Is nuclear power the answer for Bangladesh?

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“Is nuclear power the answer for Bangladesh?”
http://www.yourcommonwealth.org/2013/07/19/is-nuclear-power-the-answer-forbangladesh/
Bangladesh is looking at nuclear power to solve its electricity needs, but Mehzabin Ahmed,
29, a Commonwealth Correspondent from Dhaka, Bangladesh, argues that disasters,
environmental impact and the trend in Europe are reasons to re-think that option.
2011. I remember monitoring the news every hour, anxious about what was going on with the
Fukushima nuclear power plant meltdown in Japan.
I was worried about a land and people, half the world away, whom I have never met. But today,
similar troubles seem to be knocking right at my doorsteps.
While I was too young to grasp the horrendous magnitude of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in
1986, the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster resulting from a 9.0 magnitude earthquake and
tsunami in Japan in 2011 quite changed my perspectives towards nuclear power plants.
Today, developed countries like Germany, Switzerland, and Japan are considering phase-out
plans for their nuclear power stations. While on the other corner of the world, my beloved lowtech Bangladesh is contracting for nuclear power plants in Rooppur, along the river Padma.
Switzerland and Spain have also banned the construction of new nuclear reactors, while solar
and wind power is gaining over nuclear power in China.
While some may argue we need electricity for development, why not use modern technology to
acquire it? I lay anxious as to whether or not we as a country are prepared and capacitated to
handle such technology.
Does Bangladesh have the technical expertise or skilled manpower to undertake such a complex
and high tech project? Do we have the industrial infrastructure and the transport system to handle
radioactive waste management?
Critics also argue that the site at Rooppur was chosen more than 50 years ago for a ten MWe
prototype nuclear power plant on purely political grounds by the then-Pakistani Junta in 1961.
No site selection procedure or environmental impact assessment has been conducted since then
to choose this same site for two 1,000 MWe units today.
On the other hand, the River Padma is now heavily silted due to extraction of as much as 75 per
cent of its water during the lean summer months by India, using Farakka Barrage, only 40 km
upstream of the proposed site. The remaining amount of water is thus quite inadequate to meet
the plant cooling requirement for even one 1,000 MWe plant.
Safety concerns are further raised as the Bangladesh government is acquiring a VVER-1000
reactor for this nuclear plant from Russia. Countries had to agree to decommission VVER-400
and VVER-1000 reactors before being allowed to join the European Union. Opponents also
question that if we really have to adapt nuclear technology, why not use VVER-1200 or VVER1500 or even ACPR 1000 (used in China) technology to minimize the risk?
Is there really no safer and more viable method for acquiring the electricity we need other than at
the cost of risking a nuclear mayhem at Rooppur? Is there really no alternative to the coal
powered plants, set to be installed at the heart of our Sunderbans, the world’s largest mangrove
forest?
We may be facing an energy crisis at our country, but are short-sighted quick fixes the answers
to our problems?
It is however noteworthy that Bangladesh recently proudly celebrated the installation of two
million solar home systems by rural consumers, through the hard work of our Infrastructure
Development Company Limited (IDCOL). Perhaps, we should consider looking at investing
further in such safer and more environmentally friendly renewable energy systems in a larger
industrial as well as urban scale.
Side by side, we should also look into reducing duties and taxes on import and installation of
solar panels, and other sources of renewable energies to enable conditions for a green economy.
It is also about time we started planning for the long term development of our country, making
our position on possible impacts on our environment and the climate non-negotiable.
- See more at: http://www.yourcommonwealth.org/2013/07/19/is-nuclear-power-the-answer-forbangladesh/#sthash.3PaqWTJV.dpuf
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