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Nuclear's Green Cheerleaders Forget Chernobyl at Our Peril
Pundits who downplay the risks of radiation are ignoring the casualities of the past. Fukushima's meltdown may be worse
Every day there are more setbacks to solving the Japanese nuclear crisis and it's pretty clear that the industry and governments are telling us little; have no idea how long it will take to control; or what the real risk of cumulative contamination may be.
The authorities reassure us by saying there is no immediate danger and a few absolutist environmentalists obsessed with nuclear power because of the urgency to limit emissions repeat the industry mantra that only a few people died at Chernobyl – the worst nuclear accident in history. Those who disagree are smeared and put in the same camp as climate change deniers.
I prefer the words of Alexey Yablokov, member of the Russian academy of sciences, and adviser to President Gorbachev at the time of Chernobyl: "When you hear 'no immediate danger' [from nuclear radiation] then you should run away as far and as fast as you can."
Five years ago I visited the still highly contaminated areas of Ukraine and the Belarus border where much of the radioactive plume from Chernobyl descended on 26 April 1986. I challenge chief scientist John Beddington and environmentalists like George Monbiot or any of the pundits now downplaying the risks of radiation to talk to the doctors, the scientists, the mothers, children and villagers who have been left with the consequences of a major nuclear accident.
It was grim. We went from hospital to hospital and from one contaminated village to another. We found deformed and genetically mutated babies in the wards; pitifully sick children in the homes; adolescents with stunted growth and dwarf torsos; foetuses without thighs or fingers and villagers who told us every member of their family was sick.
This was 20 years after the accident but we heard of many unusual clusters of people with rare bone cancers. One doctor, in tears, told us that one in three pregnancies in some places was malformed and that she was overwhelmed by people with immune and endocrine system disorders. Others said they still saw caesium and strontium in the breast milk of mothers living far from the areas thought to be most affected, and significant radiation still in the food chain. Villages testified that "the Chernobyl necklace" – thyroid cancer – was so common as to be unremarkable; many showed signs of accelerated ageing.
The doctors and scientists who have dealt directly with the catastrophe said that the UN International Atomic Energy Agency's "official" toll, through its Chernobyl Forum, of 50 dead and perhaps 4,000 eventual fatalities was insulting and grossly simplistic. The Ukrainian Scientific Centre for Radiation, which estimated that infant mortality increased 20 to 30% after the accident, said their data had not been accepted by the UN because it had not been published in a major scientific journal.
Konstantin Tatuyan, one of the "liquidators" who had helped clean up the plant, told us that nearly all his colleagues had died or had cancers of one sort or another, but that no one had ever asked him for evidence. There was burning resentment at the way the UN, the industry and ill-informed pundits had played down the catastrophe.
While there have been thousands of east European studies into the health effects of radiation from Chernobyl, only a very few have been accepted by the UN, and there have been just a handful of international studies trying to gauge an overall figure. They range from the UN's Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation study (57 direct deaths and 4,000 cancers expected) to the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), who estimated that more than 10,000 people had been affected by thyroid cancer alone and a further 50,000 cases could be expected.
Moving up the scale, a 2006 report for Green MEPs suggested up to 60,000 possible deaths; Greenpeace took the evidence of 52 scientists and estimated the deaths and illnesses to be 93,000 terminal cancers already and perhaps 140,000 more in time. Using other data, the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences declared in 2006 that 212,000 people had died as a direct consequence of Chernobyl.
At the end of 2006, Yablokov and two colleagues, factoring in the worldwide drop in births and increase in cancers seen after the accident, estimated in a study published in the annals of the New York Academy of Sciences that 985,000 people had so far died and the environment had been devastated. Their findings were met with almost complete silence by the World Health Organisation and the industry.
So who can we trust when the estimates swing so wildly? Should we believe the empirical evidence of the doctors; or governments and industrialists backed by their PR companies? So politicised has nuclear energy become, that you can now pick and choose your data, rubbish your opponents, and ignore anything you do not like. The fact is we may never know the truth about Chernobyl because the records are lost, thousands of people from 24 countries who cleaned up the site have dispersed across the vast former Soviet Union, and many people have died.
