There
ought to be a word for the kind of truth that is really just an oft-repeated
lie. This kind of truth starts off as a bald-faced lie, then goes through a
tortuous digestive process in the national psyche, accompanied by lots of
cramps and gaseous emanations until it finally emerges as what should be called
a truthturd. It then sprouts some lovely turd blossoms that fool enough people
into accepting its virtue.
Cases
in point: the Tokyo gubernatorial election of February 10th, 2014, and the
notion that Japan is doomed to economic failure without nuclear power.
http://www.claybennett.com/ |
The
election was seen as a sort of referendum on nuclear energy in Japan, and the
pro-nuclear candidate “won” with a voter turnout that was less than 50% and
less than a majority of those votes. The two anti-nuclear candidates had an
almost equal number of votes as the “winner.” In a truly democratic system, the
result would be thrown out and the election redone until the turnout was high
enough to be considered a real reflection of the will of citizens. You could
say the citizens were lazy and got the government they deserve, but Tokyo had
just been hit with its worst snowfall in decades the night before. In addition,
an intelligently designed electoral system would require a runoff to decide a
winner with a majority of votes.
After
the election results were in, TEPCO coincidentally announced a few days later that
its data on some of Fukushima Daiichi’s radioactive
leaks had been underestimated by half.
Then it turned out that data on 167 samples dated as long ago as
2011 were underestimated
because the instruments used maxed out below the actual levels. As was the case
with the 2012 national election and the IOC decision on the 2020 Olympics,
TEPCO held the bad news so as to not influence political decisions that might
have unwelcome consequences for the company.
Also coming right after the election result was known, the press was full of stories about
how the national government is now going to press ahead with nuclear reactor
restarts by next summer. Everyone, including the journalists regurgitating the
government line, seems to have forgotten that Japan now has a new and improved
nuclear regulator that is, supposedly, totally independent of politics. Thus,
nothing can be restarted if the NRA objects to restarts, and no politician
could possibly pass judgment on things like seismic safety, the reliability of
old infrastructure, re-education of personnel, or evacuation plans. Right?
The Yomiuri Shimbun ran a story that might as well have been a
government press release. It reported, “The government aims to resume
operations of nuclear power plants under the plan, after [NOT IF] their safety
is confirmed by the ongoing screenings of the Nuclear Regulation Authority.” It is reported like a fait accompli, with the NRA and local prefectural approval assumed
as a sure thing.
It
must be kept in mind that the Yomiuri was the propaganda arm of the Japanese
and American government in the 1950s when President Eisenhower was pushing
“atoms for peace” and exports of American nuclear power technology. Nothing has
changed. The Yomiuri report was bad enough, but that is not to say that it was
much different than others. The New York Times went
along for the ride as well.
The
media, domestic and foreign, has dutifully reported the lie that Japan’s
economy is getting hammered by the extra fossil fuel that electric utilities
have to import now that their reactors are off. They fail to report that in the
past nuclear accounted for only 20-30% of electricity production, and that the
majority of fossil fuel imported is used for other purposes besides generating
electricity (transport, industrial uses, heating, cooking). The data shows that
the jump in total fossil fuel imports after the nuclear shutdown was about
10-15%, and this is an amount that could be cut with conservation, efficiency
gains, and investment in renewables. Furthermore, because of demographics, the
loss of dominance in technology exports, and jobs moving to cheaper countries,
the economy was moving in a bad direction a long time before the 2011 disaster.
It is disingenuous to now blame everything on the loss of nuclear power.
The
mainstream view also talks about uranium as if it were a free domestic
resource. If we consider energy created by unit of cost, uranium does have an
advantage over fossil fuel. However, it still has a significant cost and it has
to be imported, which means it doesn’t provide energy security, and it hurts
the balance of trade just like fossil fuel imports. Besides the cost of
uranium, nuclear energy has huge costs arising from construction,
de-construction, insurance, security, and safety assurance. Building and
operating a gas power plant amounts a fraction of the cost. Even though the
continual cost of importing fuel is a burden, it is at least a cost that is
born in the present and not foisted on future generations.
Consumers
and businesses are supposed to be begging for the reactors to be turned back on
because electric utilities are going to charge 20% more now, and this,
apparently, is all because of the nuclear shutdown. Curiously, the 20% matches
the 20% devaluation of the yen since Shinzo Abe introduced his “Abenomics,”
which of course made imported fuel that much more expensive. And really, is the
public supposed to believe that electricity cost is going to come down again
after the nuclear reactors are switched back on? Is the Abe government that
stupid? Do they think the public is that stupid? Or is the public really that
stupid?
The
cost of fossil fuel is actually only one of the many daunting costs that
electric utilities are faced with. All of the nuclear power plants are being
forced to meet new safety requirements. The upgrades are costly, and for some
power plants they will be too costly, so safe operation will be deemed
impossible. The Hamaoka NPP has built a new seawall as defense against tsunamis
at a cost of $1.8 billion, yet there is still the possibility that the
regulator will refuse to allow its restart. When the NRA or local governments
refuse to allow restarts, utilities will have to pay for decommissioning costs.
