Andy Rowell, 24 April 2006
It stands brooding against the skyline, slowly emitting its
deadly poison. Twenty years after one of its reactors exploded causing the
worlds worst nuclear disaster, the plant at Chernobyl
in the Ukraine
still silently smolders.
It was in the early morning of the 26 April 1986, that the disaster happened,
emitting radiation 400 times that released by the nuclear bomb at Hiroshima.
But it was not until 36 hours later that the local population was evacuated. They,
like many others, still suffer the effects of that terrible day. The plume of radiation would later spread
across much of Northern Europe, contaminating hundreds
of thousands of people and vast swathes of land.
We still do not know the full health effects of the disaster.
Twenty years later, the number of casualties remains a hotly debated topic. Nuclear
industry proponents argue that the health effects have been minimal. The supposed green guru, James Lovelock, says that no more than seventy
five people have died because of the disaster .
This months respected National Geographic magazine talked
of a cancer fuse slowly burning in the local population. Genetic damage done
twenty years ago is slowly taking its toll said the magazine.
But how big a toll? The website www.chernobyl.org, which
documents the long-term consequences of the Chernobyl disaster, argues that
there is a consensus that at least 1800 children and adolescents in the most
severely contaminated areas of Belarus have contracted cancer of the thyroid
because of the disaster. It is feared that the number of thyroid cancer cases
among people who were children and adolescents when the accident happened will
reach 8000 in the coming decades.
In contrast, in September last year the Chernobyl Forum
published a report written by specialists from seven UN organisations that
concluded the disaster will claim approximately 4000 lives. However it has been
criticized for downplaying the effects of the disaster .
This month, the international environmental group,
Greenpeace, challenged the Forums findings.
In a new report written by over 50 respected scientists, Greenpeace
argued that the full consequences of the Chernobyl disaster could top a
quarter of a million cancer cases and nearly 100,000 fatal cancers.
Greenpeace also concluded that on the basis of demographic
data, 60,000 people have additionally died in Russia because of the Chernobyl
accident, and estimates of the total death toll for Ukraine and neighbouring
Belarus could reach another 140,000 .
We just do not know how many people will die from the
disaster. At an international conference in Hiroshima in early 2002, tumour
specialists expressed the fear that a variety of cancers could emerge up to 30
years after the accident. Jacov Kenigsberg, the chair of the National
Commission of Radiation Protection of Belarus, says simply: We can say that were
on the beginning of the road.
Away from the direct impacts, there are the psychological
scars of the disaster. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced. Whole
families of Chernobyls children have grown up knowing they can never return
home. Children at the time of that accident have now become mothers and are
said to be traumatized in case their babies are born with deformities. Alcoholism and depression are rife.
Twenty years on, the original structure called the
sarcophagus - built over the reactor after the disaster to stop the radiation
is beginning to fail badly. It was only meant to last twenty years, and that
time has run out. After years of wrangling a new structure is being built at a
cost of $800 million to entomb the sarcophagus. The race is on to complete it
before the sarcophagus fails, causing a disaster as equally serious as the
first one. Radiation levels inside the building are still so high that workers
can only work for shifts of 15 minutes every 24 hours.
For twenty years, Chernobyl effectively stopped the nuclear
industry in its tracks. No nuclear plants were built in Europe or America. But
now the industry is making a comeback. The two main reasons are concerns in
both Europe and America over energy security and the growing international
concern over climate change. Unlike fossil fuels oil and gas nuclear power
is said to produce little carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas.
The nuclear lobby is using these two issues climate change
and energy security- to push its case. If you log on to the website of the
trade body for the civil nuclear industry in the UK, the Nuclear Industry
Association (NIA), a banner headline reads: Nuclear: Climate Friendly Energy. Similarly, if you look at the International
Nuclear Forum Website is says: Nuclear energy is a necessary technology to
help prevent climate change. Nuclear is part of the solution.
So the message has changed: Nuclear is no longer about
Chernobyl, and its deadly legacy of cancer wards clustered with scared people. Nuclear
is no longer worries about waste and fears over terrorism. Nuclear is a solution.
Nuclear is the future.
The second life-line thrown to the industry is energy
security. The nuclear industry is promoting itself as a secure panacea to the
problem of dwindling energy supply. Another group in the UK, the Supporters of
Nuclear Energy talks about the looming energy crisis and asks the question what
will happen when the lights go out? The lights of course will not go out, they
argue, if we build more nuclear power plants.
One person who is enthusiastic about nuclear as a solution
to energy security is President Bush, who is leading a nuclear renaissance in
the US. Bush argues that "a secure energy future for America must include
more nuclear power," . Last year Congress passed an Energy Bill that
includes up to six billion dollars of subsidies for those building nuclear
plants, and 1.25 billion dollars for an experimental new type of nuclear
reactor. Our goal is to start the construction of new nuclear power plants by
the end of this decade, says Bush .
In the UK,
the government has just finished a public consultation exercise as part of a
wide ranging review on energy. Although no official decision on nuclear has
been made, it is widely known that Prime Minister Tony Blair is in favour of a
new generation of nuclear power plants. Indeed one government insider says that
two months before the government announced its review, Blair convened a secret
meeting to give the green light to nuclear. So the decision has already been
made.
But the nuclear rush is not confined to Europe and the US. India
is in the process of constructing fifteen nuclear plants. China is also said to
have ambitious nuclear plans. So too is of course, Iran. It is here we come
to the crux of the issue. There are many problems with nuclear power. There are
the issues of safety, and cost and the huge issue about what to do with
radioactive waste.
But all these, nuclear proponents argue, are surmountable. There
are plans for cheaper and safer plants that produce less waste. But that still
does not get away from the fact that there is an inherent link between civil
nuclear power and its military usage: nuclear weapons. As I have written before: Every country that has developed a nuclear
weapons programme has done so from a civil nuclear programme.
Iran is said to be developing two parallel nuclear programs:
A civil nuclear programme as well as a military programme controlled by its
Revolutionary Guards. America is now trying to stop both programmes, just at
the same time as Iran is developing the technology at rapid speed. We know the
situation is getting critical.
Earlier this month, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president of
Iran declared that Iran has joined the nuclear club . Days later the veteran
American investigative journalist, Seymour Hersh, writing in the New Yorker
Magazine, highlighted how America was preparing a military nuclear strike
against Iran. The Bush Administration,
while publicly advocating diplomacy in order to stop Iran from pursuing a
nuclear weapon, has increased clandestine activities inside Iran and
intensified planning for a possible major has increased clandestine activities
inside Iran and intensified planning for a possible major air attack, wrote
Hersh .
The Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, has warned that
any US military strike on Iran would spark a dangerous explosive blaze in the
Middle East . Twenty years after one dangerous blaze Chernobyl caused such
suffering, we have to make sure that America does not attack Iran over its
nuclear ambitions. Because if it does, the fire that it would light would
probably not be so easily extinguished as the one still burning at Chernobyl. And
that one is still not out.
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