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Confessions of a Nuclear Power Safety Expert
When Italy decided in the mid-’70s to add nuclear power to its power portfolio, young mechanical and nuclear engineer Cesare Silvi was among those attracted to the opportunities it presented. His work centered on nuclear safety issues — in particular, what might happen if something unexpected struck a power plant.
"Why not consider Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima as warnings of greater catastrophes to come and avoid the inevitable by shutting them down," Cesare Silvi says. (MichaelUtech/istockphoto) Corners he saw cut there eventually soured Silvi on that endeavor. His next position — at the Italian Commission on Nuclear and Alternative Energy Sources, which included work on nuclear disarmament — eventually soured him on nuclear energy itself.
“[If we] continue with nuclear power, there will definitely be worse accidents,” he argued in the wake of Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi disaster. Over the weekend, Italian voters agreed and overwhelming rejected restarting nuclear power in their country.
“Why not consider Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima as warnings of greater catastrophes to come and avoid the inevitable by shutting them down, much like changing your diet and/or lifestyle after finding out that your cholesterol or blood pressure is elevated, rather than continuing down the same path until a heart attack or stroke strikes?”
In the meantime, he suggests that wrangling existing power plants requires a global response toward the dangers he predicts.
“Instead of a Kyoto accord,” he says, “we will have to have some kind of multilateral nuclear agreement to deal with such threats.”
In the last two decades, Silvi has gone on to acclaim in the world of solar energy, where has been president of the International Solar Energy Society and founder of the Italian Group for the History of Solar Energy.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Silvi originally worked in the north of Italy as a engineer. He did not like the polluted Po River valley, where the smell from various industries near his flat — despite his boss’ assurances of “You’ll get used to it” — annoyed him.
Then the 1973 Arab-Israeli War and its attendant oil crisis prompted the Italian government to consider nuclear energy, and a door opened for Silvi. The newly formed Italian National Commission on Nuclear Energy sought out young engineers like Silvi, who saw the opportunity as a means to return home to Rome. His top scores on the entrance tests won him a spot in the Directorate for Nuclear Safety and Radioactive Protection, and in 1975, the directorate tasked Silvi to examine and analyze threats to the well-being of nuclear power plants from the outside environment.
“I was looking at low-possibility events, like a meteor striking the housing of a reactor or a car thrown at it by a tornado. These definitely had a small chance of happening, but the end result would have been horrific.” Plus, he says now, the proliferation of nuclear plants just adds more targets.
“Many laughed at such speculation and planning,” he says, “but then again, how many would have taken seriously a recommendation of extending the height of the seawall at Fukishima another six meters? They would have questioned your sanity, if you had argued that the 10-meter barrier was inadequate.
“Our problem is that we don’t know what will happen on any scale of time. Such uncertainty is OK when dealing with train trips or dinner choices. But it becomes problematic when considering the possible spread of very dangerous material that will stay deadly for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.”
In his introduction to risk analysis, Silvi provides a very simple equation: R=PxC. In English, that translates to the probability of something happening (the P) times the consequences if it does (C) equals the risk to society (R).
He illustrates this by comparing driving on the Italian highway, the Autostrada, with running a nuclear power station. Driving on the Autostrada has a low risk to the general population. A possibility does exist that you will crash, and perhaps die as a result, but the consequences of the accident to the general society will be next to nil. That’s why countries let almost anyone drive. So a moderately high P times a very low C equals a small risk to society as a whole.
On the other hand, the chance of an earthquake and tsunami of the magnitude that hit Japan are quite remote, especially occurring in tandem, which makes for a tiny P. But the consequences — the C — of them imperiling a nuclear power plant are huge, leading to a much higher risk to society.
That equation played out in the Soviet Union a quarter-century ago at Chernobyl, and the aftereffects still ripple throughout Europe. A 1,600-square-mile exclusionary zone in Ukraine and southern Belarus remains off limits. Students gestated during the Chernobyl disaster in contaminated regions as far north as Sweden and Norway have shown poorer performance in school and lower verbal IQ scores.
Silvi’s sincere assessment of outside threats ultimately butted up against unfortunate human constraints.
“One day,” Silvi recalls, “the boss said, ‘Figure out how far should a nuclear plant be from an airport.’ As I did my study, I found that it wasn’t too easy to protect the reactor from a plane crash. The plant can be perfect from the inside, but the problem arises: How many low-probability events that could result in devastating consequences do you protect against through proper construction before such expenditures make the plant too costly to operate? Even if we could affordably, say, pay to reinforce the plant to withstand a hit from a plane or missile, the question never leaves you — ‘Have I figured in everything that might damage the nuclear reactor over its long lifetime?
“I left the field because I couldn’t do my analyses as I thought necessary. There was this nuclear power plant [the Caroso Nuclear Power Plant] in the north of Italy, along the Po River. An oil pipe broke and caught fire six kilometers from the plant. Oil also spilled into the river. It clogged the reactor’s condenser. After that, my team discovered there were four pipelines less than 500 meters from the plant. I felt it was necessary to determine what was flowing through them.
