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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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7
March 2010 The
Sacred Cow of Nuclear Power
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There
are a number of “sacred cow” issues in New Zealand that
politicians shy away from. These taboos are embedded so deep
within our culture that they have become sacrosanct, protected
from contrary opinion or even open discussion. As a
consequence, whenever these subjects are raised, the resulting
hysteria usually closes down the debate almost before it has
even started.
What
has got me thinking about this is a letter we received last
week from our energy company signaling a 5 percent increase in
power prices effective from 1 April. They explained that this
increase is due to changes in local lines company charges,
general cost pressures, an increase in the Electricity
Commission levy, and the need to support continued investment
in generation plant.
But
that’s not all. They ominously add, “Please also note that
the Government’s Emissions Trading Scheme takes effect from
1 July 2010. This will result in an increase in electricity
prices at that time”. In spite of my best efforts, I
couldn’t find out what they expected that increase to be,
although some in the industry are predicting that prices will
rise by at least 10 percent over time.
However,
in thinking about the impact on households, businesses and the
economy of major increases in electricity charges, I began to
wonder why it is that here in New Zealand we have never really
had a sensible discussion about whether nuclear power is an
option that we should be considering at some stage in the
future. After all, there are some 436 reactors operating
around the world with a further 47 under construction, 133
planned, and 282 proposed.
The
US currently operates the most nuclear reactors with 104,
followed by France with 59, Japan with 53, Russia with 31,
South Korea with 20, the UK with 19, Canada with 18, Germany
and India with 17, Ukraine with 15, China with 11, Sweden with
10, Spain with 8, Belgium with 7, the Czech Republic with 6,
Switzerland with 5, Finland, Hungary and Slovakia with 4,
Argentina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Mexico, Pakistan, Romania and
South Africa with 2, and Armenia, Lithuania, Netherlands and
Slovenia with 1.[1]
In
1976, a Royal Commission of Inquiry into Nuclear Power
Generation in New Zealand was established, which concluded
that while it didn’t see the need for nuclear power
generation at that stage, it did suggest that it might be
needed at some stage in the future, when demand for
electricity outstripped the ability to supply power
economically. In line with that possibility, it urged
successive governments to re-examine the issue every decade or
so in order to keep the nuclear option open. Concerned about
the prevalence of anti-nuclear propaganda being promoted by
environmentalist groups, the Commission also recommended that
great care be taken over how this matter was addressed in
schools: “we do see a positive need for more and better
balanced education on energy matters and especially for
nuclear power to be discussed and taught in its proper place
as one aspect of the total energy scene, not as a separated
isolated subject. Only if it is seen in such a setting and
weighed along with its alternatives, can the educational
process be of value”.[2]
A
cursory look at today’s education curriculum shows little
regard for that advice with the topics in the science
curriculum found under headings such as “nuclear hazards”,
“nuclear waste”, evaluating an “environmental impact
report on nuclear power”, and “critically evaluating the
use of nuclear energy for New Zealand’s energy needs”.[3]
There
is no doubt that the strong stance against nuclear weapons by
successive Governments has had a major influence on public
opinion about nuclear matters in this country - from the
actions of then Prime Minister Norman Kirk, who in 1973 sent a
frigate to Mururoa to protest against French nuclear tests, to
the passing of legislation by the Lange Government in 1987 to
prohibit nuclear weapons in New Zealand and to ban visits by
nuclear-powered ships. That this legislation still stands when
a comprehensive report commissioned by the Bolger Government
in 1992 - “The Safety of Nuclear-Powered Ships” by Sir
Edward Somers - found that “The likelihood of any damaging
emission or discharge of radioactive material from nuclear
powered vessels, if in New Zealand ports, is so remote that it
cannot give rise to any rational apprehension”, is a victory
of ideology over common sense. In other words, not only is
there is no justification for a continuation of that part of
the legislative ban - which has blocked closer trade relations
with the US for over 20 years - but the reality is that in
terms of emissions of radioactive material, more nuclear
radiation was emitted from Auckland Hospital on a single day
than was emitted by the US Navy in a whole year![4]
And
that is part of the problem – the nuclear fear factor has
been grossly over-represented by opponents. The only two major
nuclear accidents to have occurred in the 50 year history of
civil nuclear energy generation were at Three Mile Island in
the US in 1979, where no deaths occurred, and Chernobyl in
the Ukraine in 1986, where 56 deaths can be attributed, most
of them firefighters. In comparison, a study carried out
between 1970 and 1992 on energy industry deaths, showed that
there were over 10,000 in the oil industry, largely from fire,
over 6,000 in the coal industry, largely from methane
explosions, over 4,000 as a result of hydro-dam failures and
flooding, and over 3,000 from LPG and natural gas
explosions.[5]
It
is important when dealing with this issue to remind ourselves
of some facts. Firstly, New Zealand is not nuclear free and
never has been. Naturally occurring nuclear materials are
found all around us - in the soil, in rocks, water, and the
air. We absorb and store radiation from our surroundings
continually.
