Friday, June 18, 2010

Letter submitted toThe Sun/Problems with Nuclear Power Highlighted by Gulf Disaster?

June 16, 2010

 

Letters to the Editor

THE SUN

Talkback@baltimoresun.com


Dear friend:

After reading “Safety issue at Calvert Cliffs could spur additional oversight” by Liz Kay [THE BALTIMORE SUN, June 15, 2010], I immediately thought of the oil rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.  It’s not exactly news that there was another safety issue at a nuclear power plant. A nuclear power plant is a disaster waiting to happen.

How can anyone support nuclear power today?  The banks won’t finance a reactor, and the insurance companies refuse to issue policies for nuclear power plants.  The technology is too dangerous, and no state wants to be the repository for nuclear wastes.  And be prepared for excessive cost overruns for Calvert Cliffs III.

Sadly the president doesn’t fully understand the ramifications of the British Petroleum mega-disaster.  He should sign an executive order, ala FDR creating the Works Progress Administration, to launch the clean energy project.  Imagine if Barack Obama proposed a bold plan to wean this country from dirty energy—coal, oil and nuclear—to renewable energy sources.  Millions of jobs would be created to build and install solar panels, wind turbines, and a new electricity grid.  The USA could become the #1 country for green energy.  Without an addiction to oil, the U.S. could bring the troops home from Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen.

Of course, I am dreaming.  Money will continued to be wasted on warfare, oil spills and unsafe nuclear power.  And drill, baby, drill will still be the mantra of those who could care less about the life of our planet. The taxpayers and the ratepayers will have to subsidize another dangerous nuclear power plant in Maryland. Where are the visionaries who will say no to Calvert Cliffs III and yes to renewable energy sources?  They are not in Congress or the White House.  I really hope we do not have to experience another Three Mile Island or Chernobyl before the elite are forced to denounce nuclear reactors and irradiated waste and promote renewable energy sources.

In peace,

Max Obuszewski

Published on Friday, June 18, 2010 by CommonDreams.org

Problems with Nuclear Power Highlighted by Gulf Disaster?

by Ritt Goldstein

Nobody's perfect, and so mistakes do happen.  But while I doubt if any of us could conceive of the tragedy coming with a reported 35,000 to 60,000 barrels of oil daily entering The Gulf, are we any more capable of conceiving what might come with a nuclear disaster?  While optimism is important, it's sometimes a trap - just ask BP.

Before we are ‘sold' into a wholehearted embrace of the ‘clean, safe, and reliable' energy that gave us the Chernobyl Disaster [1], perhaps we might want to consider why so many of us are so sure ‘the unthinkable' can never occur...at least until it does.

We humans are an interesting species, our achievements demonstrating that we are capable of virtually incalculable greatness. Unfortunately, our catastrophes - such as that ostensibly ‘one in a million' chance oil debacle in The Gulf - demonstrate that we have our downsides too. Of course, sometimes even I happen to have that ever so rare occasion when, dare I say it, even I actually make an error; though, I reassure myself that this just means I'm only human.  But that's precisely it - 'human error [2]' can be a problem.

I recently read an opinion piece titled "Recipes for Ruin, in the Gulf or on Wall Street".  The author, an academic from the University of Chicago, indeed making a good point about our society's capability for estimating the capacity we have for grave miscalculation, not to mention its consequences.  Pointing to The Gulf Debacle and Wall Street's financial crisis, he noted our track record for foreseeing disaster could be better.

The Professor seemed to feel that we have been, and yet remain, unduly optimistic.  He also noted that "we do not live in an ideal world", and then (simultaneously offering that he felt compelled to utilize a genteel term) strongly observed that "stuff happens". And indeed it does.

Thanks to legislation dating from the Exxon Valdez disaster [3], we have some recourse to seek damages from those business entities that, for one reason or another, find themselves responsible for adding oil pollution to our already less than pristine environment. But just as our all too human capacity for making mistakes was responsible for 'Exxon Valdez', and certainly appears to have played a role in The Gulf, it also was found to have been a factor in America's best known nuclear accident, 'Three Mile Island' [4]

While we got lucky at Three Mile Island, managing to avoid a scenario that could have been far worse, the illusion of infallible nuclear safety systems was temporarily tarnished. Then came the Chernobyl, and with it a reminder of our sad capacity for boundless technological optimism, plus the inherent dangers which we, as beings that are 'only human', bring to any equation.

It's estimated that it will be a couple centuries before the countryside in the vicinity of Chernobyl is safe again; though, it's thought that the immediate area of the meltdown will take an estimated 2,000 years before being habitable.  The human costs were staggering as well, and though only about thirty died either immediately or not long thereafter, excess cancer cases, birth defects, and a host of radiation induced maladies are yet debated as to their eventual toll.  According to a Greenpeace report [5], the number of additional cancer fatalities could top 100,000. 

Even if we had legislation guaranteeing payment for ‘damages' in case of nuclear mishap, realistically, how can one put a price tag on the catastrophic suffering, not to mention those parts of America that would be uninhabitable?  Perhaps we have been ‘unduly optimistic', but we're only human.

I won't mention that our faith in those with the US Minerals Management Service [6], and their 'faith' in those they were meant to regulate, brought us that huge bowl of 'oil chowder' we had once called The Gulf of Mexico. If there's currently a better example of our all too natural capacity for error, then it escapes me.

I won't cite President Obama's March decision [7] ending the moratorium on offshore drilling just weeks before BP's Gulf Debacle began, but it does show that even those who are smart and capable do make mistakes. However, what concerns me far more is the President's February decision to support the construction of two new nuclear power plants [8], the first since the 1970's.

While the ongoing Gulf Spill presents an ecological crisis of yet untold proportions, the effects of any substantive 'nuclear spill' would be far worse. But hey, even the best of us 'make mistakes', and given that, maybe the President will realize his position on nuclear power could well prove a huge one.

With The Gulf leaving the consequences of human error so fresh in our minds, perhaps now is the time for phasing out nuclear power, not increasing it.

Of course, President Obama has also called for a vast increase in renewable energy [9], and that does seem a better idea. I sincerely believe the President to be a decent and capable man, it's just that no ones perfect, and so perhaps we must indeed try and avoid our all too human potential for mistakes, especially those that are 'nuclear'.

The damaging effects of radiation can last a lot longer than those of oil.  Though some of us certainly claim that today's nuclear power is ‘clean, safe, and reliable', of course, wasn't the same said of today's deepwater oil exploration?

© 2010 Ritt Goldstein

Ritt Goldstein (ritt1997@hotmail.com [10]) is an American investigative political journalist based in Stockholm. His work has appeared in broadsheets such as Australia's Sydney Morning Herald, Spain's El Mundo and Denmark's Politiken, as well as with the Inter Press Service (IPS), a global news agency.

URL to article: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/06/18-3

 

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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs

 

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