The proposed bill must be opposed tooth and nail.
More so, as it's so ridiculous to indemnify the entities who appear to
stand already indemnified.

The suppliers, are all across the board - for all industries,
indemnified from "consequential damages".
It is the "operator", who is responsible for damages out of accidents
while the plant is operating.
In India, as of now, the DAE/NPCL is the operator. And that cannot
change till the 1962 Atomic Energy Act (with all its grossly
anti-democratic provisions) is amended to allow for private
"operators". It looks like this is a move in that direction, in
stages, to confuse and tone down likely opposition.

The other interesting part is that, no insurance company insures a
nuclear power plant. That's why all this problem!
That's just unique to this industry only.
The reasons and implications must be publicised as much as possible to
expose the nasty and shameless lie of the claim that nuclear power,
particularly with current generation of reactors, is "safe".

However, India ratifying the Convention on Supplementary Compensation
for Nuclear Damage (CSCNL), to my mind, is not necessarily a bad idea.
This is a separate issue.
It is likely to ensure higher level of compensatory protection to the
victims of a nuclear accident.
It is unlikely that any individual commercial entity would be able to
do that. Even going bankrupt.
Even the Indian state would in all probability find itself inadequate
and hence reluctant.
So a collective (state) umbrella, sort of a substitute for customary
commercial insurance, should rather be welcomed as long as the nuclear
power plants operate.

Sukla


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Harsh Kapoor <aiin...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 29 Jul 2009 13:31:05 +0200
Subject: Spurring nuclear Bhopals?
To: sa...@yahoogroups.com

South Asians Against Nukes - Year 11
July 29, 2009

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SAAN_/message/1286

--------


Frontline
Volume 26 - Issue 16 :: Aug. 01-14, 2009

Spurring nuclear Bhopals?

by Praful Bidwai

U.S. and Indian industry pressure to cap liability for civilian
nuclear accidents will create a regime that shields offending
corporations and punishes the public.

AS far as the atmospherics of her visit to India went, Hillary
Clinton was charm unlimited. But beneath the always-smiling, relaxed
and breezy manner of the United States Secretary of State lay a hard-
nosed agenda: of further developing a broad-based relationship with
India on terms defined by, and tilting heavily towards, the U.S. in
the fields of defence, space, education, science and technology and
nuclear energy.

Hillary Clinton secured an allotment from the Indian government of
two “greenfield” sites in Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat for the
construction of nuclear power plants based on U.S. technology. These
are “of significant acreage”, have forested buffer zones (what a use
to put forests to), and allow for future expansion.

The U.S. is keen on getting a share of India’s nuclear-power pie, set
to expand thanks to the U.S.-India nuclear deal and exemptions
secured by Washington from the International Atomic Energy Agency and
the Nuclear Suppliers’ Group on restrictions on nuclear commerce with
India imposed after the Pokhran-I explosion of 1974 and tightened
after the 1998 blasts.

The U.S. nuclear industry – which has not secured a single domestic
order for new reactors for 36 years – as well as American
construction giants and related corporations are loath to see the
nuclear business opportunities in India being exploited so far by
France and Russia alone. But their “participation” will claim a
price. They will only invest in India if their legal liability for
mishaps in the nuclear power stations they build and/or operate is
deliberately curtailed to a small amount.

The U.S. has mounted enormous pressure on India to pass a law to
reduce the liability of American corporations and force the Indian
public to bear the cost of damage caused by their profit-seeking
activities, which result in accidents involving personal injury, or
the release of small quantities of radioactivity all the way to a
catastrophic core meltdown such as Chernobyl in 1986, which wreaks
havoc on the life and well-being of hundreds of thousands of people.

U.S. pressure is overt and crude. On June 25, U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert Blake
told a House committee: “… we are hoping to see action on nuclear
liability legislation that would reduce liability for American
companies and allow them to invest in India…” Former U.S. Ambassador
David Mulford even lobbied for the passing of an ordinance in case
Parliament could not urgently enact the law.

U.S. pressure is also effective. An Indian Minister has been quoted
as saying: “The draft of the nuclear liability Bill is ready. What
this will do is indemnify American companies so that they don’t have
to go through another Union Carbide in Bhopal.”

This perversely depicts the perpetrator of the world’s worst chemical
accident as a victim and pledges legal protection for a possible
nuclear Bhopal. But it is entirely in keeping with the efforts of the
U.S.-India Business Council and industrialists such as Ratan Tata to
secure a clean chit for Carbide’s successor, Dow Chemical, and let it
off the hook as far as cleaning up the contaminated site of the
Bhopal plant is concerned.

Domestically, the U.S. nuclear industry has long enjoyed a special
protective dispensation through a law called the Price-Anderson Act,
passed in 1957, which limits its liability and the compensation
available to the public in the event of a nuclear accident, however
serious. This is one of the more deplorable – and one of the most
widely criticised —– aspects of the framework within which the U.S.
nuclear industry operates, with inadequate accountability to the
public and a meagre obligation to compensate it for harm.