Fukushima is not Chernobyl, but it is potentially worse. It is a multiple reactor catastrophe happening within 150 miles of a metropolis of 30 million people. If it happened at Sellafield, there would be panic in every major city in Britain. We still don't know the final outcome but to hear experts claiming that nuclear radiation is not that serious, or that this accident proves the need for nuclear power, is nothing short of disgraceful.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllToss Monbiot in a coal pit. What is his deal? He said 43 died at Chernobyl on DN. I put out a facebook survey, asked my friends if they would go out in the Maryland rain (recent tests found iodine 131.) Most of them said "we all getting old anyway so party."
There is madness afoot.
"Their findings were met with almost complete silence by the World Health Organisation and the industry."
Vidal left out a critical epithet regarding this fact. The WHO must confer with the IAEA (the world regulator AND PROMOTOR of nuclear energy,) before it can document anything in relation to nuclear energy disaster health statistics. Dr. Alexey Yablokov, cited above, visits the WHO often to demand that this policy change and for the WHO to report the accurate empirical evidence of the doctors.
A further exploration in video on the book "Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment," published by the New York Academy of Sciences (cited above.) (http://blip.tv/file/4922080)
Good article, thanks.
George Monbiot and others like him who defend the nuclear industry as "green" are doing the public a great disservice
Unlike other forms of fuel, nuclear radiation carries with it the danger to sterilize the earth and/ or mutate the gene pool--apart from the obvious dangers of radiation poisoning and sickness on the individual level.
In fact, radioactive materials are not and never will be safe--no matter what the nuclear fission industry tells the public.
Certain forms of radioactivity produced by reactors and by weaponry can cause damage of such magnitude that the gene pool of all life would be deleteriously altered in those that initially survived. The half-life of some radioactive particles like plutonium and uranium is in the tens of thousands of years and billions of years respectively--meaning that the danger from contamination would last twice that time. Plutonium is lethal at the most miniscule doses.
Anyone who says there’s a "safe" amount of radioactive exposure and there's a safe way to dispose of nuclear waste: a) doesn't understand nuclear physics, b) is lying, c) doesn't care about human life and the future of the earth--or some combination of the three.
Data has been and is being collected by doctors in Iraq and the Balkans in places where supposedly "safe" depleted uranium bullets were used and then followed by alarming increases in birth defects, cancers and other sicknesses. This data is being hushed up. Likewise a cover-up took place in Pennsylvania of the extensive damage caused by the Three Mile Island nuclear disaster.
Too often government officials side with corporate owners of reactors and the public never learns the truth. Many governments also support nuclear arsenals and further development of nuclear weapons. For whose benefit and at what cost to life on earth?
Finally, the general public (and I suspect people like Monbiot) could use more instruction on nuclear physics and genetics--at least enough to understand what the dangers of radioactivity are from internal emitters to the damage to DNA, etc. With a better grasp of physics and genetics people could better understand why the whole nuclear industry, from arms to energy plants, must be abandoned. It was a wrong turn--as the best physicists at Los Alamos realized early on.
Monbiot is off his rocker!
He is so terrified of experiencing Climate Change (read normal climatic shifts accelerated by human activity) in his lifetime that he is willing to support almost certain Background Radiation Change!
His billions dead due to Climate Change (who, of course, would have otherwise been immortal, and have no relation to artificially high populations due to fossil energy exploitation returning to sustainable norms though a natural process of mortality vs. birth rates) will of course relish being alive and prone to crazy mutations and defects!
Or else, Monbiot is just one more in a long line of morons with good vocabularies whose thoughts rise to prominence and then recede like the trends of fashion clothing.
Maybe relying on one class of rich idiots to counteract another class of rich idiots is not the strategy we should be adhereing to...
-matti.
Dear jdev---
A very cogent and concise critique.
However, please further explain your writing: "The half-life of some radioactive particles like plutonium and uranium is in the tens of thousands of years and billions of years respectively..." Where are your "billions of years" coming from here?
Meanwhile, I suspect that even many people who actually seek to study radiation fail to comprehend the mean of the Idea of the "half-life." As in, "Oh, if the half-life of Iodine-131 is only a few days, then we will be safe again in only a few days." The "half-life" of radiation exposure turns out to be an extremely simplistic construct that really bears little resemblance to reality. For example, half-life of what forms of radiation? Gamma, Alpha, Beta? These terms are GROSS GENERALIZATIONS adopted very early in nuclear science and then pushed on the public because they are relatively (pun intended) easy to understand, and scientifically IGNORANT reporters can write about them as though they have the authority to do so, and their equally ignorant editors publish their bullshit.
