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Analysis Last Updated: Aug 3rd, 2010 - 00:35:13


Rethinking security in the new nuclear age
By Andrew MacKillop
Online Journal Contributing Writer


Aug 3, 2010, 00:23

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The most basic read out from what the nuclear industrial lobby calls The Nuclear Renaissance is that national security -- even the concept or present reality of nation-states -- has less and less credibility, when we make a rational analysis of the facts.

The real strategic role of civil nuclear power, which in �a few screwdriver turns� can enable atomic weapons, is clear. Increasing numbers of civil reactors, fuel fabrication and reprocessing plants, waste fuel centres and �plutonium repositories� create such large volumes and quantities of nuclear materials that no country with sizeable reactors has any real strategic military defence. Conventional war, like the conventional nation-states that make or �wage� war, are made less and less credible by the new nuclear threat, due to certain or assured massive or total destruction and economic damage when or if large reactors and nuclear installations are hit.

The civil nuclear power system is a giant Chernobyl-type dirty bomb in a steadily rising number of countries. Only a few types of reactor, especially underground or �hardened� military reactors can resist a wide-body airplane crashing on them. Almost none will resist entirely conventional ballistic missiles, conventional artillery shells, conventional anti-tank and anti-building munitions, and infantry launched or drone launched missiles. They will also not resist worst-case seismic damage, as well as a number of other serious natural disaster conditions. Concerning national security however, while the concept of defensible nation states continues to exist, the threat of conventional military attack on large-sized civil nuclear installations and facilities destroys any potential of �total security.� This is whatever political leaders, opinion formers and public opinion might like to believe, for example in continuing to believe the NPT (anti-proliferation treaty) provides an effective safety net, or shield against nuclear weapons proliferation.

We are presently promised, or threatened by the so-called Nuclear Renaissance. This is shorthand for a return to the rates of reactor orders and completions closer to those of the nuclear industry�s previous heydays and high times, during the late 1970s and early 1980s. In that oil shock and aftermath decade, for nearly 10 years, an average of one new reactor came on line every 17 days.

Today, as in those oil shocked days, nuclear power is assiduously promoted as a fast track to energy independence for oil and energy importer nations -- who now supposedly fear global warming from burning fossil fuels almost as much as paying for imports of foreign oil. To be sure, the argument that energy security is radically improved by �going nuclear� is curious given the massive dependence on uranium imports for nearly all nations with sizeable civil nuclear power systems, perhaps because uranium exporter countries are not, or not yet seen as �regimes supporting terror,� and not yet accused of charging too much for their uranium exports. This may however change quite soon, since another big spike in uranium prices is either likely or certain.

Proliferating dirty bombs

The Nuclear Renaissance could or might double the world�s current civil nuclear reactor �fleet� to more than 850 in up to 50 or more countries, by around 2040, based on some estimates. It will almost certainly raise reactor numbers to well above 500 in up to 42 countries by 2020 on current trends and forecasts, but some nuclear dreamers and fantasists go even further. Indian nuclear power administrators, for example, include planners who imagine in print that the national reactor �fleet� by around 2040 could attain a total power capacity of more than 400 GW -- to compare with the world�s present total 373 GW from 439 reactors in 31 countries, using IAEA data.

Nuclear materials inventories, in particular plutonium and other high-activity, chemically toxic long-lived radionuclides are obviously produced in direct proportion to the number of reactors in service. Estimates by the US Federation of Scientists (FAS) suggest the world�s current 439 civil reactor �fleet� (excluding military reactors) generates or produces about 25 tons of plutonium each year. The atom bomb dropped on Nagasaki (Fat Man), we can note, used about 10 kilograms of plutonium.

While the nuclear lobby talks about �renaissance,� this Sorceror�s Apprentice story has an evident downside closely fitting the children�s fairy tale or fable. The critical need to produce enough fuel for the ever-growing world reactor �fleet,� from geologically restricted world resources of uranium requires almost magical solutions. One of these fantasy solutions, still in favour with the nuclear lobby despite their total commercial failure for more than 40 years, is a hypothetical �fleet� of Fast Breeder Reactors (FBRs).

