Author: A.P.J Abdul Kalam & Srijan Pal
Singh
Publication: The Hindu
Date: November 6, 2011
URL: http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/article2601471.ece
Every single atom in the universe carries
an unimaginably powerful battery within its heart, called the nucleus. This
form of energy, often called Type-1 fuel, is hundreds of thousands, if not
millions, of times more powerful than the conventional Type-0 fuels, which
are basically dead plants and animals existing in the form of coal, petroleum,
natural gas and other forms of fossil fuel. To put things in perspective,
imagine a kilometre-long train, with about 50 freight bogies, all fully laden
with the most typical fossil fuel - about 10,000 tonnes of coal. The same
amount of energy can be generated by 500 kgi of Type-1 fuel, naturally occurring
Uranium, enough to barely fill the boot of a small car. When the technology
is fully realised, one can do even better with naturally occurring Thorium,
in which case the material required would be much less, about 62.5 kg, or
even less according to some estimatesii, and thus enough to fit in a small
bagiii. (Note: 500 kg of naturally occurring Uranium would contain about 3.5
kg of Uranium-235 fuel.)
Energy and economy
Energy is the most fundamental requirement
of every society or nation as it progresses through the ladder of development.
Of course, once it reaches a relative degree of development, the energy demand
becomes more stable. There is a distinct and categorical correlation between
the energy consumption and income of a nation - each reinforcing the other.
Look around you: every step into progress comes with an addition of demand
for energy - cars, ships and aircraft to move, hospitals to give quality healthcare,
education, as it follows the model of e-connectivity, production of more and
better goods, irrigation for better farming. In fact, every element of our
lives is increasingly going to become energy-intensive - that is a necessary
prerequisite for development. This is clearly reflected in the average energy
consumption per person across nations - for instance, an average American
consumes more than 15 times the energy consumed by an average Indian (see
Figure 1)iv
Today, India finds itself going through a
phase of rapid ascent in economic empowerment. Industries are evolving at
a significantly higher rate since liberalisation. Our focus for this decade
will be on the development of key infrastructure and the uplifting of the
600,000 villages where 750 million people live, as vibrant engines of the
economy. In 2008, we crossed the trillion-dollar mark, and it took more than
six decades for us to reach that milestone. However, it is predicted that
the Indian economy will double again, to reach the $2-trillion mark by 2016,
and then again redouble, to reach the $4 trillion milestone by 2025v. All
this economic growth will need massive energy. It is predicted that the total
electricity demand will grow from the current 150,000 MW to at least over
950,000 MW by the year 2030vi - which will still be less than one-fourth of
the current U.S. per capita energy need. In fact, by 2050, in all likelihood
the demand could go even higher, and the per capita energy demand would be
equal to the current French or Russian figure of about 6000 W per capita.
Analysing the international scenario on nuclear
energy
So, will we allow an accident in Japan, in
a 40-year-old reactor at Fukushima, arising out of extreme natural stresses,
to derail our dreams to be an economically developed nation? When a few European
countries, particularly Germany, decide to phase out nuclear power, that should
not become a blanket argument to take a view against our nuclear programme.
A few things need to be put in context here.
The decision of Germany suits its current scenario which goes beyond mere
concerns of risk posed by nuclear power. Germany is a developed nation, a
power-surplus nation - so it can afford to lose a few plants. More important,
Germany has completely exhausted its nuclear resources. Against a total demand
of 3,332 tonnes (2006-08) vii it was able to produce only 68 tonnes (Note:
This was the production in 2006) of Uranium, and for the deficit it was relying
on importsviii. Thus, nuclear energy never fits into its goal of energy independence.
India, on the other hand, is the leader of the new resource of nuclear fuel
called Thorium, which is considered to be the nuclear fuel of the future.
The Indian population is misled when it is
said that some Western nations have ended their nuclear programme, or that
Japan is reconsidering nuclear power plant expansion. Study the accompanying
Table, which shows what share of energy these advanced nations are generating
by means of nuclear power.
