The
Indian writer Shiv Viswanathan, who describes himself as a “social science
nomad,” published
a brilliant essay last year on the raging debate over the construction of
the Kudankulam
Nuclear Power Plant in Tamil Nadu, on the southern tip of India.
India
has been attempting to go through the same process of “development” that Japan
went through in the 1960s and 70s, but it seems to have learned nothing from
the mistakes of those who have gone down this path before. Like Japan, India
has adopted the energy megaprojects of a large state which feels it must crush
fishing villages and any other small community that stands in the way of
national goals.
Unfortunately
for state planners, Fukushima happened just as the Kudankulam project was nearing
completion. The locals rose up and mounted an opposition which dominated
national and international headlines. Japanese villagers had no precedents to
inform them about the nuclear juggernaut that was descending on them, but
Indians had the lessons of Chernobyl and Fukushima to make them wary.
Kudankulam Background from The Week:
Kudankulam Background from The Week:
- The agreement on the Kudankulam nuclear power project was signed in 1988 by Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. It hit the first roadblock when the Soviet Union broke up in 1991.
- Owing to the political developments in Russia, the construction of the plant started only in 2001.
- Concerns about the safety of the plant rose after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011 caused by an earthquake and tsunami. People of Kudankulam started mass protests against the plant.
- In November 2011, a panel constituted by the Union government, which did a survey of the safety features in the plant, said the reactors are safe.
- In February 2012, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh blamed some western NGOs for fuelling protests against the Kudankulam plant.
- In March 2012, an expert panel constituted by the Tamil Nadu government submitted a report in favour of commissioning the plant.
Shiv
Viswanathan wrote his essay in the form of a dream in which he conversed over
the meaning of Kudankulam and nuclear energy with Gandhi, the Dalai Lama and
various writers and philosophers. This is an unusual device because with it he
attributes to these people words that he only imagines they would speak, but
they are actually his own insights. He may have written it this way to honor
their influence on his thoughts, or perhaps he just wanted to be modest. Nonetheless,
I think Mr. Viswanathan should take full credit for them. The full essay can be
found at Dianuke.org,
but I’ve excerpted some of its gems below:
·
One cannot think of the modern state
without the baggage of necessary evils. Torture is a necessary
evil. Detention is a necessary evil. Suspension of rights is a necessary
evil. Genocide is a necessary evil. It is almost as if you cannot have a
social contract without necessary evils. The greater the evil, the bigger
the necessity.
·
I somehow want to belong to a world
where ethics is not a technical answer to a technical question.
·
Today politics has become a dismal
science and science a dismal politics.
·
Science has to return to
life. It needs a good laugh at the pomposity of clerks who run our world,
who titrate truth through pipettes.
·
Number is seen as a form of
assurance that creates certainty for the Hamlets in us.
·
Between facts and truth lies life.
Facts are seductive, apples of knowledge which lie.
·
…Niels Bohr… loved the logic of
quantum but still stuck a horse shoe in his lab door. When asked, he said,
“just in case…”
·
You need knowledge to say you do not
know. Not knowing is an essential form of knowledge… knowledge is not
hubris, it is a form of caring.
·
[Not knowing] is an ethics of
prudence, of modesty of a science that senses limits and converts them to
possibilities.
·
Nuclear Energy is a reason of state.
·
I think when Japan decided to shut
down the nuclear plants, it became a civilization again. Ethics and
aesthetics, honor and modesty became a weave. Japan realized the limits of
modernity.*
·
Admitting a mistake is the beginning
of a civilization.
·
A poker player, a good one, knows
when to stop. Scientists are good poker players. They are worried that God
might play dice with the world but man cannot.
·
No good insurance agent would insure
a nuclear plant. A scientist should at least know what an insurance
salesman does.
·
Scientists who join committees often
think like one.
·
Risk is a recognition that science
has changed. It is an acceptance of prudence, the recognition that you do not
know, the acknowledgement that a road accident and a nuclear explosion are
different, different in scale and quantity. You have to design differently
for both.
·
Pilgrimage should be a part of
scientific method. Every atomic scientist should visit Hiroshima and Chernobyl,
spend a few moments in meditation to understand what a hibakusha means, a
survivor of an atomic blast.
·
If a nuclear reactor is bad science,
what makes it good politics? Politicians. And scientists playing politicians…
Good scientists who were better nationalists. They left science to become
devotees of the nation state.
·
Nuclear energy feeds the state not a
people.
·
Civil society felt that energy is a
form of civics. Gargantuan energy leads to gargantuan states.
