Avoiding the Next Catastrophe
The recent season of powerful
hurricanes striking the United States raised concerns once again about
operating nuclear reactors in places that are likely to be struck by natural
and human-caused disasters, or by deliberate sabotage.
These concerns have been thoroughly
covered by Charles Perrow in his books Normal
Accidents: Living With High-Risk Technologies (1999) and The Next Catastrophe: Reducing Our
Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, and Terrorist Disasters (2007). In
these books he discussed all high-risk technologies and the dangers they pose
due the inability of human institutions to defend them from profit-seeking,
human error and human malice. In the latter book he singled out nuclear power
plants as having more “lethal potential” than any other dangerous technology:
Nuclear power plants concentrate more lethal potential
than anything else in our society. They are vulnerable to natural disasters.
There have been emergency shut downs in the face of hurricanes, for example,
though no storms or floods have as yet disabled a plant's external power supply
and its backup power generators. Some plants sit on earthquake faults... they
are extremely vulnerable to terrorist attacks and to organizational failures.
Their electricity is considerably more expensive than alternative means of
generation, and while they pollute far less (only in the short run; in the long
run of thousands of years, their wastes pollute far more if they are not
contained) and release no carbon dioxide, the current difference between oil
and coal-fired plants and nuclear plants in this respect could be greatly
reduced if currently available emission reductions were required of fossil fuel
plants. And, of course, the federal government invests only a trifling amount
in research on solar and wind power and energy conservation, while it continues
to handsomely fund nuclear power research. This is an example of increasing our
vulnerability to natural, industrial, and terrorist disasters. By supporting
pollution reduction from fossil fuel plants, alternative energy sources, and
energy conservation, we could phase out our vulnerable nuclear plants in a
decade or so.[1]
It is notable that Charles Perrow’s
books were written before the triple meltdown and spent fuel pool fire at
Fukushima Dai-ichi, and before the recent seasons of intense forest fires,
floods and hurricanes that have struck close to nuclear reactors in various
parts of the world.
After the Fukushima Dai-ichi
catastrophe the nuclear industry has tried hard to say the glass is half full,
that lessons have been learned and now we know how to run nuclear power plants
safely. However, other people, interested but disinterested[2] in the nuclear industry, draw
different lessons and different conclusions. Lists like the one below have
circulated on social media, but this version is one I have added to with a few
extra points.
Lessons
Learned from the Meltdown in Three Nuclear Reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi
Don’t place nuclear reactors next to one another in
multi-reactor complexes.
Don’t leave spent nuclear fuel near reactors,
especially if it is in pools of water and not in dry cask storage.
You need at least two separate access routes.
You need back-up control rooms in distant bunkers.
You need more on-site and off-site back-up power.
You need better evacuation plans for a larger area, but
evacuation may not even be possible, and even if it is carried out, it will
victimize the weakest people in society.
Evacuation plans and drills may at best be a deceptive
public relations stunt.
The social bonds of the affected communities will be
shattered forever.
By the time you know that people in the area need
potassium iodide pills, it will be too late. They will have already been exposed.
You need sensors and cameras that work post-accident.
You need staff willing to die for their families and
communities.
You need massive reserves to pay compensation, if you
care about fair compensation for the people affected.
You need an honest assessment of the costs and risks.
You need to resolve the contradictions inherent in
allowing a profit-seeking enterprise to operate nuclear reactors. Regulatory
systems will tend toward being corrupted and complacent, aligned with the
interests of the corporations.
The cost of making nuclear energy safe make it more
expensive than alternative forms of generating electricity.
It has become painfully obvious that
many of these lessons have not been learned, even in Japan. For example, TEPCO
is now seeking permission to restart its multi-reactor complex in Kashiwazaki,
Niigata. The national regulator has given them approval, but the prefectural
government has not. It remains to be seen whether a pliable governor can be
installed in future prefectural elections.
Many people have learned lessons
quite different from those of the nuclear industry. Those who assess this
situation impartially realize the futility of trying to make nuclear energy
safe. When an activity requires too many precautionary counter-measures,
sensible people just give it up. To operate nuclear reactors, too many
inspections, back-up procedures and counter-measures are needed. In fact, the
back-up procedures require back-up procedures. We need a regulatory agency for
the regulatory agency. Producing energy should be simple. Boil some water. Use
the steam pressure to spin a turbine. Send the electricity down a wire.
Imagine if riding a bicycle were
suddenly complicated by numerous weaknesses in the human and the machine that
made cycling possible. The rider is prone to failure of his sensory organs, so
he needs backup systems like cameras and motion sensors. The brake cables are
prone to catastrophic failure, but replacing them constantly is too expensive.
The frame becomes embrittled after several years of usage, but the frame is
much more expensive than brake cables. The tires get punctured easily. Now
imagine that every time a serious bicycle accident occurs, deadly particles
spread over a wide area, requiring a temporary evacuation of all of it and
permanent evacuation of a part of it. We could require all riders to buy
insurance, and we could mandate frequent inspections of the machines and the
riders’ physical and mental fitness, but sensible people would see that the
cost of ensuring safety would quickly outweigh the benefits of cycling. And no
matter how thorough our efforts, the risk of accident would never be totally
eliminated. It is likely we would come to the sensible conclusion that cycling,
despite its joys and conveniences, is too dangerous, and the effort to make it
safe is exhausting and ultimately futile.
Notes
[1] Charles Perrow, The Next Catastrophe: Reducing Our
Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, and Terrorist Disasters (Princeton
University Press, 2007), 173.
[2] I use the word with the variant
meaning defined thus by the Merriam-Webster dictionary: Free from selfish
motive or interest, unbiased. The meaning is illustrated with a quote of G.M.
Trevelyan: “Disinterested intellectual curiosity is the lifeblood of real
civilization.”
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