Secondly,
New Zealand has always used radioactive material - radium was
used for the early treatment of cancer not long after the turn
of the century. In 1933, the country’s first Radiation
Laboratory was established in Christchurch by the British
Empire Cancer Campaign Society. It was taken over by the
department of Health in 1951. The Laboratory was responsible
for providing advice on all things nuclear, including
pinpointing a potential location for a nuclear reactor (along
the Helensville Coast, North of Auckland) and it also
coordinated the shipping through New Zealand of nuclear
materials to and from the US’s nuclear reactor at McMurdo
Sound in Antarctica, until it was decommissioned in 1972.
Modern
day New Zealand has many uses for radioactive materials in
medicine, industry and scientific research. Currently more
than 3,000 such shipments arrive every year. Whenever nuclear
material is used, waste must be disposed of, and until the
1970s, most was embedded in concrete and dumped at sea just
east of Cook Straight. However, since 1976, it has either been
stored at the National Radiation Laboratory in Christchurch
(in 2005 there were 161 small drums of radioactive waste
sealed in concrete in the storeroom) or shipped back to its
source for either recycling or disposal.[6]
Countries
that use nuclear power invariably find that it is safe,
reliable and versatile - it can be sited anywhere that is free
from seismic activity and has a suitable supply of water. In
fact, this week’s Guest Commentator, nuclear expert Dr Ron
Smith, Co-Director of International Relations and Security
Studies at the University of Waikato, describes a new
generation of ‘floating reactors’, urging us to think
seriously again about nuclear power:
“As
far as nuclear power for New Zealand is concerned, we just
need the courage to think about it and begin to collect
reliable information. Once
we do this we will find that most of the grounds that are
commonly held to count against nuclear power are not as
substantial as they have seemed. In
fact, experience around the world confirms that civilian
nuclear power is safe, highly reliable, economically
competitive and environmentally friendly.
A vigorous nuclear industry does not detract from
Switzerland’s appeal and the fact that France generates
around 80% of its power by nuclear means does not prevent it
from being the world’s number one tourist destination.
It is, thus, not plausible to argue that the
development of nuclear power here would reflect unfavourably
on our tourist industry”.
In
his article Dr Smith also points out that adding nuclear power
to the national grid would free up some of the water resource,
which presently needs to be held in case there is a power
crisis, for tourist or agricultural purposes. To read Dr
Smith’s full article click
here >>>
At
present, New Zealand’s energy needs are expected to rise by
around 2 percent a year. It has been suggested that rather
than focus on large
scale intrusive and inefficient renewable schemes – such as
the massive wind farms that are being proposed or the unproven
schemes like the proposed tidal project in the Kaipara Harbour
- small pebble bed nuclear reactors should be considered.
Using this sort of technology an energy park producing 1100 MW
(just less than the 1400 MW output of the country’s largest
coal and gas-fired power station at Huntley) would occupy an
area of no more than three football fields, and could be
erected anywhere there is a steady and ready supply of water.
It could be used as a base-load station or load-following
station, and could be adjusted to the size required by the
community it serves.[7] Such a facility would future-proof New
Zealand’s energy needs into the foreseeable future.
Whether
New Zealand decides that nuclear technology is the right way
to go is a moot point. The
issue is that in 2010, shouldn’t we be at least having a
discussion about these “sacred cow” subjects?
This
week’s poll asks:
Do
you think nuclear power should be considered as an electricity
generation option for New Zealand in the future? Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Guardian,
Nuclear
Power Around the World
2.Report of the Royal Commission of Inquiry, Nuclear Power
Generation in New Zealand
3.Ministry of Education, Science
in the New Zealand Curriculum
4.Hansard, Nuclear-Free
Legislation – 20th Anniversary
5.WNA, Safety
of Nuclear Reactors
6.Listener, Material
Evidence
7.Eskom, Pebble
Bed Reactor Technology
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