Nuclear Nation

Japan's unlikely love affair with atomic energy.

BY YUKI TANAKA | MARCH 22, 2011

The devastating earthquake that hit Japan on March 11, together with the following massive tsunami, completely destroyed the picturesque northeast coast of Japan's main island, taking potentially tens of thousands of lives and creating hundreds of thousands of refugees.

Along this stretch of utter destruction sit four nuclear power stations, comprising a total of 15 reactors, within a distance of about 200 kilometers. Of these, the Fukushima No.1 nuclear power station, operated by the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), is the largest, comprising six nuclear reactors. Until now, TEPCO was proud of the robustness of the containment vessels of these reactors, claiming that they were made utilizing the same technology originally developed to produce the main battery of the world-largest naval artillery ever produced, mounted on the gigantic battleship, Yamato, the pride of the Japanese Imperial Navy, which U.S. forces destroyed toward the end of the Asia-Pacific War. TEPCO claimed that the nuclear reactors would safely stop, then automatically cool down and tightly contain the radiation in the event of an earthquake, and that there would therefore be no danger that earthquakes would cause any serious nuclear accident. The vulnerability of nuclear reactors to earthquakes was already evident, however, when TEPCO's Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant on Japan's northwest coast caused several malfunctions, including a fire in a transformer, and a small quantity of radiation leaked into the ocean and the atmosphere following a magnitude 6.8 earthquake that hit this region in July 2007. In spite of this serious accident, TEPCO officials still arrogantly boasted of their "world-best nuclear power technology."

They're not boasting anymore. Immediately after the earthquake violently shook Fukushima and the tsunami surged and damaged many buildings of the power station, the notion of the "safe and durable reactor," a myth promulgated by TEPCO, was immediately shattered. At this writing, half of the six reactors seem to be on the verge of melting down, and one of the containment buildings has caught fire due to spent fuel rods combusting. The radiation level in the vicinity of the power station is extremely high, and it is spreading as far as Tokyo and Yokohama. Thus, as every day passes, an unprecedented scale of nuclear disaster is unfolding, making it more and more difficult to arrest the multiple problems of radioactivity.

What went wrong with Japan's nuclear industry? It is often said that the Japanese are hypersensitive about nuclear issues because of the experience of nuclear holocaust. How could they not be? On the morning of August 6, 1945, an atomic bomb instantly killed 70,000 to 80,000 civilian residents of Hiroshima city, and by the end of that year, 140,000 residents of that city had died as a result of the bombing. Another 70,000 were killed in Nagasaki. Many others have subsequently died, often after experiencing a lifetime of suffering, or are still suffering from various diseases caused by the blast, fire, and radiation.

Yet opposition to nuclear energy has never been strong in Japan. Why? It is true that the Japanese, in particular the citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, are highly conscious of the danger of nuclear weapons. A-bomb survivors, who know well the terror of the bomb and who fear the long-lasting effects of radiation, have therefore been the vanguard of the anti-nuclear weapon campaign. Despite this, however, many A-bomb survivors and anti-nuclear weapon activists have so far been indifferent to the nuclear energy issue. Anti-nuclear energy campaigners have long been marginalized in Japan.

For example, a small group of anti-nuclear energy activists in Hiroshima have been actively involved in the movement against the Chugoku Electric Power Company's (CEPCO) plan to build a nuclear power station near Kaminoseki, a beautiful fishing village on Japan's Inland Sea, about 50 miles away from Hiroshima. However they have had virtually no support from any A-bomb survivors' organizations. Nor have either the former or current mayors of Hiroshima, who are widely known as staunch advocates for the abolishment of nuclear weapons, ever supported this local anti-nuclear power movement. Indeed they never expressed concern about the danger of nuclear power accidents. That made it easier for CEPCO, over strong opposition by this group of anti-nuclear energy activists in solidarity with the fishermen of Kaminoseki, to start construction work early this year. (The company did, however, temporarily stop construction work on the Kaminoseki site on the day of the earthquake, suggesting that the nuclear power industry and the government will have difficulty resuming work on nuclear plants following the disasters.)

