitals etc. So how can you expect locals to not protest, knowing
the efficacy of the present state of affairs? It is only the
government's fault for not listening to the locals earlier and wasting
so much money on a long drawn out process! With all due respect, A.P.J
Abdul Kalam had spoken in support of the protesters a few years back
during a visit, so I do not know if his assurance now can help. Let's
not even start about the decommissioning plans, for which at least 3
different versions have been given by different officials. Nobody is
opposing growth or energy expansion but it must never come at the cost
of our safety or democracy!
There is finite risk in everything we do in life, including the VVER reactor system. There is nothing that is hundred percent safe. That would be against the law of nature. Therefore, the arguments put forward here are not good reasons for not starting up the reactors at Kundakulum. All the pontifications here seem to me as bad mouthing everybody associated with the reactor project and condemn them as a traitors.
If you live in the 21st century, you are dependent on a variety of technologies, each of them having some risks. But, all we can do is to minimize this risk in the interest of greater good to society and the nation. The arguments made by the authors as well as most of the commentators here is applicable to almost all the technologies we are using today with different scenarios. That is no reason; Indians should go back to stone ages and avoid all risks associated with living in the 21st century. If you ask the younger generation of Indians today, they would opt for e
It is really depressing to see a number of sane,intelligent and educated people taking a pro-nuclear stand, ignoring the plight of people living near Kudunkulam.It's not just a few hamlets near Kudunkulam that will be affected.The gravity of the situation should be looked in the context of the environmental safety of future generations to come by.When developed nations are saying no to "nuclear power"...Why have we become so insensitive to human casuality, brandying terms like "Greater Common Good", when every Indian human life and livelihood is precious.Dr.Abdul Kalam who also hailed from this region and has background similar to that of the protesting people should shown more sensitivity before making any profound pronouncements about "nuclear safety".