You mentioned "depleted uranium." PLEASE always with initial caps: Depleted Uranium, because its name is biologically an intrinsic lie. This needs to be said again and again. It is poisoning huge swaths of the Earth and our government is complicit not only in this Genocide, but an Ecocide.
Iodine 131. The angular momentum of its outer shell electron can be expressed mathematically, while what makes it "radioactive" is that the electron can fly off and interact with some other substance, like the mammalian thyroid gland, which requires iodine to function at all. But there exist more than two isotopes of Iodine, so if 131 loses more than one electron, can it remain radioactive? Probably. Depending on its environment! Enter Heisenberg (and the other great early theorists):
Yes, you can "control" nuclear energy up to a point, but do not think you truly understand what you are doing. Caltech says the Universe is around 4 billion years old and still evolving. Human evolution (starting with flint-striking) is what?
Fukushima is a perfect demonstration of technological Hubris. I am reminded of that early Bob Dylan song the exact words of which I wish I could recall right now, but I am an old man: "Something is Happening, but you do not know what it is, do you Mr. Jones." A couple of decades ago, I could sing that song.
But not to worry! The Fukyoushima plant is much older and more primitive than our modern nuclear plants. Never mind that many nearly identical GE-created monstrosities are still operating in the U.S. and have been given extended operating licenses beyond their original engineering life (and I am aware of the redundancies built into such projections). [Vermont Yankee. Or that thing on Long Island?]
Or, that GE paid no federal taxes last year, while if anything drastic happens to their nuclear plants they have no liability, while federal regulatory oversight after the likes of Dubya is functionally nonexistent.
My heart goes out to all the people of Japan.
I was two years old during the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. These bombings have haunted me all my life. Fukushima may yet turn out to be far worse, as the radiation hazard is not, er, "vaporized" as in a true nuclear detonation. (I leave it to others more learned than I to again ask the question, as raised by others at Common Dreams, whether an X-kiloton, etc. precisely-sized nuclear weapon might suffice here. But WHO KNOWS? Might it be better to "vaporize" the radiation threat here than allow it to fester? One CD author has said absolutely not. I am not sure, while I am sure that the psychological trauma to the Japanese people of such a "solution" would be global in scope, even as it may be an appropriate "solution" as it would tend to "neutralize" the contaminating radiation: to put this in context, nuclear bombs can be "cleaner" than nuclear power plants. Something to think on!)
Tepco calls a meeting of all their bureaucratic heads to try to figure out what to do, but it turns out that all their bureaucrats have forgotten their math and algorithms because the only way humans can remember them is by CONSTANTLY working with them like high school students in algebra class, while if you are a BUREAUCRAT you just do not have the time for that, so you depend upon others in your GE nuclear hierarchy. But, WHICH ONES?
Have you noticed how haggard all those Japanese scientists look on Nippon TV lately? And how the stats keep changing?
One final point that I expect to cause trouble, but which I earlier posted in a more primitive form at CD: I doubt that Einstein and E=MC2 was necessary for the development of nuclear science. I suspect that Madame Curie and her devoted husband were studying pitchblend regardless of Einstein.
Cosmology is not necessarily Chemistry. Different cosmologies can arrive at identical constructs while both can demand recognition as "reality." We sometimes call that law.
People who think that more advanced big nuclear plants are therefore safer (because they are more "advanced") do not understand the hazards of human ignorance. I love it when I hear from pundits that the human brain has more cells than the Galaxy has stars, to say nothing of the neuronal connections.
I do not believe in a god, but I am beginning to understand why so many people do. We are far more stupid than our society leads us to believe.
Relevant, try:
http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Sept01/Sandage/Sand1.html
Happy April Fools! Humility is good. Hubris is bad. The 20th Century was a genocidal century driven by psychopaths. Their parasitism made their replication impossible. I mean, try mobilizing, again, ten million men to re-fight WWII. GE? They are promoting scam light bulbs. (There is actually a war going on there...)
Nuclear "power" is Entropy. It is NOT "green." The sun and the planet are "green." And, ultimately, if you seek your own soul, you will find it also "green." There is nothing innately wrong with technology. What IS wrong is Predation. Seek wisdom.
-30-
Very good stuff Mr. River.
Yahoo News - weekend edition - about the workers Fukushima workers. It is relevant to this terrific article.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thelookout/20110401/ts_yblog_thelookout/japan-nuke-workers-have-committed-themselves-to-die-if-necessary
If they're nuclear proponents, they're not green.