The study indicates that most of the prosperous
nations are extracting about 30-40 per cent of power from nuclear power and
it constitutes a significant part of their clean energy portfolio, reducing
the burden of combating climate change and the health hazards associated with
pollution. Meanwhile in India, we are not generating even 5000 MW of nuclear
power from the total of about 150 GW of electricity generation, most of it
coming from coal.
We should be careful not to be carried away
by the barrage of anti-nuclear news often being generated by many of the same
nations that are enjoying the maximum benefits from it. The economically developed
world has a well-trained habit of presenting their success in a distorted
context to misguide emerging nations like India, which are a potential challenge
to their neo-age proxy-imperial economic subjugation. What is needed for our
India, we Indians have to decide.
Hence, we and we alone will decide what is
the best needed action for our economic prosperity, based on our context and
resource profile. India is blessed with the rare, and very important, nuclear
fuel of the future - Thorium. We cannot afford to lose the opportunity to
emerge as the energy capital of the world, which coupled with the largest
youth power, will be our answer to emerge as the leading economy of the world.
India has the potential to be the first nation to realise the dream of a fossil
fuel-free nation, which will also relieve the nation of about $100 billion
annually which we spend in importing petroleum and coal. Besides the billions
spent on importing coal or oil, we are also importing millions of tonnes of
CO2 and other greenhouse gases, which are a hazard to the environment and
human health. It is noteworthy that in 2010-11, India imported about 82 billion
tonnes of coalxii, a large fraction of which was for the thermal power plants.
Experts believe that this number will continue to rise exponentially in the
times ahead, as shown in Figure 3xiii.
The greenest sources of power are definitely
solar and wind. With abundant sunshine and places of high wind velocity, the
nation definitely has potential for these forms of energy. But solar and wind
power, despite all their advantages, are not stable and are dependent excessively
on weather and sunshine conditions. Nuclear power, on the other hand, provides
a relatively clean, high-density source of reliable energy with an international
presence. Today, there are 29 countries operating 441 nuclear power plants,
with a total capacity of about 375 GW(e). The industry now has more than 14,000
reactor-years of experience. Sixty more units, with a total target capacity
of 58.6 GW, were under construction. (Note: This is according to data from
2010.)
Much of the destructive power of nuclear
accidents is compared against the benchmarks of the atomic bombing of Japan
by the U.S. forces during the Second World War. Pictures of mushroom clouds
looming over cities, charred buildings, and massive death scenes are awakened
to form our opinion of nuclear dangers and disasters. But that is far from
the reality. It is poor judgment and a deliberate act of spreading fear to
compare a nuclear bomb with a nuclear plant. The bomb is designed to deliver
a large amount of energy over a very short period of time, leading to explosions,
firestorms and massive heat energy generated to obliterate every object in
its path. That is what a bomb is supposed to do!
Civilian nuclear applications in the form
of a power plant, on the other hand, are designed to deliver small amounts
of energy in a sustainable manner over a far larger time frame. It is designed
with systems to control and cool the nuclear reaction. There are safety procedures
and back-ups, and even in the event of failures, as in the 2011 disaster,
the destructive might will never be even a fraction of what happens in the
case of a nuclear bomb.
Nuclear risks
We need to put the Fukushima-Daiichi events
in the historic frame of nuclear accidents and analyse them. While there was
huge loss to property and disruption of normal life, there was no direct loss
of life due to the accident or during the operation in its aftermath to contain
it. As a silver lining, the way the accident was handled - compared to the
Chernobyl disaster of 1986 - showed how much progress we have achieved in
nuclear emergency management over a period of two and half decades. The Fukushima-Daiichi
plant was almost five times as big in terms of power generation and, more
significantly, contained about nine times the nuclear fuel at the time of
the accident. Yet, with better emergency management learnt over the years,
the maximum radiation was less than 0.4 per cent of that released during the
Chernobyl disaster. So, while the Fukushima-Daiichi accident was unfortunate
and needs review, one must also acknowledge the advancement of national and
international capabilities to manage nuclear emergencies now.
