[quote="In page 85, amit-ji"]
I think it's time you guys clearly stated what you think should be the key takeaway from Fukushima for India. Should it abandon the nuclear option? Should it take cognizance of the failures - real and imaginary - at Fukushima and design more robust nuclear reactors?
[/quote]
In the context of the discussions taking place now in this thread, I am not quite sure whether the above question was meant to be rhetorical or not. Here I have assumed that it is not.
To me the question above was thought provoking, and so I have tried to cast my vote as follows:
Evolution and consequent detailed design, manufacture, construction and operation of NPPs should be (and as far as I am concerned,
is) a continuing process, even without any reference to Fukushima. If it were not so, Dr. AK et al would not have come up, a few years ago, with the AHWR concept that uses passive heat removal even during normal full power operation. (That I think implementation of this particular idea may be found unviable and that at some point of time in future they may re-introduce pumps for circulating the coolant through the reactor core, might be irrelevant to the concept of continual evolution of NPP designs that I am discussing here). Therefore, taking the appropriate lessons from Fukushima and not only incorporating them in future designs, but also straining as much as possible to back-fit them in existing designs is the way forward. Such exercises
were carried out in the wake of Chernobyl and TMI, and must have been done after the Narora fire and other similar incidents.
As far as India is concerned, for reasons I have been attempting to articulate in this thread so far, I vote for continuing the line of PHWRs that we have developed and proceed forward with the steps we are taking in relation to indigenous FBRs and Thorium fuelled FBRs / PHWRs / AHWRs. For me, import of NPPs must be shunned, because I firmly believe that (i) such imports will inhibit indigenous technology development and, (ii) LWRs are not neutron economical. I note that India has already developed LWR technology at a much more difficult level - namely, compact LWR, suitable for incorporation inside the confines of a submarine. Again, I am not a believer in the new-found need (post nuclear deal), for 40,000 MWe of nuclear capacity addition sought to be justified by Dr. AK as mere "additionality" thereby implying that we can very well afford to do without. However, DAE may have to go quite a distance yet on some other issues -- to me, the implementation of a "sterilised zone" around a reactor site is anathema and impinges on societal aspirations. I understand no other country in the world has it.
Finally, risk assessment and its mitigation as well as balancing it with economic or other gains needs to be realistic -- unfortunately achieving consensus on "what is safe" is difficult particularly in a Democracy such as ours; which is why we are having so many heated arguments and written bytes generated in the environment. I have heard that the NPPs at Kaiga are located at such an elevation so as to cater for a "deterministically" postulated scenario that envisages the dam (called
Supa dam ?) at the upstream reservoir to have an instantaneous, complete, full-flow break caused by incessant torrential rains in the catchment areas and near by rain forests, lasting several days. (I do not know whether similar scenarios were also imposed on the dam designers and builders. Why they would not gradually and progressively open the sluice gates as soon as torrential rains begin, is not quite known to me; perhaps there is a conservative assumption of goof-up by the dam authorities.) To me this scenario is a bit extreme, but possibly the NPP designers could comply with this diktat without incurring too much extra cost. I am not sure whether they did take into account what will happen to the homes of the NPP operators in the colony located, may be a few kilometers, down stream - will the colony get subsumed in the "pralayam"? I hope not!! (It all depends on the topology of the area, since the water stored in the reservoir is not infinite as in a sea).
Just My Thoughts.