A modest
proposal for changing the conversation about nuclear proliferation: the standard
view of nuclear proliferation risk might be completely backwards
One
perennial aspect of the battle over nuclear energy is the question of
proliferation risk. Advocates of nuclear energy say that the spread of
nuclear power plants does not necessarily have to accelerate the spread of
nuclear weapons. Opponents say that this proliferation risk can never be
eliminated because any nation that gets a nuclear power plant will have the
potential to build nuclear weapons.
Could
it be that we have defined this problem in the wrong direction? After all,
seventy years into the nuclear age, the record shows that an unexpected thing
happened on the way to Armageddon. The feared nuclear war between the
superpowers never happened, and a nuclear weapon has never been accidentally
detonated, in spite of many nightmarish near misses and “broken arrow”
incidents. In contrast, nuclear power plants have a record of devastating
accidents, the most famous of which are Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and
Fukushima.
Of
course, deliberate weapons tests were crimes against the biosphere and the
marginalized ethnic groups who were downwind. Furthermore, the front end and
back end of the nuclear weapons industry have left a trail of accidents and
environmental contamination. I’m just leaving these issues aside here in order
to make a point about nuclear power plants. While the IAEA and the
international community were (and still are) preoccupied with what turned out
to be a failed attempt to stop weapons proliferation, the beginning of the end
of the Cold War came with the explosion of the Number 4 Reactor at Chernobyl.
Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 4 ruins, 1986 |
This was the occasion when it should have been
obvious to all that the proliferation risk goes in the other direction. Fukushima
should have been enough to drive the point home. The best reason to fight for
the abolition of nuclear weapons is that they present an unacceptable risk of
the proliferation of nuclear power plants. Just look at the historical record
of how these two technologies came to various countries.
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, 2011 |
The
bombs came first in 1945, then the nuclear power plants came a decade later under
the deceptive banner of “atoms for peace.” Now we have about 400 nuclear power
plants throughout the world, and each one of them is essentially a nuclear fuel
and nuclear waste production facility, with years of accumulated waste usually
sitting above ground in long-term storage. The recent failure at the disposal
site in New Mexico has cast doubt on underground disposal as a solution for
nuclear waste. Each power plant is a large dirty bomb in waiting. Each one could potentially cause a large-scale social
and ecological catastrophe if it were struck by a natural disaster or an act
of war or sabotage.
As
we look at the record of individual countries, we see that several have built power
plants under the cover of building a nuclear arsenal for deterrence and
self-defense. In the case of the USA, the USSR, China, France, and the UK, this
was the duplicitous strategy. Other countries like Canada, Germany, Japan, South
Korea, Switzerland, Sweden, Finland and many others were much bolder. They didn’t
even bother to express any peaceful intention of just wanting a deterrent. They
boldly went straight to nuclear power plants.
Israel
and North Korea are the only two countries that have nuclear weapons but no
nuclear power plants. They had the good sense to not trust themselves and tied
themselves to the mast as they sailed past the siren song promising cheap and
clean electricity. Pakistan has also been fairly restrained for a nation in
possession of nuclear weapons, having only two plants in operation. We could
call these three the axis of self-restraint. They have not let their nuclear
arsenals proliferate into dangerous fleets of nuclear reactors, and their
geopolitical circumstances make the reasons obvious. They have enough cause to take
seriously the possibility that hostile actors might target a nuclear power
plant as a way of dealing a blow that could be as calamitous as a nuclear detonation.
However,
there is no guarantee that these three shining examples of global leadership
will always be so sensible. A guarantee of safety could come only from the
hardening of a global taboo against the possession of nuclear weapons--not for
the usual reasons that everyone is rightly afraid of, but for the less acknowledged
reason that nuclear weapons pose an unacceptable risk of nuclear power plant
proliferation.
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