Dear OleManRiver,
Thanks. The half life of uranium-238 is 4.5 billion years.
George Monbiot is a journalist, but certainly one of the better ones, because he does his homework. But doing one's homework does NOT guarantee that they would learn ALL the right lessons or that one could trust everything they say. Monbiot's book "Heat: How to Stop the Planet Burning" has been quite effective in convincing those that were baffled by the denial industry's lies. In fact, one of the chapters, a fascinating one, in that book is called exactly that: "The Denial Industry" and goes into some detail about the workings of this "industry". But Monbiot is wrong on his support for nuclear power.
Maybe it's the numbers - as to how much electricity is used and will be needed as other countries develop and the alternatives are not that easy to set up. Having looked at the numbers myself, of not just the present electricity generation capacity, but also what it takes to set up each megawatt of renewable power capacity, I have NO DOUBT that conservation MUST top the agenda. There is simply NO WAY to meet all of the current electricity usage worldwide AND make provision for increased electricity usage in poorer countries as they try to attain some basic level of development within the next decade or so completely from renewable sources, without coal and nuclear. I repeat, NO WAY. Major cuts in CO2 emissions need to happen NOW. The thermal inertia of the Earth is just too huge that planning to cut emissions 20 years or 30 years down the road may take us all past the tipping point.
TIPPING POINT - that's the scary part, because it's hard to tell how close we are to that point. James Hansen thinks that nuclear power will be inevitable, too. His book "Storms of My Grandchildren: The Truth About the Coming Climate Catastrophe and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity" is a must read. Even after following the climate change issue since the early 1990's, I found this particular book so disturbing. Humanity simply cannot afford to ignore Hansen's warning.
James Lovelock - the man who came up with the "Gaia hypothesis" also thinks nuclear power is necessary to try and minimize the climate change-induced effects. Effects that cannot be completely avoided, according to him. More scary stuff.
James Hansen, James Lovelock and George Monbiot: people who I respect and have no hesitation in quoting, but cannot agree with on their nuclear prescription. Even if I can see where they are coming from.
Where they are coming from is simply this: they are trying to find ways to maintain the current levels of consumption, more or less (though Monbiot does list a lot of things that must simply go or be greatly reduced). They do not question the western-style consumption. Most of all, they do not question meat eating, even though the meat industry has been documented to be one of the largest contributors to global warming. Despite their prolific work, none of them seemed to have referred to this UN FAO report that came out in 2006:
"Livestock's long shadow: environmental issues and options".
Monbiot is the worst of all on this point: he actually seems to believe that vegans end up looking anemic. His British cultural bias comes through loud and clear here. This is not simply a dietary choice. Regular meat eating became possible for so many people worldwide only because of the brutal conquest of the "New World" and therefore cutting it down to pre-conquest levels should not be difficult.
Many people do not question the mindless wastage of electricity in so-called "leisure" and "entertainment" activities such as amusement parks, ice rinks in hot regions (just look at how many NHL teams there are in places that hardly get any natural ice during the entire year), ski resorts and golf courses in Dubai (while the golf courses consume primarily water and chemicals, producing that much water needs a lot of energy), etc. How many people drive to the gym to run on treadmills that require electricity? And all the escalators in shopping malls that run non-stop, so shoppers do not have to climb the stairs. And supermarket freezers left open for the "convenience" of shoppers, blasting away cold air, while the building itself needs to be heated in winter! It is criminal that such consumption and wastage are taking place when humanity is faced with a very real threat.
Bottom line: there is only a small window of time to avert climate change-induced danger. Coal is by far the biggest culprit and must go first. Nuclear power is inherently dangerous. Together they account for a large percentage in the USA alone. And then there are other countries. Replacing ***so much*** generation capacity with renewable power systems in the next decade is next to impossible. It's not just a question of money - there's also the question of material availability. In any case, the world WILL have to move towards all-renewable sooner or later. Therefore the immediate requirement is to cut electricity usage, big time. All new generation capacity should be renewable-based, and should start replacing coal and nuclear capacity.
Those who say "no nukes" must put major conservation and demand reduction at the top of the agenda. They should also start getting used to numbers. Otherwise they cannot be taken seriously.
"There was burning resentment at the way the UN, the industry and ill-informed pundits had played down the catastrophe."
So it was and so it will be this time...
Exponentially so.