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Wednesday, August 27, 2008


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Provisional Truth  |  Essays  |  Revised April 22, 2007  |  Originally Published November 2006

  Nuclear Power Necessity     

To say we have been shortsighted about nuclear power would be an insult to people with poor vision. Frankly we have been morons, which one day we likely will regret, and our love-affair with petroleum has blinded us to the disastrous ramifications of our energy policies in the last quarter-century.

Our dependence on oil – our addiction as the president rightly defined it – and mostly imported oil at that should be near the top of a very short list of threats to our national security in this new millennium, and should rank far above the possibility of terrorism and perhaps ahead of our exploding, unsustainable national debt and its growing ownership by foreign governments (but that is another story)..

Since 9/11, however, we have taught ourselves to live in fear of terrorists and the countless ways those evildoers may bring about the end of our “non-negotiable” way of life, instead of teaching ourselves how to end this madness of imported oil dependency.

In reality, for half a century we have had the means to reduce our energy dependence from those less-than friendly men who control the faraway sands under which the fix for our addiction lies and upon which the blood of our military sons and daughters, and innumerable innocent civilians, now flows.

Those men whom in only a generation we have enriched beyond the capacity to imagine, helping to finance, in a macabre way, our own destruction, as undoubtedly some of our American petro-dollars since 1973 ultimately found their way to the generous inheritance Osama bin Laden has so cruelly used to plot and act against us.

Yet we have done nothing in the span of that same generation to rekindle our faded interest in the benefits of nuclear power as a substitute for our oil addiction, and little to explore other clean, pollution-free sources of electricity.

While we have worsened our petroleum habit in the last three decades, other countries thoroughly have embraced the technology of the atom, notably France which derives nearly 80 percent of it's power from nuclear energy, and China and India which each are building more than 20 new nuclear facilities as if their civilizations depend upon them.

In contrast, only 14 percent of our electric power is generated by nuclear technology and the last U.S. nuclear plant brought on line was Watts Bar 1 in Tennessee in 1997. Work on that facility began in 1973, requiring a construction, licensing and testing span of 24 years to begin its return on investment. (The Great Pyramid of Giza, in case you forgot, required only 20 years to build.)

Construction of a sister-facility was 80 percent complete in 1988 when it was halted, officially due to “slower electricity demand,” (?!) but more likely from a combination of then-cheaper alternative fossil fuels and endless, costly legal challenges from anti-nuclear activists.

(Watts Bar 1, by the way, provides electricity for about 250,000 households from its location in the Chattanooga-Knoxville area. Had the second facility been completed, its combined power output could have covered the entire electrical needs of a million-plus-residents metropolitan area.)

Thanks to Three Mile Island in 1979, Chernobyl in 1987 and an amnesiac cheap-oil fiesta lasting most of 20 years from the mid-Eighties, no publicly held utility executive or political officeholder has had the courage to seriously discuss this nuclear option.

At least until the recent developments of $75-a-barrel oil and our foreign policy misadventures in the Middle East which has done nothing but further inflame hatred of us among those young Arab men eager to die killing infidels in the service of their deity.

It's said the best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago and the next best is today. Comparatively, the best time to have built a nuclear power plant would have been 1973, but today, no new nuclear plants are under construction anywhere in the United States and not one since 1978.

In the last year, however, no doubt prompted by spiraling petroleum prices, utilities in South Carolina, Mississippi and Alabama have announced they are considering additions to existing nuclear facilities and another power company is looking at building a new plant at a site in central Florida.

That's a start, but if they all began construction tomorrow, it probably would be 2026 at least, and likely longer, before we would begin to benefit from this carbon-dioxide-free source of energy.

To begin again a reasonable debate about nuclear energy we need to set aside for a moment our fear of the security issues. If, as a country we now are willing to use military troops and equipment to defend our southern border from the horrors of illegal immigration, we certainly could protect nuclear facilities, fuel movement and disposal with our military. That would be an entirely appropriate use of our forces, compared with patrolling our borders, given the nature of the consequences should we fail to provide adequate protection.

We also must put aside the fear of the safety issues – survival of our country, as a whole, ultimately should be more important. Plenty of Americans live near hurricane-prone coastlines, earthquake fault lines, dormant volcanoes and tornado alleys, and yet rationalize as “acceptable” those risks of property destruction and loss of life. In 50 years of public nuclear energy there never has been a civilian fatality in the United States from unsafe operation.

So the real issues -the facts - in this debate are these: 1) we now import far too much petroleum from unfriendly sources; 2) oil and natural gas needlessly are used today for electricity generation (about 20 percent of our electric power) and residential/industrial heating that otherwise could be provided by nuclear power; 3) our consumption of a quarter of the world's daily petroleum output (21 million barrels a day) is projected to increase to 30 million barrels a day in 20 years, and, more importantly, 4) there are not now, nor will there be in the next two decades, any suitable, scalable, liquid-fuel alternatives to oil sufficient to sustain our free-wheeling, automobile-dependent lifestyle and consumer economy.

Not hydrogen, not used French-fry oil and certainly not ethanol. In fact, we could appropriate the entire U.S. corn crop for automobile ethanol and the entire soybean crop for bio-diesel, and together they hardly would make a dent in our current, much less future, petroleum demand: only 12 percent of fuel demand for autos and 6 percent for diesel could be satisfied by diverting the entire yearly crops. Clearly ethanol and bio-diesel are not, and never will be, the happy-motoring panaceas we are being led to believe.

Which brings us back to our now nearly desperate, yet almost universally unrecognized, need for pollution-free electricity generating and heating alternatives like nuclear power (and wind, and hydro, and geothermal) which would allow us to concentrate all oil and natural gas products for other uses.

Recently I read an obituary of 89-year-old Carrie Dickerson, of Claremore, OK, which detailed her 1973 campaign to prevent construction of a nuclear power plant in the eastern part of the state by Public Service Company of Oklahoma.

“She did not want to see Oklahoma contaminated with something so deadly as nuclear energy,” according to a long-time friend quoted in the story.

At the end of her successful, nine-year bid to prevent the plant's construction, selling her farm in the process to finance her legal challenges, Dickerson was quoted as saying “our children won't have that legacy to live with” perhaps in reference to her perception of the many, yet not insurmountable, risks of nuclear power.

Mrs. Dickerson didn't stop there. As recently as 2002, she protested the movement of nuclear fuel through Oklahoma. She lived in fear such shipments, or a functioning nuclear power plant, would “attract terrorists,” the story mentioned.

“My neighbors and all Oklahomans don't need to be taught the terrorism lesson a third time,” she said, referring to the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 and the 2001 terrorist attack on New York and Washington, DC. Interstate shipments of nuclear fuel were “a terrorist's dream,” she believed.

Her obituary saddened me, not only because of her death, but also, with all due respect, because of the unfortunate millstone she and others similarly obsessed with preventing nuclear power have hung around our collective necks. The road to our current energy addiction and insanity, however, no doubt was paved with the good intentions of the many, including Mrs. Dickerson, who never could have foreseen the extent of our now precarious situation.

Perhaps some day her descendants – yours and mine too – may rue her admirable tenacity and that of the many others who joined her cause in Oklahoma and around the nation in the Seventies and Eighties.

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     Once we thought the
        earth was flat -
     What of that?

     It was just as globos then
     Under believing men

      As our later folks have
        found it,
     By success in running
        round it;

     What we think may
        guide our acts,
     But it does not alter facts.

   Charlotte Perkins Gilman
            (1860-1935)

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