Attention
Mumbaikars: Your city may be sitting on a volcano
Wednesday March 23, 2011 11:40:15 PM,
VT Padmanabhan
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The oldest commercial reactors in
India are located at Tarapur, about 80 km north of Mumbai. These
boiling water reactors designed and built by the General Electrics
(Now Hitatchi-GE) were commissioned in 1969 and 1971. The chief of
the Nuclear Power Corporation of India has recently reassured that
these reactors are safer than the crippled reactors at Fukushima
Daiichi. Like the officials of the Japanese TEPCO, NPCIL leaders are
also honourable men, who are ready to sacrifice their lives for the
welfare of the people. If you believe this, you will not lose your
sleep and your children will be happy.
Tarapur reactors did not fare well all the time. There were long
periods when the reactors did not produce any electricity. Its rated
capacity was 200 MW, but NPCIL has downgraded it to 140 MW(e).
Currently, these two reactors are producing less than 200 MW of
electricity a year.
One way of assessing the integrity of a complicated system, like an
atomic reactor, is to look at the leaks and emissions. All the
atomic reactors release radioactive elements to the air and water,
all the time. These are known as routine releases. These releases
are monitored and reported to the United Nations' Scientific
Committee on Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR). This is the only
source you can depend on to know what comes of the nuclear fuel
chain. 1994 is the latest year for which data from Indian reactors
are available in UNSCEAR report. The data given in the original
report is for annual emission. Since that involves huge numbers, I
have calculated the emission per second. There are 3.153 cores of
seconds in a year, if you want to know the annual data, kindly
multiply it.
Iodine released from Tarapur will give away 714 radioactive
disintegrations (of beta particles) every second for the next 8 days
and for the next 8 days 357 disintegrations and for the next 8 days
178 disintegations like that. After about 90 days there will be no
radioidone left from the quota released at this second. The average
release of iodine from all the boiling water reactors in the world
was 26 during the same period. In other words, the Tarapur reactors
are 28 times dirtier than the rest. They may tell you to eat iodine
tablets every day. That simply does not work.
Noble gases are a group of radionuclides of krypton, xenon and
argon. Tarapur I and II release 1.1 billion of these noble gas
disintegration every second of its operation. The global average was
11 million; that is a hundred times dirtier.They are not that noble,
when they are near or inside a living cell. They puncture the cell
membrane and deface the DNA and initiate a process known as genomic
instability.
This data are for air releases through stack. The reactor also
discharges contaminated water laced with radionuclides to the
Arabian Ocean, into the fish-workers' commons. Studies have shown
129 Iodine, thousand times the background rate in the sea around
Tarapur. The ocean eco-system does not hoard the radionuclides. They
are returned to us through fish.
Besides the four reactors including the two 500 MW reactors recently
built, the Tarapur campus is also storing the highly radioactive
spent fuel, accumulated over the past forty years. The spent fuel
contains much more radioactivity than the reactor cores. Any
disaster on this campus will have unacceptably high impacts on the
health and well being of our people and the eco-system for hundreds
of years to come.
There is a thing called the risk-benefit ratio. These ageing
reactors are surely doing a great service to the nation by
generating electricity. Their net contribution to the national grid
will be less than 0.01%. Not a big deal for a big nation. And what
are the risks in case of an accident?
(a) Over 300,000 hectares of farm land which will be rendered
unusable for at least 300 years
(b) Miseries in the form of cancer and genetic disorders in a
population of 20 million or upward
(c) Tokyo is 220 km from Fukushima, Mumbai is less than a hundred
kilometres.
(d) Total dislocation and anomie in a city which is the hub of the
nation's industrial production.
(e) The cost of sacrophaging the reactor, by air-dropping cement,
born and metals for mothballing the structure in case of a breech
will be thousand times more than the return NPCIL is getting by
selling that 0.1% of electricity from Tarapur.
And above all, those big brains, the scientists who design,
fabricate and maintain our national deterrence also live in that
city – fairly close to the ageing structures.
We are a great people. We can do without these unsafe structures.
And save Mumbaikars from this unacceptable risk.
(countercurrents.org)
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