Another argument which surrounds the nuclear
debate is that nuclear accidents and the radiation fallout as the aftermath
would not only harm the exposed generation but also continue to impact generations
to come. If available facts and scientific inquiry was given more weightage
than mere conjectures and comic-bookish imagination, this argument will in
all probability be proved a myth. The strongest case of human exposure and
destruction due to radiation is, without argument, the Hiroshima and Nagasaki
nuclear bombings of 1945. These are the only two occasions when nuclear force
was intentionally developed and deployed to kill human life. Post the bombing,
the U.S. government established the Atomic Bombing Casualty Commission (ABCC)
in 1946 to assess the late-effects of radiation among the atomic bomb survivors
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It operated for 30 years until, in 1974, it was
reconstituted as a joint venture between the U.S. and Japan under the name
of Radiation Effects Research Foundation (RERF). It is operational even today.
The ABCC and the RERF have extensively studied the long-term impact of radiation
and nuclear disaster across generations for over six decades now, and the
findings throw light on the possible effects of radiation. Its report says
that chronic (sustained) exposure of about 100 millisieverts (mSv, which is
the international unit to measure radiation), increases cancer risk by 0.5
per cent to 0.7 per cent. Notably, the areas in close proximity of Fukushima
had a peak exposure of 800 mSvxiv.
Of course, there is some correlation between
radiation exposure and cancer risk, which must be acknowledged. But the notable
aspect is that, contrary to popular belief, the findings clearly state that
the effect of such exposure is limited only to the exposed generation. To
quote the report, "Our studies have not found thus far any inherited
genetic effects from parental radiation exposure among the children of A-bomb
survivors."xv (Note: A-bomb stands for the atom bomb. Two atomic bombs
were dropped by the U.S. on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
on August 6 and 9, 1945, as part of the Second World War.) Thus, while radiation
due to a nuclear disaster is dangerous, it would amount to wrong propaganda
to state that nuclear disasters will affect generations to come. Of course,
the technology has been advancing over the decades and the human capability
to contain nuclear disasters has definitely advanced.
There is no doubt that nuclear power is superior
along three dimensions, namely, energy density, effect on improved quality
of living, and the economic benefits. Now let us look at the key challenges
which pertain to the sector, especially in the wake of the recent natural
disaster impacting the Daiichi plant in Fukushima. Two concerns are prominent
here. The first is that of safety against the plant's disaster, and the second
relates to the environmental impact and the nuclear waste which the plant
generates.
Let us consider the second issue first.
Opportunity cost of nuclear energy
a) Abstinence from nuclear power is an incomplete
response without the logical alternative. If we look at the complete picture
of alternative measures, we will have to endorse the fact that our current
and future energy demands have to be met. In economics, there is a concept
called "opportunity cost," which refers to the cost incurred when
one chooses the next alternative. So what happens if we pronounce a total
ban on nuclear energy generation? Some part of the future need, although only
a small fraction, would come from solar and wind sources, with great unpredictability
as pointed out earlier. A part would be offset by hydro-power too. But in
all probability we will continue to increase our reliance on fossil-based
fuel power generation methods, at least in the near and mid-term future. And
that is where the problem lies.
