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The Friday Times,
July 1-7, 2005, Vol. XVII, No. 19
www.thefridaytimes.com

NUCLEAR POWER: NO SOLUTION TO GLOBAL WARMING

M V Ramana

There is simply no way global warming can be stopped
without significant reductions in the current energy
consumption levels of developed countries

-------------------------------------------------

Whatever else one could say about nuclear power in the
old days, it was certainly not considered
environment-friendly. Over the past few years,
however, a number of so-called environmentalists,
generally Western, have come out in support of nuclear
power as an essential component of any practical
solution to global warming.

Predictably, flailing nuclear establishments
everywhere have grabbed this second opportunity to
make a claim for massive state investments and
resurrect an industry that has collapsed in country
after country due to its inability to provide clean,
safe, or cheap electricity. But just as the old mantra
"too cheap to meter" proved ridiculously wrong, the
claims that nuclear energy can contribute
significantly to mitigating climate change do not bear
scrutiny.

Most prominent of these so-called environmentalists
turned pro-nuclear advocates is James Lovelock, who
propounded the Gaia hypothesis of the Earth as a
self-regulating organism. Last year he entreated his
"friends in the [Green] movement to drop their
wrongheaded objection to nuclear energy." Lovelock's
article had several factual errors. For example,
"nuclear energy from its start in 1952 has proved to
be the safest of all energy sources" One wonders which
of the many renewable energy sources promoted by the
Green movement - photovoltaics, wind energy, and so on
- has had an accident that even remotely compares with
Chernobyl.

Even more inexplicable is the assertion: "We must stop
fretting over the minute statistical risks of cancer
from chemicals or radiation. Nearly one third of us
will die of cancer anyway, mainly because we breathe
air laden with that all pervasive carcinogen, oxygen."
Despite such nonsense, Lovelock's article was
circulated widely, both by the nuclear lobby and by
other environmentalists who were either confused or
felt that this sort of argument had to be refuted
strongly.

Lovelock's bloomers aside, the fact that some
environmentalists have endorsed nuclear power as a
solution to global warming deserves serious
consideration and response. The enormity of the
potential impact of climate change adds to this
imperative.

Two implicit but flawed assumptions underlie most
claims about the significance of nuclear energy for
the climate-change issue. The first is that climate
change can be tackled without confronting and changing
Western, especially American, patterns of energy
consumption - the primary causes and continuing
drivers for unsustainable increases in carbon
emissions and global warming. This is plain
impossible; there is simply no way global warming can
be stopped without significant reductions in the
current energy consumption levels of Western/developed
countries. Efforts by various developing countries to
match these consumption levels only intensify the
problem.

The second flawed assumption is that the adoption of
nuclear power will lower aggregate carbon emissions.
In a strictly technical sense, each unit of
electricity produced by a nuclear plant would cause
the emission of fewer grams of carbon than a unit of
electricity generated by thermal plants. (A false myth
often propagated by the nuclear lobby is that nuclear
energy is carbon free. In reality, several steps in
the nuclear fuel cycle, from uranium mining to
enrichment to reprocessing, emit copious amounts of
greenhouse gases.) And so, the assumption goes,
installing a large number of nuclear power stations
will lower carbon emission rates.

The problem is that the assumption holds true only if
all else remains constant, in particular consumption
levels. But that is never the case. In fact, there is
no empirical evidence that increased use of nuclear
power has contributed to actually reducing a country's
carbon dioxide emissions. The best case study is
Japan, a strongly pro-nuclear energy country. As
Japanese nuclear chemist and winner of the 1997 Right
Livelihood Award, Jinzaburo Takagi pointed out, from
1965 to 1995 Japan's nuclear plant capacity went from
zero to over 40,000 MW. During the same period, carbon
dioxide emissions went up from about 400 million
tonnes to about 1200 million tonnes.

There are two reasons why increased use of nuclear
power does not necessarily lower carbon emissions.
First, nuclear energy is best suited only to produce
baseload electricity. That only constitutes a fraction
of all sources of carbon emissions. Other sectors of
the economy where carbon dioxide and other greenhouse
gases are emitted, such as transportation, cannot be
operated using electricity from nuclear reactors. This
situation is unlikely to change anytime in the near
future.

A second and more fundamental reason is provided by
John Byrnes of the University of Delaware's Centre for
Energy and Environmental Policy, who observed that
nuclear technology is an expensive source of energy
service and can only be economically viable in a
society that relies on increasing levels of energy
use. Nuclear power tends to require and promote a
supply-oriented energy policy and an energy-intensive
pattern of development.

The high cost of nuclear power also means that any
potential decreases in carbon emissions due to its
adoption are expensive, certainly higher than energy
efficiency improvements as well as other means to
lower emissions from thermal power plants.

One other argument advanced by some of these so-called
environmentalists is that nuclear power is just an
interim solution while better solutions are worked
out. The idea is wholly at odds with the history of
nuclear establishments around the world and completely
underestimates the remarkable capabilities of powerful
institutions to find resources for continuing
existence and growth. Once such institutions are
established, they will find ways to ensure that they
are not disempowered.

For nuclear power to make a significant dent in global
warming, nuclear capacity must grow manifold
(ten-plus). The notion that nuclear power can increase
manifold from current levels and then be phased out is
wishful thinking, to say the least. Such a projection
also completely ignores existing realities -
uncompetitive costs, safety concerns, the unresolved
problem of radioactive waste, and the link to the bomb
- that come in the way of any significant expansion of
nuclear power.

Global warming is a serious issue. Providing
ill-thought out answers is no way to address such a
grave problem.

_________________________________

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SOUTH ASIANS AGAINST NUKES (SAAN):
An informal information platform for activists and scholars concerned about the 
dangers of Nuclearisation in South Asia
SAAN Website:
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