“But the boss complained, ‘You’re trying to get at too many details,’ and stopped the study. It turned out that some very powerful person owned the pipelines and was hiding what was going through those pipes for tax purposes.”
(Italian voters in 1987 decided to shutter all the nation’s nuclear plants and by 1990 they were closed, although the government opted to restart nuclear power in 2008. Post-Fukushima, the country has placed a moratorium on those plans and over the weekend the country’s voters decisively rejected a return to nuclear power.)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
So in 1981, Silvi shifted his work to nuclear disarmament with the Agency for the Promotion of European Research, and was working in that field as the Soviet Union spun out of existence. Suddenly, many Warsaw Bloc bases containing atomic arms essentially were abandoned, leaving them vulnerable to nuclear thievery. Silvi was part of a NATO delegation sent to Moscow to account for and inventory atomic supplies throughout Russia.
While at the job, Silvi had an epiphany: “If we are struggling to control the spread of nuclear weapons, why should we extend the technology to civilian use?”
Named a resident fellow of the East West Institute in 1986, being the first physical scientist to labor among its political scientists changed his perspective, he explained on the East West Institute’s blog.
With Chernobyl then in everyone’s mind, he spent his early time there explaining how all nuclear reactors are not created equal.
“With a sheet of paper and a pencil, I illustrated the difference. Cupping the curved sheet in my hand, I placed the pencil at the bottom of the curve to simulate the behavior of a western nuclear reactor. If its equilibrium changes, it rolls back and forth until it finds the stable position again. To simulate nuclear reactor such as the one in Chernobyl, I flipped the curved sheet over and placed the pencil on the top of the curve, illustrating that once equilibrium is lost, it is impossible to control.
“… I soon came to the conclusion that neither international cooperation nor technological advancements would guarantee human societies to build and safely run nuclear reactors in all possible conditions on Earth (earthquakes, floods, droughts, tornadoes, wars, terrorism, climate change, tsunamis, pandemics, etc.). I am sadly reminded of this turning point in my life as I listen to the news about the earthquake, tsunami and extremely worrying nuclear crisis in Japan.”
Upon leaving the Institute, he added, he moved away from nuclear energy and focused on solar energy.
“Nuclear today only generates about 12 percent of the developed world’s electricity. By instituting an energy efficiency program,” Silvi suggests, “we could fill the gap caused by shutting them all down and put this malevolent genie back into the bottle.
“Human history is full of madness, full of catastrophes. Imagine if we had nuclear reactors when we fought wars in the past. If you try to consider all the events that might happen over the years, you start to ask, ‘What are the benefits of such an effort, especially when you have opportunities to get electricity in many other ways?’”
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13 Comments so far
Show AllMy uneducated guess would call that the 100 000 gallons of sea water finally coming into contact with the exposed MOX (Mixed OXide) nuclear fuel lying in the bottom of the concrete containment structure.
If that is indeed what that was, plutonium is now DEFINITELY loose in Fukushima.
Buh-bye Japan.
Yes Galenwainwright,,, and not only Japan... Radiation that escaped into the environment in the first week after the tsunami damaged the Fukushima nuclear power plant, is as least double the initial estimate according to a new report.
Hey Scribe,, I opened the link you posted and cannot find anything about an explosion on this Tuesday. There was one on a Tuesday in March of 2011.
I believe you and I would agree if there had been another explosion in any of the Fukushima reactor builldings' the MSN would have had to cover the story to at least to some degree and it surely it would have been covered by every newspaper and new's outlet in Japan... There is a limit to what they can muzzle... And I'm sure Greenpeace would have been all over it.
We also agree that what has already occurred at Fukushima and is on-going is a horrible long lasting disaster for everyone on the planet and it can and most likely will occur again someday at any place a nuclear power plant operates.
Diablo Canyon is a good candidate, very near an earthquake fault. I believe it is of the same design as those at Fukushima. We could shut it down now but we won't. How many will die near that plant? How many will be irradiated all across the country? I hope it never happens, but we could ASSURE that it never happens by shutting it down.
Suppose the probability of no accident at a nuclear power plant is .99 over a twenty year lifespan. If you have 20 nuclear power plants the odds of no accident is about 2 in 5: 1 - .99 to the twentieth. Now you are talking about serious probabilities. The .99 figure is made up, I admit, though any number concocted will be based on assumptions of questionable validity. The point is that relying on nuclear to fix the carbon emission problem is a Faustian bargain. The more reactors, the greater the probability of an accident.
One could argue that coal-fired plants could produce more fatalities in terms of damage to human health than nuclear, but that would be a false comparison. There are other means of generating power--solar, wind, hydro--which are much less damaging to the health than coal. This analysis is, I admit, a bit short-sighted as it does not consider all the costs of generating power. I suspect, though, that nuclear would come out even worse if mining and processing mortalities were figured out. We need to consider other options besides nuclear.
Yes math can be played with, especially with the number (9).
Example:>>> Three women attend a pet cat show in Philadelphia. They wish to share a room in a hotel... The desk clerk gives them a room and says it's $85 for one day.