There are many reasons for this peculiar dichotomy in the antinuclear movement in Japan. One reason is that postwar Japanese governments strongly backed nuclear science, particularly after U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower began promoting the idea of "atoms for peace" in 1953. The feeling in Tokyo, among politicians and scientists alike, was that Japan had neglected scientific research during the war. Many believed their nation was defeated in World War II by American technological prowess, exemplified above all by the United States' evident mastery of nuclear physics.

This attitude, together with a deep anxiety about the lack of natural energy resources in a nation that relies on imports for 100 percent of its oil and is the world's largest importer of coal, overtly encouraged Japan's embrace of nuclear energy. Particularly since the late 1960s, the Japanese government has wielded pork-barrel policies to secure the approval of local communities in remote areas for the construction of nuclear-power plants in their backyards. The government has allocated huge sums to build public facilities such as libraries, hospitals, recreation centers, gymnasiums, and swimming pools in areas where local councils accepted a nuclear power station. Meanwhile, power companies have paid large sums of money to landowners and fishermen to force them to relinquish their properties and fishing rights. Unsurprisingly, political corruption soon became part of the package as construction companies provided large sums of kickbacks to politicians in return for contracts. All the while, the government and power companies promoted the myth that nuclear power was clean and safe, thereby marginalizing the anti-nuclear energy movement.

Although for a short period following the Chernobyl accident in 1986, the anti-nuclear power movement in Japan enjoyed nationwide popular support, but it quickly faded following campaigns by the government and the power companies. Despite many accidents since, the seriousness of these incidents was effectively covered up by changing data records and falsifying reports to the government. Consequently, there are now 17 nuclear power stations around the earthquake-prone Japanese archipelago, comprising 54 nuclear reactors that provide 30 percent of Japan's total electricity generating capacity.

The anti-nuclear movement has been warning of the dangers of a devastating nuclear accident for years, but those efforts have always been met with dismissive assurances both by electric power companies and the government about the safety of the reactors. The Fukushima accident has brought to fruition all the fears and predictions previously expressed. And just as the atomic bomb indiscriminately killed tens of thousands of civilians, this nuclear reactor accident, albeit on a smaller scale, will be responsible for indiscriminate suffering and lives cut short; the consequences are likely to play out over the next several decades due to radiation pollution and the resulting economic costs.

And yet, amid catastrophe, a better Japan might well emerge. At a minimum, it ought to provide a wakeup call to those who wrongly assumed that nuclear power was as safe, clean, and cost-effective as its boosters told us. Japan has the technical, scientific, and financial resources to become a world leader in truly green energy. All it needs now is the will.

GO TAKAYAMA/AFP/Getty Images

 

Yuki Tanaka is research professor at the Hiroshima Peace Institute, Hiroshima City University.

CCNG

1:13 AM ET

March 23, 2011

Pragmatism

In the end, Asians tend to be more pragmatic. It can't be questioned that nuclear power is cheap and relatively clean, and properly managed poses little health risk. Chernobyl really is an exception. No modern reactor, including the one in trouble right now, could ever cause such devastating harm. In the end, they have deemed the risks worth the benefits, and I can't blame them for it.

 

MRMONDAY

10:17 AM ET

March 23, 2011

Reflecting

I think the anti-nuclear movement have definitely used this tragic situation to its advantage. Japan and other Asian countries have long had a love affair with nuclear power due to their high needs and lack of resources. What has unfolded is a once in a century event, and whilst the situation doesn't look good it's too early to start bagging nuclear power. I think all nations will take this lesson on board.

 

CHRIS SCHERRER

7:12 PM ET

March 23, 2011

From nuclear to green energy

Congratulations to Yuki Tanaka for a sound presentation of the issues at stake.
In the aftermath of the most dangerous moment in the recent history of Japan, and indeed the world, I was surely not the only one who followed with dismay the horrific news about the mega-disaster unfolding in Northern Honshu, Though the tsunamis produced by one of the strongest earthquakes in history were devastating, and could indeed have been far more deadly, the tsunamis themselves were much less deadly then those devastating Southeast Asia on 26 December 2004, after a quake measured between 9.1 and 9.3, which ad the power to kill 240.000 people and devastate a dozen of islands and coastal countries, with the quake off Sumatra (Aceh) measured 26.3 megatons of TNT, an energy equivalent to over 1.500 times the power of the atomic bomb which has destroyed Hiroshima. The death toll by the tsunamis was thus about ten times the death toll of the tsunami on March 2011 in Japan so-far.