The Act was designed to create an incentive to industry because
investors were unwilling to accept the then-unquantified (but
presumably high) risks of nuclear energy without some limitation on
their liability. Originally, the Act required nuclear plant operators
to obtain the maximum possible insurance cover against accidents,
then determined to be a measly $60 million.

It provided a further government commitment of $500 million to cover
any claims in excess of private insurance. Companies were relieved of
any liability beyond the insured amount for any incident releasing
radiation, regardless of fault or cause. The Government
Accountability Office of the U.S describes this as a subsidy.

Since then, the insurance cover has been raised to a still-measly
$300 million and a fund has been provided for, to which all operators
must contribute up to $111.9 million if an accident occurs. As of
2008, the maximum size of the fund is $11.6 billion.

But a serious reactor accident will cause damage, which is hundreds
of times higher than this amount. For instance, the damage from
Chernobyl is estimated at some $250 billion. If a core meltdown were
to happen in Germany, the loss would be an estimated Euro 2000-5000
billion-of the same order as its gross domestic product. The public
must bear this cost. This is grossly unfair.Three international
conventions also attempt to provide such indemnity to the global
nuclear industry: the Paris Convention (1960), the Vienna Convention
(revised in 1997) and the Convention on Supplementary Compensation
for Nuclear Damage (CSC), which has only been ratified by three
countries and hence has not entered into force.

The CSC limits the compensation payable by the operators of nuclear
plants for any accidents or damage to $450 million, leaving the
responsibility for the rest to national governments. It is a mere
coincidence, if a cruel and obnoxious one, that this paltry amount is
of the same order as the total compensation paid ($470 million) to
the victims of the Bhopal gas disaster under a collusive settlement
imposed on them by the Indian government and the Supreme Court – an
epochal case of injustice if there ever was one.

The proposed Indian nuclear indemnity Bill, which is apparently ready
to be tabled, will make India a party to a similar form of injustice,
albeit of a probably higher magnitude. Yet, Indian business
organisations are piggybacking the U.S. and lobbying for such a law.
FICCI (Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry) has
just produced a working group report, which recommends legislation to
limit liability. The group was headed by the Nuclear Power
Corporation chairman, and included representatives of a host private
companies keen to get into nuclear power.

To appreciate the full import of what is in the offing, just consider
the following. Nuclear power is inherently and extremely hazardous.
Each stage of the so-called nuclear fuel cycle, from uranium mining
to fuel fabrication, and from the operation and maintenance of
nuclear reactors to the handling or reprocessing of spent fuel, is
fraught with exposure to ionising radiation. Radiation is a unique
and long-acting poison that causes chromosomal damage even in small
doses – and hence cancer and genetic damage. Radiation cannot be
neutralised or destroyed. And there is no threshold below which it is
safe.

Nuclear power generation, as well as the transportation and handling
of nuclear materials, inevitably exposes occupational workers to
radiation. It is also fraught with routine emissions and effluents
that are hazardous to the public in the vicinity. It leaves behind
wastes, which remain dangerously radioactive for tens of thousands of
years.

For instance, the radioactive half-life of Plutonium-239 is 24,400
years and that of Uranium-235 a mind-boggling 710 million years.
Science has not yet found a way of safely storing, leave alone
disposing of, such long-acting wastes. The economic lifespan of a
nuclear reactor is only 30 or 40 years. But it remains hazardous for
thousands of years.

Most important, nuclear power is the only form of energy generation
that is capable of undergoing a catastrophic accident such as a core
meltdown, with enormous radioactivity releases causing death and
destruction over thousands of square kilometres. The death-toll from
Chernobyl is estimated at 65,000. And every commercial reactor type
now in operation in the world can undergo a Chernobyl-style accident.

All this demands that strict liability should apply to nuclear power
– including all hazards from mining, processing, handling and
transportation, and covering suppliers of components and equipment as
well as power plant operators. The CSC’s central objective is to
limit liability solely to the operator, and the jurisdiction to a
single country, normally the one on whose territory an accident has
occurred. This is utterly irrational and violative of natural justice.

Yet, there are alternatives. For instance, Austria has extended the
liability regime to suppliers of equipment and other entities
involved in transporting or dealing with nuclear fuel/waste. It does
not limit the liability jurisdiction to one country and imposes no
cap on liability. This is a worthy example.

India needs to have a proper system of regulation in place before it
expands nuclear power generation and allows foreign investment in it
– a course about whose wisdom one must be sceptical. . This system
must respect the imperatives of safety, health, transparency,
accountability and environmental sustainability. It must fully
separate the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board from the operators of
nuclear installations and empower it with independent personnel,
equipment and a budget. And above all, it must hold

Copyright © 2009, Frontline.

____________

SOUTH ASIANS AGAINST NUKES (SAAN):
An informal information platform for activists and scholars concerned
about the dangers of Nuclearisation in South Asia
http://s-asians-against-nukes.org/

SAAN Mailing List:
To subscribe send a blank message to: saan_-subscr...@yahoogroups.com
________________________________
DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do
not necessarily reflect the views of SAAN compilers.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to greenyouth@googlegroups.com
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
greenyouth+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to