Inter Press Service
December 29, 2004

ASIA:
TSUNAMI A REMINDER OF RISKS THAT PLAGUE COASTAL NUKE PLANTS

By Ranjit Devraj

NEW DELHI, Dec 29 (IPS) - Tsunamis and other natural disasters are 
posing a bigger challenge than pesky green activists to India's 
secretive nuclear power and research facilities on the coast of 
southern Tamil Nadu state, which accounted for 5,000 of the more than 
50,000 deaths from this week's quakes and killer waves in Asia.
The worst casualties among the tens of thousands who died around the 
shores of countries around the Bay of Bengal have been in Sri Lanka, 
which is separated from Tamil Nadu by the narrow Palk Straits and 
where government sources now say as many as 25,000 people may have 
perished.
Authorities at India's secretive Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) 
have been quick to assert that the atomic facilities at Kalpakkam, 80 
kilometres from Chennai, the state capital, were safe. On Tuesday, 
they allowed a group of journalists to inspect the installations to 
dispel widespread fears of radiation leakage.
On Monday night, the plant's director S K Jain said the plant had 
been shut down following flooding of the pump house that controls the 
flow of sea water used to cool the power plant. He added that a 
perimetre wall around a controversial Fast Breeder Reactor (FRB) 
being built at the site had collapsed.
Although the Kalpakkam facility escaped major damage, the fact that 
30 inmates of the plant's residential complex nearby died and that 
several of them were technical personnel or atomic scientists was 
proof enough that planners never seriously considered the possibility 
of a tsunami striking the Tamil Nadu coast.
The residential complex has now been evacuated of its 1,500 families. 
No one is venturing to say when the 440-megawatt atomic power plant 
will be functional again or when work can resume on the controversial 
fast breeder reactor.
A bigger Russian-aided nuclear power complex that uses sea water for 
cooling is coming up fast at Koodankulam, 900 km south of Chennai and 
close to Kanyakumari, the southernmost tip of the Indian peninsula 
that was severely devastated by the tsunami that in some places 
reached 10 metres high.
Long before the tsunami struck, the secret workings of the Kalpakkam 
and Koodankulam facilities have been the subject of protests by local 
citizens and groups opposed to nuclear power -- most notably the 
People's Movement Against Nuclear Energy and South Asians Against 
Nukes (SAAN), an informal information platform for activists and 
scholars concerned about the nuclearisation of South Asia.
The DAE has justified the allegations of the green activists by 
extending secrecy to serious radiation leaks that have endangered 
public safety in the recent past.
In March 1999 when there was a leak of heavy water at Kalpakkam, the 
Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB), another wing of Indian 
nukedom, dismissed the incident by saying that "the release to the 
environment is maintained well within the limits specified by the 
AERB."
Another leak that affected workers at the Kalpakkam Reprocessing 
Plant in January 2003 was met with complete silence, but after 
persistent media reports and pressure from eminent scientists and 
public persons the DAE acknowledged the accident six months after the 
event.
Some of the installations at Kalpakkam are outside the reach of even 
the AERB or indeed any authority because they carry a strategic tag. 
These include the controversial fast breeder reactor (FBR) which 
involves the handling of large amounts of plutonium which can be used 
in nuclear warheads.
''The DAE must adopt an enlightened policy of keeping the public 
informed at all times about safety aspects of its installations,'' 
said M R Sreenivasan, one of India's leading nuclear scientists and 
former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, commenting on the 
Kalpakkam leaks and attempts to hide them.
The PMANE has mounted protests and seminars - including at the World 
Social Forum (WSF) in Mumbai in January 2004 - against fast breeder 
reactors which according to its convenor S P Udayakumar is ''being 
promoted in this country by a dangerous combination of career-minded 
scientists and facilitated by secrecy laws that shroud the Department 
of Atomic Energy (DAE)".
FBRs have been built and operated in the United States, France and 
Japan but were phased out for a variety of reasons, but most 
especially because of accidents, such as the one at Monju in Japan in 
1995 and the European reactor Super Phenix in France in 1987.
Germany built an experimental FBR reactor at Kalkar in 1991, but 
never put it into operation because of safety concerns. FBRs use 
liquid sodium coolant, but the metal reacts explosively when it comes 
into touch with water, as what happened at Monju.
Risky as the FBR project is, the PMANE and other anti-nuclear groups 
have been concentrating their energies on the bigger coastal project 
at Koodankulam, which is being built at a cost of five billion U.S. 
dollars although the area is known to seismically active.
''We have been trying to assert our right to know the impacts of this 
anti-people project on us and our children's health, safety and the 
environment but even elected civil and political societies are being 
kept in the dark by the DAE,'' said Udayakumar.
The DAE is intent on producing 4,000 megawatts of power at 
Koodankulam using four Russian reactors.
Two of these have already been supplied under an agreement signed in 
1988, while the Soviet Union was still in existence and despite 
opposition from the U.S. government and from the Nuclear Suppliers 
Group (NSG) - also called the London Group because it first met in 
London in 1975 as a reaction to India exploding a nuclear device in 
the previous year.
Since 2002, the Russians have developed cold feet over the project, 
the actual site of which was shifted by the DAE without consulting 
them. Earlier, possibly under pressure from the NSG, Moscow announced 
its inability to supply two more reactors that were to make a 
complement of four reactors at the Koodankulam atomic energy plant.
Meanwhile, local bodies and religious groups have been regularly 
recording protests against the Koodankulam project.
The latest of these was on Oct. 30, when Amritajnana Tapaswini, the 
head of the well-regarded Santhigiri Ashram that maintains an 
ayurvedic and spiritual centre, nearby insisted on leading a 
delegation into the high-security site to meet S K Agrawal, the 
project director, and warn him of possible dangers.
''You may be building this project at great cost in the name of 
humanity and using high technology, but it is well to remember that 
there are far higher forces in the world that you do not 
understand,'' she warned Agrawal.
Her remarks are now being seen as a premonition of the Dec. 26 
tsunami that Indian scientists had been convinced would never strike 
the coasts of Tamil Nadu. (END/2004)


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