Putnanja,
In the Indian context there is one major difference from the Fukushima incident. And that is the Indian equivalent of TEPCO (and other operators in Japan) is the GoI entity Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd.
So if it’s not a case of you thinking that the govt is corrupt, then commercial and/or cost considerations are unlikely to come into place regarding reactor designs and such. Also, every piece of reactor part will be inspected and passed by agencies under the Atomic Energy Commission and other govt entities.
I don’t think our nuclear experts are so stupid as to not being able to understand whether a particular design is safe or not.
I disagree with you on the point that any one on this thread has said that the nuclear incident at Fukushima was
insignificant. If you think so, then I must conclude that you either did not read the posts carefully or assumed something that you shouldn’t have. What’s been constantly hammered is that while the accident is serious and there has been significant radiation leakage, the severity was not a doomsday kind of scenario. And more importantly this does not imply that the basic assumption that nuclear is a good source of pollution free high base load power at economical rates is wrong.
If you read more than that in the posts – many were admittedly biting – then I will have to question your neutral status in this debate.
Similarly is their assumption of max tsunami heights given Japan's previous experience.
It would help if you could elaborate on this with some authoritative studies and not just pop science links which claim in the 1800 hundreds there was a 30-40-50 meter high tsunami - I really wonder who was holding the measuring tape for such precise measures and what point on the coastline this "measurement" took place. (I do hope you realize the height of a tsunami depends on the topography of the coastline and can vary drastically within a few KM depending on the topology, shallowness or otherwise of the sea facing side etc).
Given the corruption endemic in India, and the political game of rewarding all major NSG countries with nuclear parks inspite of delays in their implementations(whether russian or french, or US) or design, I do have my doubts on the safety of these reactors, especially as there will be multiple high capacity reactors in one area. And the destructive nature of nuclear reactors as seen in the japanese accident does raise red flags for me.
I’m sorry the bolded portion above makes no sense. Can you name one country outside the NSG grouping that we are negotiating with for reactors (Russia, France and US) who could have given us the technology (GenIII), 1,000 MW plants and fuel?
And why do you think it’s a sign of corruption and/or a political game if India rewards the US, Russia and France for helping it to open the NSG door. Would you rather that we got our reactors from China like the Pakis?
At the end of the day each and every part of each and every reactor will go through a strict audit by both NPCIL as well as the nuclear authorities before they are selected and installed. I happen to have full confidence in Indian scientists of doing the correct thing. It could be that you don’t have the same confidence. But then that is a state of the mind rather than a factual position unless you can factually prove why you don’t trust them.
Maybe an independent nuclear regulator who will go through the design and validate each design before awarding them projects, with the projects themselves being awarded in a transparent manner, say an auction, where in both the design and cost ( and not diplomacy/political expediency) are given priority would infuse more confidence in people??
Forgive me but phrases like independent nuclear regulator raises too many NPA flags in my mind. Who would form part of this “independent” body could you tell me? And why precisely do they need to be independent and what would be their
expertise to validate each design? Why do you think the GoI and Indian janata need to look for independent “body” for this kind of expertise.
And I see that you’ve already convinced yourself that GoI can’t be trusted but presumably “independent” operators are impervious to pressure, inducements and hard sell that folks like GE can and will do.
I do understand the limitations of fossil fuel, and the relatively high imports that we face, as also the technological and financial limitations of wind /solar/tidal power projects. It is still a conflict in my mind as to the exact mix of various power projects we need to go for.
Boss this is no longer an academic exercise, at least for India. I would suggest you actually read the Stewart Brand interview.
Finally Fukushima was victim of a Black Swan even, a biggest ever (since they started measuring in the 1890s) earthquake felt by Japan and globally history’s second largest quake and a killer tsunami.
For a typical Indian nuclear park what kind of Black Swan events are you fearful of, that you have this queasiness in your mind. Mind you all Gen III reactors have far more safety features built in, including passive cooling. It’s good to fear but irrational fear is unfounded. For example I have an irrational fear of big dams, I wouldn’t want to live downstream from the Tehri dam. I may survive a nuclear meltdown by getting out of the area within 24 hours of it occurring but I wouldn’t get time to get out of the way from the wall of water which would flow out if the Tehri dam were to burst for any earthquake greater than 8.5 magnitude ( you can search the Indian nook thread to find out why this figure is important).
Even if one sees who threw the first punch, others continued their personal attacks /sarcastic comments page after page, where in almost every other post has sarcastic comments/innuendos about those who question the nuclear accident.
So you’ve only seen the sarcastic comments of the so-called pro-nuke group and none of the so-called anti-nuclear group? Well that can, in my mind, lead to only to two assumptions. You either haven’t followed this thread and the related Indian nuclear thread carefully as I and many others have; or one needs to reconsider your
neutral status.
JMT