When
the story of the Fukushima catastrophe was told, one of the evident lessons
learned was that the “nuclear village” of Japan was an insular rats’ nest of
incestuous relations between power utilities, workers’ unions, professional
organizations, advertising agencies, media, academics, journalists, bureaucrats
and political parties. Even the judiciary was on board, having sided with the
nuclear industry and national energy policy in numerous lawsuits brought by
citizens’ groups that tried to raise the alarm about the potential for an
unprecedented earthquake-tsunami-meltdown syndrome.
In
2009 the opposition Democratic Party of Japan came to power, but they too were
pro-nuclear because of the support they had from power plant workers’ unions. Japan Press Weekly reported,
“Donations
to the DPJ and its lawmakers come not only from nuclear-related corporations
but also from pro-business labor unions. The pro-business Japan Trade
Union Confederation (Rengo) affiliated-Federation of Electric Power Related
Industry Workers’ Unions of Japan (Denryoku Soren) and its member unions give
donations to the DPJ.”
It
was only after the meltdowns that Prime Minister Naoto Kan made his conversion
to being anti-nuclear, while his successor from the same party remained
pro-nuclear.
I
use the word “union” above loosely because nuclear workers in Japan seem to have
never had anything resembling a healthy oppositional relationship with management.
None of these worker unions threatened action over safety issues, or fought for
equal benefits for sub-contracted labor that was always stuck with the dirty
and dangerous jobs. The unions and professional organizations recognized that
they had common interests with their employers, and when disaster struck, they
had been playing along obediently for a long time. It was common knowledge to
everyone working in the Fukushima Daiichi plant that the sea wall wasn’t high
enough, yet management didn’t have to worry that there would ever be job action
over the issue.
These
considerations make me wonder why Bruce Power Limited Partnership (Ontario, Canada), operator of the
world’s largest nuclear power station on the shores of Lake Huron, needs to
have the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System as a major partner, and The Society of Energy Professionals and the Power
Workers’ Union as minor
partners. The former has a 1.2% share, and the latter has a 4% share. If
regulators and politicians aren't allowed to have investments in the industries
that they oversee, why is it all right for staff in a power plant to have a similar
conflict of interest?
It
is easy to predict the answer given by the company. This investment should create
an incentive for workers to care about the long-term viability and safety of
the power plant. They would never dare overlook a safety issue that might later
lead to scandal or a regulator shutting down operations, would they?
In
spite of this theoretical positive incentive, there is another one working to
negate it. Because of the workers’ investment in the company, anyone who might
otherwise be tempted to blow the whistle on a safety concern now has a reason
to hesitate. Speaking up might cause the plant to close down for a while and
have a bad quarter, or if it’s a serious problem, it might lead to a permanent
shutdown.
It’s
bad enough that one’s job security is often the reason to ignore safety
concerns, so it is difficult to understand why an additional conflict has to be
added to the organizational structure. The history of industrial accidents and
scandals shows that the person who brings problems to public attention is often
the whistleblower who had knowledge of day-to-day operations. The people who
have the official responsibility for guaranteeing safety are more famous for the
hazards they overlooked.
The
above criticism of a weakness in the organizational structure is not a
criticism of the many individuals in the nuclear industry and regulatory bodies
who work very diligently and ensure safety. Nothing horrible has happened (in Ontario), so they must
be doing many things right that the public never notices. In places with a
good safety culture workers are taught to question a superior’s orders if they
seem to be violations of safety, and they are explicitly trained not to give
in to the temptation of letting mishaps go unreported, or altering records in
the hope that regulators won’t find out. In light of how much has been done to
improve institutional safety culture in recent years, it is just strange that
the partnership arrangement at Bruce is not considered a problem.
The
entities that have the larger interests in the Bruce Power Limited Partnership (Cameco
Corporation, TransCanada Corporation* and BPC Generation Infrastructure
Trust,** each with 31.6%) have obvious incentives to get the workers’ groups on
board. It’s not as if they were utterly incapable of finding investors to buy
the last 5.2% share of ownership. The important thing was to make sure that
everyone working at the plant was co-opted.
This
blog has pointed to no evidence of safety lapses at Bruce Power, but it does
pose an important hypothetical question. If a senior engineer came to feel that
management was refusing to address serious safety concerns, would he speak out,
or would he worry about the consequences a shutdown would have on his retirement
plan?
* Bruce Power proudly boasts of its contribution to reducing carbon
emissions, but the major partner, Transcanada
Corporation, is primarily involved in the oil industry, most notoriously
the Keystone XL pipeline that will send tar sands oil from Alberta to the American
refineries. If the company had a principled stance that nuclear was a solution to global warming, it would not accept members of the oil industry as partners.
** BPC
Generation Infrastructure Trust was established by the Ontario Municipal
Employees Retirement System specifically as a way to hold a major stake in
Bruce Power. This partnership establishes grassroots support for nuclear power,
but such support can only be in the form of financial interest. The partnership
also guarantees that the support is a political issue. The sudden devaluation
of civil servants’ retirement funds can quickly become a political crisis, thus
support for nuclear energy has been woven into the social fabric of the
province. Like Japan, Ontario has its own nuclear village. Support has been
constructed so that it is not based on a rational or principled evaluation by
the public of nuclear energy’s merits and demerits.
Sources:
“DPJ’s cozy
ties with Nuclear-related companies and unions affect resumption of Nuclear Power
Plant,” Japan Press Weekly, April
18, 2012.
Roger
Pulvers, “Citizens’
lack of resolve leaves nuclear door wide open for next disaster,” The Japan Times, February 3, 2103.
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