Every year, human activities are adding about
30 billion tonnes of CO2 xvi into the atmosphere. The IPCC estimates that
26 per cent of this emission (about 7.6 billion tonnes) is a direct consequence
of electricity generation requirements. This is not really air pollution but
it adds to the risk of climate change, which is exhibited in changing rainfall
patterns, sea levels and temperatures, leading to food shortages, malnutrition,
and disease alterations. The WHO estimates that about 1.3 million peoplexvii
lose their lives as a result of urban outdoor air pollution alone, and about
140,000 are causalities to adaptation challenges of climate changexviii. (Note:
Additionally, about two million lives are lost due to indoor pollution, the
primary victims being women, and children under the age of five.) Thus, the
pollution caused by power generation activities, and the climate change associated
with them, are directly or indirectly responsible for about 481,000 deaths
every year. Comparatively, in the case of the worst civilian nuclear disaster
ever at Chernobyl, the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects
of Atomic radiation (UNSCEAR) predicted up to 4,000 cancerxix cases (often
curable) due to the accident, besides 57 direct causalities. Unclean fossil
energy is definitely not sustainable in the future. Moreover, fossil-based
fuels are fast depleting, and their scarcity is inspiring geopolitical instabilities
around the world.
Furthermore, it is believed that the changing
climate patterns will carry a costly adaptation price tag in the future -
an enormous $300 billion every year, which will be a huge drain on the global
GDPxx. All these issues can be addressed only when we graduate from Type-0
fuels to the next-generation fuels - the most prominent amongst them being
nuclear fuels, which will also power our deep space missions of the future.
A standard approximate comparison between a 1000-MW coal plant and a similar
nuclear plant is given in Table 6.
Safety issues of nuclear power
b) Now, let us delve more into the other
issue - that of plant safety. Throughout the history of nuclear power generation
there have been four major incidents of plant failure - the Kyshtym accident
in fuel reprocessing in 1957, the relatively smaller Three Mile Island meltdown
(United States), the much bigger Chernobyl accident (USSR, 1986) and the recent
Japanese incident at Fukushima. The first accident was purely due to underdeveloped
technology, and much of the blame for the next two disasters is attributed
to human error. Even in the case of the Fukushima disaster of 2011, there
were extraordinary natural forces in action - the rare occurrence of the tremendous
stress load of an earthquake coupled with the unprecedented shear load of
a tsunami. Of course, there is a need for better technology and more stable
plant design across the world, but the occurrence of four failures in six
decades cannot be made out as a case for completely disbanding the technology
- which is one of our foremost keys to graduating beyond the fossil fuel-based
low-end energy. The best of technological progress, while being the biggest
ally of mankind, does come at an incremental risk. The key is to learn and
evolve to mitigate the risk, rather than use the first incident as an excuse
to disband science.
Let us take a few examples. In 1903, the
Wright brothers translated into reality the remarkable dream of controlled
human flight. Not more than half a decade later, in 1908, the first flight
disaster occurred, which severely injured Orville Wright and killed his co-passenger.
Many accidents followed, and even today air accidents kill more than 1,500
people every year. Imagine whether we would be flying between distant cities,
across oceans and continents, if the incident of 1908, or the ones later,
were used as a reason to disband human flight? When the mighty ship Titanic
set sail in 1912, it was heralded as the pioneering mission in the field of
large and comfortable ocean liners. But on its first voyage it struck an iceberg
and sank, killing more than 1,500 people, more than two-thirds of those on
board. But that never stopped our quest for bigger and faster means of ocean
travel. The very first attempt to send man to the moon, Apollo-1, met with
an accident and killed three prominent astronauts. It took another 10 missions,
with mixed results, before Apollo-11 finally made it to the moon in 1969,
with Neil Armstrong setting foot on the lunar surface and declaring to the
world those never-to-be-forgotten words: "One small step for man, one
giant leap for mankind." Indeed, that small step was preceded by many
a stumble.
The Indian space programme, which is now
ranked among the best in the world, started with a failure in 1979 when our
first rocket, instead of putting the satellite into a near-earth orbit, went
into the Bay of Bengal. I was the Mission Director of the launch, and we were
accused of putting a few crores of rupees into the sea. We did not wind up
our dreams with that one accident and the criticism. The mission continued
and the next year we were successful. Today, that programme, which started
with a failure, is the first and only one to discover the presence of water
on the moon with its Chandrayan mission, and is now a pride of the nation.