Then of course, there is Fukushima Daiichi, where the cleanup and compensation
costs are growing all the time. Nuclear waste disposal, and the cost of future
accidents are not even put into the calculation.
The
government and the utilities are being utterly deceptive in failing to disclose
how these costs make nuclear-generated electricity much more expensive than
what consumers pay now in their utility bills, even with the rate increase
included. It seems to be assumed that the government has paid and will always
pay for the devastating costs of nuclear energy through general revenue. And
general revenue is 50% borrowed money these days, so there's not much difference from the attitude toward nuclear waste. It only looks cheap because the deciders who
are alive now will be dead in twenty years and not have to pay the price. The
true costs–financial, ecological and moral–have been completely obscured.
The
blog Peace
and Freedom has some insightful quotes from Japanese officials who are
propagating the fear of a nuclear shutdown, but the author failed to critically
analyze the assumptions behind them. According to the Institute of Energy
Economics in Japan, “… fossil-fuel imports would cause an outflow of national
wealth equivalent to 0.6 percent of Japan’s gross domestic product.” The
question to ask is how this tiny figure is supposed to be catastrophic, when it
is well understood that energy consumption is an indicator of domestic economic
activity and resources being turned into value-added goods that are exported. Fossil fuel imports have been the very basis of Japan’s economic miracle. If
Japan can no longer work its manufacturing and exporting magic, it’s a sign of
a deeper problem with creativity, innovation and competitiveness. It has
nothing to do with nuclear energy.
Elsewhere
in the article, Hirohide Hirai, director of policy evaluation and public
relations at the Economy, Trade, and Industry Ministry, is quoted as saying, “The
reliance on the hydrocarbons makes Japan vulnerable from the energy-security
perspective. You have to pay a lot, a lot, a lot for LNG imports. If something
happens in the Strait of Hormuz today, that makes—oh, I don’t want to think
about it.”
Yes,
indeed, the world is a scary place. Why not repeat “a lot” just a few more
times for us? Mr. Hirai’s horror story could give us all chills on a summer
night and lessen the need of air conditioners. One can shudder and get scared
about various man-made and natural disasters that would leave populations
freezing in the dark, but invoking this “Strait of Hormuz” bogey man is an
absurd way to debate energy policy. For one thing, Japan has other supply lines
from Russia, North America and Indonesia. And, yes, Japan is very vulnerable to
energy supply shocks, as many nations are. That’s just a part of the bargain a
nation makes if it doesn’t want to have an 18th century lifestyle. Furthermore,
even if every nuclear power plant in the country were operating, the loss of fossil
fuel supplies would be more crippling to the economy than the loss of nuclear
power. Fossil fuel is the only source of energy for airplanes, trucks and cars,
most homes use it for heat and cooking, and it has always supplied (even at the
peak of nuclear generation) about 60% of electricity.
The
claim that nuclear energy is cheap, green and essential is an utter falsehood,
perpetuated by some people who know it, and by others who are too dim to
understand the nature of the monster they have created. Who in his right mind
in this land of earthquakes and volcanoes, after all that has happened at
Fukushima Daiichi, would switch on another nuclear reactor? It's time for everyone to stop and listen to the voices from Chernobyl, like the one
who said, “They
grabbed God by the beard, and now he’s laughing, but we’re the ones who pay for it.”
Sources:
“10 N-reactor restarts sought by
summer.” The Yomiuri Shimbun. February 10, 2014. http://the-japan-news.com/news/article/0001019352.
Martin
Fackler. “Nuclear
Issue in Limbo as Indecision Grips Japan.” The New York Times. February 11, 2014. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/12/world/asia/nuclear-issue-in-limbo-as-indecision-grips-japan.html.
“More
Record High Radiation Readings at Fukushima Daiichi.” SimplyInfo. February 13, 2014. http://www.fukuleaks.org/web/?p=12348.
Svetlana
Alexievich. Voices from Chernobyl: The
Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster (1997, published in English by Picador
in 2006).
John E.
Carey (editor). “Why
Japan Can’t Quit Nuclear Power.” Peace
and Freedom: Policy and World Ideas. February 16, 2013. http://johnib.wordpress.com/2013/02/16/why-japan-cant-quit-nuclear-power/.
At times I get as good as Nihonjin about putting my head in the sand and refusing to think about the consequences of all this ... because how can any individual (or small collection of individuals trying to oppose the madness) have any effect anyway? and sometimes I have quixotic bursts of energy, trying to stop the idiocy of shops leaving doors wide open to let out the heat in winter and the cool in summer - does no one THINK? Well done anyway for documenting the idiocy - the first necessary step in trying to counter it.
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