India should deprioritise Nuclear Energy
http://forbesindia.com/article/close-range/india-should-deprioritise-nuclear-energy/33648/1
Aug 31, 2012 | 1523 views
India should deprioritise Nuclear Energy
by Lauren Zumbach
MV Ramana tells Forbes India that despite the Indian leadership being committed to nuclear energy, he is not optimistic about its future in the country
MV Ramana
Age: 45
Designation: Researcher in Science and Global Security at Nuclear Futures Laboratory and Program, Princeton University; member of International Panel on Fissile Materials and Science and Security Board, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Education: PhD in Physics, Boston University; IIT-Kanpur; post-doctoral fellow, University of Toronto and Center for International Studies, MIT
Career: Author of The Power and the Promise: Examining Nuclear Energy in India
Interests: Food, South India classical music
Q. You have a book on Indias nuclear energy prospects coming out this year. Whats the argument youre making?
The book looks at the history of nuclear power in India. The Department of Energy had made a series of projections for how much nuclear power would contribute to Indias energy production over the past 60 years. These projections have not come through. I look at why projects have been delayed, what are the economics of nuclear power in India, the safety record and impact on health and the environment. Its an assessment of how the nuclear program has fared so far.
Q. Indias leadership has said it is committed to nuclear energy despite Fukushima, and has set pretty lofty targets for making nuclear power a major source of Indias energy: 470 gigawatts by 2050. Do you think theyre likely to follow through?
No. The leadership is committed, but thats been the case since the 1950s. Every group of leaders has been committed to nuclear power, given it unlimited budget allocations, and yet it hasnt happened. Theres no reason to expect it will happen in the future.
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Good interview, worth reading in full.
He goes into the importance of protests and why they occur.