The argument is, of course, that all failures and accidents propel us to think
and develop better and safer technologies towards better service. And in the
case of nuclear power, we do acknowledge that the effects of radiation can
reach a wider impact zone. But then, improvement, and not escapism, should
be our step forward.
Nuclear fuel of the future: Thorium
Let us introduce a lesser-known member among
radioactive materials - Thorium. It is perhaps the best solution possible
in the future and would be technologically and commercially the best option
in another two decades. Thorium, the 90th element in the Periodic Table, is
slightly lighter than Uranium. Thorium is far more abundant, by about four
timesxxvi, than the traditional nuclear fuel, Uranium, and occurs in a far
purer form, too. It is believed that the amount of energy contained in the
Thorium reserves on earth is more than the combined total energy that is left
in petroleum, coal, other fossil fuels and Uranium, all put together. And
information revealed in an IAEA Report (2005) on Thorium fuels indicates that
India might have the largest reserves of Thorium in the world, with over 650,000
tonnes. (Note: The IAEA, the International Atomic Energy Agency, is the world's
centre of cooperation in the nuclear field. It was set up in 1957 as the world's
'Atoms for Peace' organisation within the U.N. family.) This is more than
one-fourth of the total deposits of Thorium; in comparison, we have barely
1 per cent of the world's Uranium deposits, which is currently being put to
effective use, our having opted for the closed fuel cycle technology. Thorium
has many other advantages. It is estimated that Thorium may be able to generate
(through Uranium-233 that could be produced from it) eight times the amount
of energy per unit mass compared to (natural) Uraniumxxvii. In the much debated
issue of waste generation also, Thorium has a relative advantage. It produces
waste that is relatively less toxic due to the absence of minor actinides
(that are associated with Uranium).
At the same time, it is acknowledged that
the long-lived high-level waste from Uranium, especially in light of the Indian
strategy of adopting the closed fuel cycle involving reprocessing for the
recovery of Plutonium and Uranium, can be effectively managed using technologies
available today. Indian nuclear experts tell us that the relatively small
volumes of such waste (long-term storage space of less than a quarter of the
size of a football field is adequate for the estimated waste from a 1000 MWe
plant) can be safely stored after vitrification for hundreds of years without
causing any risk to the environment or the people.
One question that crops up is, why then has
Uranium rather than Thorium become the popular choice for nuclear energy programmes
across the world? There are two reasons: one is technological and the other
is historical.
The technological reason stems from the simple
fact that at first one needs to produce Uranium-233 from Thorium, and for
this, reactors based on the naturally available nuclear fuel material, Uranium-235,
are required. In addition, the recovery of Uranium-233 by large-scale reprocessing
of irradiated thorium, as well as the likely presence of hard gamma emitting
Uranium-232, pose certain practical hurdles. But according to experts, all
these can be overcome technologically.
The second and the historical reason why
Thorium has lagged behind in the ladder of development, comes from its advantage
of being able to provide Thorium-based fuel, as seen from the context of the
relatively unstable geopolitical conditions - which is that Thorium cannot
be weaponised. Unlike Uranium, which is always on a tight-rope walk between
being a power source and finding destructive applications, Thorium bombs just
cannot be made. Here history steps in. It must be remembered that much of
the current civil nuclear applications are direct offshoots of the military
nuclear technologies of the Cold War period. So, the first significant outcome
of nuclear technology was the Manhattan Project during the Second World War,
which ultimately culminated in the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing of 1945
by the U.S.
