If you agree that the India-Japan Nuclear Agreement is a bad idea, please put your name on the petition.
____________________
In late July and early August, a leading member of India’s Coalition for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament, Kumar Sundaram, visited several Japanese cities in order to speak to the mass media and Japanese citizens about the proposed Japan-India nuclear energy agreement. He timed his visit to Japan to precede that of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the end of August. Modi will meet with his Japanese counterpart in hopes of finalizing a deal to allow the purchase of vital components of nuclear power plants that are proposed or under construction.
____________________
In late July and early August, a leading member of India’s Coalition for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament, Kumar Sundaram, visited several Japanese cities in order to speak to the mass media and Japanese citizens about the proposed Japan-India nuclear energy agreement. He timed his visit to Japan to precede that of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the end of August. Modi will meet with his Japanese counterpart in hopes of finalizing a deal to allow the purchase of vital components of nuclear power plants that are proposed or under construction.
Mr. Sundaram wished to draw attention to
numerous problematic aspects of India’s nuclear energy ambitions, negative aspects
which the mass media, intellectuals and politicians have failed to criticize
sufficiently.
On July 31, Mr. Sundaram gave a press conference in
Tokyo at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan. During his hour at the
microphone, he gave a detailed explanation as to why he believes the plans for
nuclear energy development in India will lead to disastrous consequences for
both India and foreign countries. This report summarizes the information given
by Mr. Sundaram, with additional background information and commentary.
The Nuclear Energy --
Nuclear Weapons Connection
Since India tested its first nuclear weapon
in 1974, it has had pariah status as a nuclear power. Like Pakistan and Israel,
it possesses nuclear weapons but never signed the Non Proliferation Treaty
(NPT). In response to India’s first test of a nuclear weapon, the Nuclear
Suppliers Group was formed by Canada, West Germany, France, Japan, the Soviet
Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States in order to stop exports of
nuclear technology to countries that refused to sign onto the NPT. In 1998,
after another nuclear test, India faced further sanction, but the pressure
decreased after Western nations shifted their emphasis to “the war on terror.” At
the same time, their nuclear energy suppliers grew more interested in exporting
nuclear technology to developing nations, and the Indian market was too
tempting to ignore. During the G.W. Bush presidency, ways were found to skirt
around the problems with India’s status as an intransigent possessor of nuclear
weapons, and thus the US-India Civilian Nuclear Agreement came into force in
2008. This waiver made India the only known country with nuclear weapons which
is not a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) but is still permitted
to engage in nuclear commerce with the rest of the world.
In addition to the US deal, India now has
bilateral arrangements with France, Canada, Russia, Nigeria,
Kazakhstan, and Australia. The present push for a Japan-India agreement could be
seen as a multi-lateral effort that aims to facilitate nuclear deals for multinational
corporations.
The preferential treatment for India set an
obvious dangerous precedent. It signaled to other nations that there was a
double standard, and it suggested that if they too defy international
agreements to not develop nuclear weapons, they merely need to endure rogue
status until pragmatic considerations force other nations to legitimize their
nuclear power status. It signaled to China that the US was tacitly approving
India’s nuclear weapon status in order to have a strategic balance to China in
the region. It signaled the same to Pakistan, with the added message that its
political instability would prevent it from getting the same treatment as
India.
In spite of the opening for nuclear energy
created by the US-India Civilian Nuclear Agreement, there was still a drawback
in the works. The major American corporations that want to build India’s
reactors have become American-Japanese hybrids such as GE-Hitachi and
Westinghouse-Toshiba. Other corporations building plants in India are dependent
on parts from these companies. In order for construction to proceed, a
Japan-India deal is necessary, but traditionally Japan has taken a hard line
against nuclear weapons proliferation, the obvious reason being its status as
the only victim of nuclear weapons in an act of war.
