Since a number of commentators, who are presumably not writers of
Lifafa articles and are (again presumably) not
shills, have commented on the US Price-Anderson Act and cited it as a sort of benchmark, I think it would be right if we had a look at the Act itself.
The Price-Anderson Act
Some random quotes:
The main purpose of the Price-Anderson Act is to ensure the availability of a large pool of funds
(currently about $10 billion) to provide prompt and orderly compensation of members of the
public who incur damages from a nuclear or radiological incident no matter who might be liable.
The Act provides "omnibus" coverage, that is, the same protection available for a covered
licensee or contractor extends through indemnification to any persons who may be legally liable,
regardless of their identity or relationship to the licensed activity. Because the Act channels the
obligation to pay compensation for damages, a claimant need not sue several parties but can
bring its claim to the licensee or contractor.
Power reactor licensees are required to have the maximum level of primary insurance available
from private sources ( currently $300 million) and to contribute up to $95.8 million per unit to a
secondary insurance pool, payable in annual installments of $15 million or less, and subject to
adjustments for inflation at five-year intervals. The combined primary and secondary insurance
coverage now totals over $10 billion.
The Price-Anderson Act motivated the private insurance industry to develop a means by which
nuclear power plant operators could meet their financial protection responsibilities. Pooling
provides a way to secure large amounts of insurance capacity by spreading the risks over a large
number of insurance companies. The American Nuclear Insurers (ANI), which currently writes
all nuclear liability policies, retains about one third of the liability exposure under each policy
and cedes the remaining two thirds to insurers around the world.
In the 43 years of Price-Anderson protection, the nuclear insurance pools have paid a total of
$151 million for claims. The Department of Energy has paid about $65 million during this
same period.
The Three Mile Island accident on March 28, 1979 provides a good example of how the Price-
Anderson Act provisions work. Representatives of the insurance pools arrived in Harrisburg,
Pa, the day after the accident and a local office was established on March 31. Advertisements
were placed in local newspapers. The insurance paid for the living expenses of families who
decided to evacuate, although evacuation was not ordered. On the first day of operations, the
office made payments of almost $12,000. By April 2, the pools had advanced funds to 2400
persons. The payments increased daily and reached a per day peak of $167,286 on April 9. A
total of about $1.2 million in evacuation claims were paid to 3170 claimants. The pools also
paid over $92,000 in lost wage claims to 636 individuals.
Following the TMI-2 accident, numerous lawsuits were filed in State and Federal courts in
Pennsylvania, alleging various injuries and property damages. These suits were consolidated
into one suit before the Federal District Court in Harrisburg. In September 1981, a settlement
agreement was signed, under which the insurance pools paid into a court-managed fund $20
million for economic harm to businesses and individuals within 25 miles of the plant and $5
million for the establishment of a public health fund in the area.
Although no health damages from the accident were substantiated, payments to more people took
place in the following years amounting to a total of more than $70 million through 1997 ($42
million in indemnity settlements and $28 million in expenses). Payments were all from the
primary insurance coverage and funds from the secondary insurance were not needed.
As Arnab pointed out earlier this is what BC says:
Under Clause 6, the maximum liability of the operator and the government combined has been set at “the rupee equivalent of 300 million special drawing rights (SDRs),” or Rs.2,087 crore ($458 million) — 23 times lower than what is provided under the equivalent U.S. law, the controversial Price-Anderson Act (labelled “Half-Price Anderson” by critics). Of this, the total liability of the operator has been limited to Rs.500 crore ($109 million). The Central government will be liable for damages in excess of Rs.500 crore but only up to Rs.2,087 crore.
Is BC's reading of the US Act right?