A nuclear weapon is different from a nuclear
plant, as in the former there is no need to control or slow down the reactions
that lead to a catastrophic energy release in a short time interval - which
is the essence of a bomb. However, a nuclear plant needs moderation of the
reaction to sustain a steady but controlled release of energy. It was only
by the end of 1951 that some noteworthy work was done in controlled nuclear
power generation at the EBR-1 experiment in Idaho to produce 100 KW of nuclear
power. This "weapon first" approach to nuclear technology led to
the fact that there was little focus on developing methods to energise from
Thorium, which is non-weaponisable, and a larger focus on Uranium, which can
be weaponised.
But now, being the largest owner of Thorium,
and also being amongst the nations which will see the highest surge in power
demand with its growth, the opportunity is for India to pursue its existing
nuclear programme with a special focus on research and development on the
Thorium route as the long term sustainable option, which we are already undertaking.
For this purpose, it is imperative to continue to implement the current Indian
plan of making use of the uranium and plutonium-based fuel cycle technologies
as well as irradiate larger amounts of Thorium in fast reactors to breed Uranium-233
fuel as it graduates to the Thorium-based plants. It is noteworthy that the
Indian plan for an advanced heavy water reactor (AHWR) is an important step
to launch early commencement of Thorium utilisation in India, while considerable
further efforts to use Thorium in both thermal and fast reactors would be
essential to harness sustainable energy from Thorium-generated Uranium-233.
Various technologies for Thorium-based plants
are already being developed and deployed on a test basis across the world
including in India, which have a promising future. These include first breeding
it to fissile Uranium-233 isotope in the conventional reactors or through
the revived interest in technologies like the Molten Salt Reactors (MSR) which
use salts to trap the fissile material and do not react with air or burn in
air or water. In this technology, the operational pressure is near the ordinary
atmospheric pressure, and hence the cost of construction is low and there
is no risk of a pressure explosionxxviii.
A significantly large quantity of highly
active nuclear material exists, and will continue to exist in the form of
nuclear armaments - which was the mother programme of the nuclear energy programme.
In 2010, there were about 22,000 nuclear warheads spanning at least nine countries
of the world, and 8,000xxix of them are in active state, carrying a risk far
greater than controlled nuclear power reactors. If the argument of risk is
to be used to eliminate the peaceful energy generation programme, then the
nuclear opposition factions must first direct their efforts at Washington
and Moscow, the owners of 90 per cent of the world's nuclear warheads, to
disband their nuclear arsenal - which is, by design, intended to be hostile.
Would that happen? Unlikely, at least in the foreseeable future. Our aim should
be to minimise the risks associated with nuclear power.
The power of the nucleus is mighty and the
future of humanity lies in harnessing it in a safe and efficient manner. In
the years to come, it will fuel not only our earth-based needs but also our
space missions and perhaps even our civilisation's reach to other planets
for habitation. Our current nuclear projects will expand into better and safer
materials, like Thorium, and later on, into better reactions like fusion,
which once completely developed, will be able to generate hundreds of times
more of power than current fission methods. Affordable, clean and abundant
energy provided by nuclear sources is our gateway to a future that is healthy,
learned and connected - a future that will span deep into space and crosses
the boundaries of current human imagination.
Coalfields and burning earth
The Jharia coalfields in Jharkhand constitute
the richest coal-bearing area in the country: they contain large quantities
of high-grade coking coal. But the presence of this natural resource has been
a curse for the local tribal villagers. The Jharia area also has a large number
of ongoing mine fires, which have a history of more than a century and have
been causing great loss to life and property.
I am reminded of an incident that happened
when I was President of India. I was travelling from Sindri to Dhanbad. Hundreds
of villagers rushed to my car. We immediately stopped and listened to them.
They narrated the heating and spot-fire which regularly take place near their
houses. A major challenge to the mining community is that of tackling fires,
which have engulfed large and densely populated coal-bearing areas. I and
my team visited their houses, where we discovered intense, unbearable heat,
emanating not from the skies but the ground below. Occasionally, jets of flames
would spurt out from the ground, scorching the earth.
The entire area has been destroyed by the
mining activity and rendered uninhabitable for humans or any other life form.
