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The Indian establishment's craze for nuclear power and its destructive potential explained
http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?283832
Review
The Critical Conundrum
The Indian establishment's craze for nuclear power and its destructive potential explained, critiqued, questioned
Praful Bidwai
<snip>
Nuclear power is in global decline. The number of reactors worldwide peaked in 2002; their output peaked in 2006. When production was at a peak, nuclear power contributed 17 per cent to the worlds supply. It has gone down to 11 per cent. After Fukushima, nuclear power stands irredeemably discredited and is probably moribund.
In India, however, the elite treats it as the technology of the future, promising an unending supply for unbridled consumption. And we have a State that considers peaceful anti-nuclear protests seditious. It wants to multiply Indias nuclear capacity a hundred-fold to 470 GW by 2050. Forgotten is the Department of Atomic Energys (DAE) abysmal failure to deliver. It projected 43.5 GW for 2000, but achieved a pathetic 2.7 GW. It has since missed every target. Also erased is the department's appalling record on safety, health, transparency, accountability and technology absorption. Cost overruns are routinely over 200 per cent.
This excellent book explains why, despite this, official India remains obsessed with nuclear energy and the DAE remains politically powerful. The two pillars of DAEs power, Ramana says, are the promise or future projection of limitless energy, and the deadly attraction of nuclear weapons. An elaborate charade rationalises India's economic and political investment in nuclear power: vanishing fossil fuels, unviability of renewable sources, the imperative of consumption-driven development and N-powers claimed advantages.
<snip>
Ramana shows how the DAE was crafted and run as an institution unanswerable to Parliament and the public. It abuses its power to mess up everything, violates its own safety norms, routinely makes extravagant claims about developing technologies indigenously while importing/borrowing them and hides costs with accounting tricks.
<snip>
One of the books best chapters analyses the DAEs safety, health and environmental record and failure to learn from accidents. The DAE gets away because theres no independent safety regulator and no real obligation to disclose relevant information.
<snip>
Review
The Critical Conundrum
The Indian establishment's craze for nuclear power and its destructive potential explained, critiqued, questioned
Praful Bidwai
<snip>
Nuclear power is in global decline. The number of reactors worldwide peaked in 2002; their output peaked in 2006. When production was at a peak, nuclear power contributed 17 per cent to the worlds supply. It has gone down to 11 per cent. After Fukushima, nuclear power stands irredeemably discredited and is probably moribund.
In India, however, the elite treats it as the technology of the future, promising an unending supply for unbridled consumption. And we have a State that considers peaceful anti-nuclear protests seditious. It wants to multiply Indias nuclear capacity a hundred-fold to 470 GW by 2050. Forgotten is the Department of Atomic Energys (DAE) abysmal failure to deliver. It projected 43.5 GW for 2000, but achieved a pathetic 2.7 GW. It has since missed every target. Also erased is the department's appalling record on safety, health, transparency, accountability and technology absorption. Cost overruns are routinely over 200 per cent.
This excellent book explains why, despite this, official India remains obsessed with nuclear energy and the DAE remains politically powerful. The two pillars of DAEs power, Ramana says, are the promise or future projection of limitless energy, and the deadly attraction of nuclear weapons. An elaborate charade rationalises India's economic and political investment in nuclear power: vanishing fossil fuels, unviability of renewable sources, the imperative of consumption-driven development and N-powers claimed advantages.
<snip>
Ramana shows how the DAE was crafted and run as an institution unanswerable to Parliament and the public. It abuses its power to mess up everything, violates its own safety norms, routinely makes extravagant claims about developing technologies indigenously while importing/borrowing them and hides costs with accounting tricks.
<snip>
One of the books best chapters analyses the DAEs safety, health and environmental record and failure to learn from accidents. The DAE gets away because theres no independent safety regulator and no real obligation to disclose relevant information.
<snip>
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The Indian establishment's craze for nuclear power and its destructive potential explained (Original Post)
bananas
Feb 2013
OP
xchrom
(108,903 posts)1. Du rec. Nt
busterbrown
(8,515 posts)3. Blame Colonialism for this!! Just another after effect..
Impoverished colonized countries have a lot of making up to do..
Simply put.....