Each of the ladies gives the clerk Thirty dollars in cash and he gives them five one dollar bills in change... They cannot equally divide the five dollars, so each of the ladies take one dollar and they give the bellboy a two dollar tip.
Each lady had paid $29 for her share of the room fee... Three times $29 is $87, plus the $2 tip, which equals $89... There is a dollar missing... They each gave the clerk $30 which equals $90.. That is playing with math. Bean counters do it all of the time.
Anyway: I agree with nuclear expert's math. Almost everything has danger, falling out of bed, taking a shower, being struck by a bolt of lightening while riding a bicycle. We can have an auto accident which kills a dozen people, or an airline crash which kills hundreds. Those accidents won't kill millions of innocent people, or leave hundreds or thousands of square miles of irreplaceable, priceless land steralized for use for a hundred or more years.
So far during the past 60 years, there have been five major nuclear power plant accidents and numerous very close calls. It isn't worth the risk when there are viable, affordable alternatives such as geothermal and solar. Solar is not yet to the stage where it is the best choice, geothermal is the best choice at the present time.
Someday solar could be all the electrical energy we humans will ever need. We must replace the coal and oil fired power plants and nuclear is not safe enough nor will it ever be safe enough.
And (scribe) can you offer assistance with the link you posted? I cannot find a word about an explosion at the Fukushima plant that happened today. It's bad enough without another explosion anyway.
Nuclear energy generates about 12% of the developed world's electricity.
Renewables generate about 18% of the world's electricity. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renewable_energy)
So much for the claim that we NEED nuclear energy and that renewables will never amount to much.
Even more encouraging, we are currently nowhere near tapping the full potential of clean renewables.
Consider wind power (again from Wikipedia):
"Globally, the long-term technical potential of wind energy is believed to be five times total current global energy production, or 40 times current electricity demand."
and
"Wind power is growing at the rate of 30% annually, with a worldwide installed capacity of 158 gigawatts (GW) in 2009"
To get a perspective on how much 158 gigawatts is, note that the 7 old nuclear power plants that Germany shut down in response to Fukushima generated a total of 8.5 gigawatts.
If the growth of wind energy were to continue at its present rate, wind power alone would outstrip the total 2011 world energy demand of 15 terawatts by the year 2027. The growth won't be able to continue exponentially of course, but if we really wanted to, surely we could add a several hundred gigawatts a year worldwide. That comes to several terawatts per decade.
And that's just wind power.
If you're not scared yet, consider what Robert Alvarez has to say about pools of spent nuclear fuel - Democracy Now! 6/10/11 (http://www.democracynow.org/2011/6/10/as_japan_nuclear_crisis_worsens_citizen):
"We, in the United States, are currently storing on the order of three to four, five times more radioactivity in our pools than in Japan, and that the amount of radioactivity that we are storing in unsafe, vulnerable pools constitutes the largest concentrations of radioactivity on the planet."
The pools must be kept cool with water. They're exposed to the open air and are not well guarded, so are vulnerable.
Alvarez went on to describe the danger:
"if somebody or something were to cause the water to drain, it would lead to a catastrophic radiological fire that could render an area uninhabitable far greater than that created by Chernobyl. Chernobyl created an area that's currently uninhabitable that's approximately the size of half of the state of New Jersey."
"Meanwhile, out at Fukushima Dai-ichi, there's still no word about the cause of a HUGE steam explosion from reactor 3 which the nuke-cam logged just after midnight Tuesday, June 14. See footage at:
http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/ "
Wow! I'll bet we never see that on the M$M. I wonder how much crap went downwind from that thing? As it happened at night, we'll never know, probably never hear about it.
No sweat minitrue,
Our EPA says the radioactive poisons arriving here daily from Fukushima are not a health hazard.
Of course they aren't if we don't inhale any of the trillions of dealdy for life, radioactive isotopes of cesium-137 which are now blowing in the wind. Or eat any food crops which have absorbed the cesium poison. It is only a serious health hazard for a hundred years or so, no sweat.
WayneWR- yeah, it's amazing how the media and EPA are downplaying (ignoring) the fallout of contamination hitching a ride on the jetstream. Can't have the sheeple in the US rise up like the Germans or Italians demanding an end to nukes.
I related on an earlier post about 2 good friends, mother and daughter, who have been battling deadly cancers. Mother survived a bout with colon cancer and is now battling kidney cancer. Her 28 year old daughter is battling an inoperable brain tumor. Both were living in the Hebrides when Chernobyls fallout made landfall there. The daughter would have been about 3 at the time. The time bomb took 25 years to go off.
Can a definite connection be proven. Of course not. And that's what the nuclear industry is banking on. That isotope particle you inhale today that was born in the nuclear chamber of Fukushima may not kill you for 20 years.
Splitting atoms to boil water is insane. Creating radioactive waste isotopes that are deadly for longer the span of human civilization is insane. It's all about greed and making a few people very wealthy at the expense of human health, the environment, the planet itself.
Nuclear shill response in 3, 2, 1 ....