·
1984 should have been about a
nuclear plant.
·
No housewife would want a nuclear
plant. It breaks the Swadeshi rule. You cannot control it.
·
Nuclear Energy brings out the
theologian in us. And the feminist.
·
A housewife is a body of
knowledge. She knows what budget as a number means. Budget is a ratio of
limit to possibility. Budget is an ethics. Budgets are not just about
households. They are about planets and the cosmos. You need energy budgets
for the world.
·
A budget is also a theory of
suffering. A housewife suffers. She understands the everydayness of
suffering. She knows you cannot buy happiness cheap. Nuclear energy tries
that. It isolates the ethics and ecology of a housewife. See it as a
feminine logic not as a feminist ideology.
·
Nuclear energy was a failure of
language, of storytelling. It should have been a cosmo-comic, a story that
inhales huge sections of time. The time of nuclear energy runs to millions
of years and yet we telegraph it to a decade. When storytelling declines
and language suffers, you get symptoms like nuclear energy. There was no
poignancy, no pathos, no irony, and no regret. No guilt. Cost benefit
analysis and efficiency tells you little. A thermometer measures heat but
a Dante has to tell you about hell.
·
Aesop had more wisdom than all the
cost benefit analysts in the world. A hundred fables of nuclear energy
told with the endearing affability of the fox and the crow.
·
Kudankulam should not be a petition
to the state. It should have been a civilizational debate, summoning
Tagore or a Gandhi.
·
Kudankulam is a thought experiment
in the real time. It shows that if you begin with official science, modern
economics, and political theory, you will reach Kudankulam. Current
categories lead to the current crisis. Look at all the key terms at Kudankulam--energy, security, efficiency, development, progress, and cost. It is a don’t-use-me
dictionary of terms, a lethal thesaurus of our time. You cannot argue the
case in these terms.
·
Our protest movements are too
reverential. They enter the debate as supplicants, as petitioners when
actually we need a new Magna Carta, a freedom to dream and live differently.
·
Half of Delhi cannot identify
Kudankulam on a map. Our clerks will claim it enters history only as a nuclear
plant. For our bureaucrats, fishing villages have no history.
·
Our democracy breeds and thrives on
informal economies, on margins, on nomads, and slums and pastoral
groups. We pretend they do not exist and get irritated when they insist
that they do.
·
We
are a strange democracy which attributed thought only to experts. Fisherman can fish but not think. If
they do, then it must be foreign hand, an NGO conspiracy, and the dangers of
conversion. Delhi and Jayalalitha are convinced fisherman who think and
think about nuclear energy are alien creatures. A state which treats them
like planktons suddenly sees them as sharks.
·
Kudankulam needs to be fought
legally and philosophically. Kudankulam is the heart of India. It belongs
to all of us. Like Gandhi would advise, we fight it twice. As a village
struggle and as a drama of modernity.
·
We begin without consulting the
people. By the time, the displaced organize, the contractors are already
at work. Everyone argues that the half done has to be completed. The
contractors sound more patriotic as the project proceeds.
·
Security cannot deprive us of
rights. Security cannot threaten livelihood.
·
Saying no to nuclear energy is the
beginning of the new democracy.
·
Does democracy choose life or in its
indifference decide it is quietly genocidal?
·
History has shown that a
civilization begins to die when it ignores an ethical debate in a
village. The butterfly effects of history have already begun happening.
All
sections in italics by Shiv
Viswanathan.
*
Unfortunately, the writer seems to have been deceived by Japan's vague promise to abandon nuclear sometime in the future. In 2012, the government led by Prime Minister Noda made statements
about aiming to abandon nuclear energy by 2030, but soon waffled on the commitment.
The policy was never established as a firm national goal, and the present
government led by the LDP is determined to make use of the nuclear investment
as soon as its safety can be guaranteed, which logically means never, but for
the government means soon. Japan is far from being done with its nuclear
experiment.
Sources:
The
Times of India, Inferior parts being used in Kudankulam
Nuclear Power Plant: Top Scientist, April 7, 2013.
Garavi
Gujarat News, India
Court Rejects Plea to Block Nuclear Plant, September, 13, 2012.
Raminder
Kaur, “Nuclear
Power vs. People Power,” The
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, July, 2012.
Martin
Fackler, “Japan
to Begin Restarting Idled Nuclear Plants, Leader Says,” The New York Times,
February 28, 2013.
Joanna Sugden and Aditi Malhotra, "Anti-Nuclear Campaigners Down, Not Out," The Wall Street Journal, India Real Time, May 6, 2013.
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