The present Japanese government is willing
to abandon the strong stance on disarmament and non-proliferation and instead
just pay lip service to the issue, as it did this month with regard to the 69th
anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The
Times of India reported that on August 10th, the foreign ministers of India
and Japan, Sushma Swaraj and Fumio Kishida, met on the sidelines of the ASEAN Regional Forum to exchange what, to my skeptical eye, was no more than cynical
pieties regarding the Hiroshima memorial. The Times report played up the fact
that Kishida is from Hiroshima, as if that necessarily makes one sincere on
nuclear proliferation issues. Then it portrayed an Indian parliamentary
observance of silence for Hiroshima as a blessing by the people of both
countries for everything that the two nations are planning to do with regard to
nuclear energy development. After this brief ritual of mutual flattery, both
ministers emphasized it was time to cut to the chase, to finally sign a civilian nuclear trade deal, regardless of the numerous valid objections their own
citizens have.
No matter how much the Indian and Japanese
governments would like to pretend otherwise, nuclear weapons and nuclear energy
are inextricably linked, especially in South Asia. For India, the primary
motive for pursuing nuclear energy is to obtain legitimacy for its nuclear
weapons. In this pursuit, all other considerations have been ignored. The government
has not considered whether nuclear energy is worth pursuing in terms of its
social, environmental and economic costs.
Neglecting safety,
local opposition, environmental damage, economic viability, and the decline of
nuclear energy in developed nations
Mr. Sundaram pointed out that even among
various Indian government agencies the methods of developing nuclear energy
have not been unanimously approved. Official environmental reviews have raised strong
objections. Even among those who are, in general, supportive or undecided about
nuclear power have voiced objections about the methods and the scale of the nuclear
expansion. Nonetheless, diplomatic imperatives always sideline these concerns.
For example, after the Bhopal disaster,
laws were strengthened to make foreign corporations liable for the damage they
may cause, but these laws are now being rolled back in order to please the
corporations that are building nuclear reactors. The citizens’ right to
information is being curtailed for the benefit of foreign corporations as well.
The comptroller and auditor general raised severe concerns about nuclear
regulation, and secretaries from eight ministries said they are not in a
position to deal with a nuclear emergency. Local opposition to plant
construction has been brutally oppressed, with trumped up charges of vandalism
and violence laid on peaceful protesters. Five thousand people have been
charged with sedition because the government now construes opposition to
nuclear energy as treason. Nonetheless, the protests continue. Security
agencies now keep files on organizations such as the Coalition for Nuclear
Peace and Disarmament (CNDP), Greenpeace, and individual activists (including
Mr. Sundaram) because they are defined as threats to national economic security.
If they obtain funding or cooperate in any way with groups and activists
abroad, they are viewed all the more as traitors.
During the question period after the news
conference, I asked Mr. Sundaram to speak about the front end and back end of
the nuclear cycle; that is, to describe India’s record in dealing with safety
and environmental issues in uranium mining and processing, and issues in the disposal
of nuclear waste. He said there have been significant health and environmental
impacts from mining, all documented by independent scientists, but the
government has continued with complete unaccountability. As for the waste
problem, the government is in “complete denial,” asserting even that there won’t
be any waste to worry about for another thirty years.
Mr. Sundaram concluded by emphasizing that
the pursuit of nuclear energy is an anachronism. India has been targeted by
multinational corporations who can no longer make profits from nuclear energy
in the countries where they built plants in the past. In this sense, India
might be the lynchpin that the global nuclear industry is depending on for its
survival. Indian elites are allowing themselves to be used in this way in order
to legitimize the nation’s status as a nuclear power, but they have failed to
consider whether it is necessary for any other reason. Since India has a
chronic trade deficit, these very expensive, high technology deals will be
financed by debt that the country cannot afford. Nuclear energy should be
opposed in India because it is an undemocratic, unsafe, uneconomic,
unaccountable expansion of a technology that will bring horrors and great costs
on the nation’s most vulnerable people.
Google has ceased its "Search Blogs" facility. makes it easier to fine mainstream "acceptable" news, but hard to find really insightful articles like this one.
ReplyDeleteIndia's conclusion of a proposed civilian nuclear power agreement with Japan remains in limbo given fallout from the damage to the Fukishima Daiichi nuclear power plant. On one hand, the disaster has hardened the position of the Japanese government and public regarding the dangers of nuclear power and renewed concerns over the need for more stringent compliance with international norms and rules on the proliferation of civilian nuclear technology. This has led to the persistence of restrictions on the supply of enrichment technology to India.
ReplyDelete