It’s a frightening experience. I am a survivor of the tsunami which destroyed Mirissa, a beautiful beach village in Southern Sri Lanka. One day earlier, even less people would have survived, due to Christmas party hang-over.

Death tolls in Japan are still rising, and will be combined with those who will die an early death due to diseases caused by radiation. Even though a mega-disaster as the one in Chernobyl seems to have been avoided, the death toll in northern Honshu will rise. Only recently, with the Chernobyl report as well as the ECRR report “Chernobyl: 20 Years On” (Health Effects of the Chernobyl Accident, by C.C. Busby and A.V. Yablokov (eds.) 2006) we know that one million people have died so-far due to this largest ever nuclear disaster. Typically, the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA, on her website gives a death toll of just 4.000 people.
The lies and deceptions of the nuclear industry monumental. It shows the insane mentality of the nuclear pushers in covering-up the real impacts of nuclear accidents (which are in the hundreds).

We have just witnessed a new series of cover-up in relation to the Fukushima nuclear disaster, which, thanks to the heroism and determination of what in Chernobyl was called the liquidators, those Fukushima plant workers and self-defence Forces who have sacrificed their health to save Japan and the neighbouring countries of Russia, China, Korea as well as North America from a mega-disaster, and any other place to where the winds would have brought significant amounts of high radioactivity. Keep in mind that almost no amount of radioactivity is “safe”.

Such a mega-disaster that would have overshadowed the one in Chernobyl, chiefly due to much older and far more poisonous radioactive materials (illegally) “stored” in the Fukushima plant, a criminally maintained system, which could have wiped out millions of people in Northern Japan and beyond. Due to denial and deception inherent in the nuclear bureaucracy and industry we will probably never know how narrowly Japan, and indeed the world, have escaped mutual assured destruction in the range of tens of millions of people, to say the least.

As for the reactions so-far, in is never too early to start bagging nuclear power. We should do it now. There will be more earthquakes, tsunamies and related dangers in future. What should be clear by now, is that given human imperfection, every modern nuclear reactor, including the old ones still in trouble right now, can potentially cause devastating harm. It is never too early to stop the insanity of nuclear power plants and the atomic industry as such, especially in earthquake-prone parts of the world, which includes almost all of Japan.

Alternatives are readily available. Windmills are surely the safest and most economic alternative, together with plants using earth heat (for which Japan would provide many ideal locations too) as well as passive and active solar energy use, combined with hydropower stations. These are the elements of the green energy revolution Yuki Tanaka mentioned, which should be jump-started now.

As Tanaka mentioned, Japan and many other nations have the technical and scientific skills as well as the financial resources to become world leaders. China has become in no time the world leader in production of windmills, which has already brought prices down considerably. It is a shame: So far we don’t even use on thousandth of planet earth’s massive amounts of unused wind, geothermic, hydraulic, solar and other green energies, which are all perfectly safe and economically as well as ecologically sound to harness.

If humanity should survive in bigger numbers, we should lose no time to develop and use the full range of the mentioned forms of green energy, to phase out nuclear and other dirty energy such as the uneconomic, environmentally harmful and dangerous burning of coal, oil, gas and nuclear elements. Green energy is doable, durable, economic, clean and safe. What are we waiting for?

Chris Scherrer, Prof. at HPI-HCU. Hiroshima, Japan

 

DOMINOMAN

7:17 AM ET

April 17, 2011

Due to denial and deception

Due to denial and deception inherent in the nuclear bureaucracy and industry we will probably never know how narrowly Japan, and indeed the world, have escaped ruch poparcia mutual assured destruction in the range of tens of millions of people, to say the least.As for the reactions so-far, in is never too early to start bagging nuclear power. We should do it now. There will be more earthquakes, tsunamies and related dangers in future. What should be clear by now, is that given human imperfection, every modern nuclear reactor, including the old ones still in trouble right now, can potentially cause devastating harm.