When or if FBRs return to center-stage, plutonium inventories, as well as quantities of other very high level radionuclides will ratchet up very fast, or to use military parlance will �proliferate.� FBRs would use the high level wastes from conventional reactors to �produce more fuel than they consume.� Doing this, the radioactive and chemically toxic fuel they produce would either have to be stored, or used. If used in other FBRs, even more would be produced than consumed, enabling or making necessary the construction of yet more conventional reactors, to �burn up� this FBR-route reprocessed fuel. Under any dependent scenario for the FBR-route to escaping a very serious and easily-predictable world uranium fuel supply pinch, world stocks of extremely dangerous �dirt bomb� materials will radically increase, with each larger-sized FBR probably needing 50 tons, or more of plutonium to start operating.

Unintended consequences

Liberated from the uranium fuel supply pinch, nuclear boomers can dream in print and out loud that they have the Final Solution to all energy limits or fuel shortages of any kind, that would or could bar mankind�s route to Universal Prosperity. This essentially cornucopian dream is -- extremely ironically -- the result of a fusion of supposedly total opposite world views. In the deep Cold War period of extreme American defence of capitalism, and extreme Soviet defence of totalitarian state control, through the 40 years from the late 1940s until 1989, both regimes placed all their military faith in nuclear weapons. Both also linked civil and military nuclear, then fuzed them into a nuclear technological utopia. This ideology-spanning facet of the �all nuclear solution,� joining civil and military in a seamless web makes it unsurprising that China and India, and other big states, or would-be big states are today fully embarked on the Nuclear Renaissance.

Certainly for the Big 5 UN Security Council �declared nuclear� weapons owning states, any pretence that civil nuclear, and military nuclear are not 100 percent linked and interdependent is simply a waste of time. All started their �nuclear story� with a feverish race to develop nuclear weapons, then made a �few screwdriver turns� to spin-off and start their civil nuclear systems. Despite this, by a strange form of mass schizophrenia among the political elites of these states, the reality of dirty bomb capability in each and every large sized reactor, anywhere on earth, is stoically denied.

Denied or not, this reality eats deep into the fond and false idea of �totally defendable� national territories, and the linked illusion of high-level, almost total national security. Far worse, this �permanent denial� of the functional interdependence of civil and military nuclear has very likely favoured the most proliferative-possible, most vulnerable-possible civil nuclear systems, both in the �old nuclear� countries, and in the �new nuclear� states. In both cases, the historic reality of international wars, started by one nation and fought against another nation, is obsolete. Any state or nation with sizeable nuclear installations on its home territory is vulnerable to devastating attack using entirely conventional, non-nuclear weapons of the type possessed by dozens of states and nations, today. This reality hides an even more dangerous one: who would or could �step in� during a civil war in a country with sizeable nuclear facilities, involving only national participants or communities, to prevent worst-case damage to its nuclear plants ?

If we ask the key question: �Can we be certain this reality is understood by our political elites and opinion formers who control the press and media ?� there is no sure answer.

The end of nations

The fully globalized economy is described by many writers, historians and analysts as a certain near-term future �death sentence� for the nation-state. Nuclear power proliferation can be presented as setting the exact same No Future end for �classic nation states� simply because the war-making �prerogative,� or historical trend and instinct of nation states disappears. While the possession of large nuclear reactors and facilities can serve as a �kamikaze last-ditch� defence strategy against military invasion and occupation, they also serve as pre-positioned enemy weapons for hostile opponents not necessarily wanting to invade and occupy.

The �asymmetric� potential is almost open-ended, which to be sure should generate new life for the already tired �Bin Laden industry� of technology-and-terror potboiler books, films and docudramas. Much worse however is the reality of the civil nuclear threat. This is already massive and increases each day that existing reactors continue operating, new reactor building projects are started, plutonium is produced, and wastes accumulate.

Ceasing and abandoning the national illusion, and national security illusion is the next and massive step unless deciders pursue their classic head-in-sand route, and the civil nuclear overkill threat is simply ignored and denied for another day. That is until we wake up to hear the �incredible and fantastic� worst case has happened, in the shape of purposeful military attack on large civil nuclear installations, either through international war, or national civil war.

Copyright � 2010 Andrew MacKillop

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