Sadly, it can never be restored, at least not for the next million years.
Much of the coal mined today is used for electricity generation across the
world, and there are many more Jharias being created across the rural and
forest lands of earth. These will continue to swell in numbers and size -
unless we find sustainable alternative fuel sources to replace fossil fuels.
Pollution, outdoor and indoor
Urban Outdoor Pollution (UOP): It refers to
the air pollution experienced by people living in and around urban areas,
generally in open space, for example, roads.
Indoor Air Pollution (IAP) refers to pollutants
found indoors, generally due to inefficient fuel consumption, chemical pollution
to building material, and so on. UOP contributes to IAP. Nearly two million
lives are lost due to Indoor Air Pollution, the most common victims being
women, and children under the age 5.
Endnotes
i. http://www.world-nuclear.org/education/whyu.htm
ii. Thorium as a Secure Nuclear Fuel Alternative,
A Canon Bryan, 23-April-2009, Journal of Energy Security (available at http://www.ensec.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=
187:thorium-as-a-secure-nuclear-fuel-alternative&catid= 94:0409content&Itemid=342)
iii. Steve Kirsch, The Most Important Investment
that We Aren't Making to Mitigate the Climate Crisis, 26.12.2009 Huff Post
Green, (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-kirsch/the-most-important-invest_b_402685.html)
iv. Data from World Resources Institute (for
2003)
v. India and China, Raghav Behal
vi. India envisages about 950,000 MW power
requirement by 2030, http://bit.ly/vTv5Qx
vii. "World Nuclear Power Reactors 2006-08
and Uranium Requirements." World Nuclear Association. 2008-01-14.
viii. "World Uranium Production U3O8/
million lbs." Ux Consulting Company, LLC
ix. World Nuclear Power Reactors & Uranium
Requirements, World Nuclear Association (21 October 2011) (available at http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/reactors.html)
Data is for 2010
x. Nuclear Power Plant Information, IAEA PRIS
(2010), available at http://www.iaea.org/cgi-bin/db.page.pl/pris.nucshare.htm
xi. International Monetary Fund, 2010
xii. India 2011/12 coal import needs may jump
to 114 mln T, Reuters, September 27, 2011
xiii. Rise of the Coal Bill, RN Bhaskar, Forbes
India Magazine (April 2010)
xiv. Matters elucidated thus far by RERF studies,
http://www.rerf.or.jp/rerfrad_e.pdf
xv. Matters elucidated thus far by RERF studies,
http://www.rerf.or.jp/rerfrad_e.pdf
xvi. IPCC Reports on climate change
xvii. Air quality and health, Fact Sheet,
WHO (http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs313/en /index.html)
xviii. Climate Change and Health, WHO 2010,
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs266/en/
xix. "UNSCEAR assessment of the Chernobyl
accident." Unscear.org.
xx. Climate change fight to cost $300 billion
a year, Alister Doyle (12-August-2009), OneWorld (available at http://southasia.oneworld.net/globalheadlines/climate-change-fight-to-cost-300-billion-a-year)
xxi. How Coal Works, Union of Concerned Scientists
(available at http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_energy/coalvswind/brief_coal.html)
xxii. Each kg of coal generates about 2.93
kg of CO2
xxiii. Considering the following calculations.
About 30,000 million tons of CO2 is responsible for the casualties of about
1.3 million lives per year. (1 billion ton = 1000 million ton). Thus, 1 MT
corresponds to about 43.33 causalities per year. And 8.37 million tons would
be responsible (by interpolation) for about 362 lives being lost.
xxiv. Similar to the above derivation
xxv. Based on the eight fold mass to energy
advantage we have earlier cited from the article: Thorium as a Secure Nuclear
Fuel Alternative, A Canon Bryan, 23-April-2009, Journal of Energy Security
xxvi. IAEA, 2005
xxvii. Extracted from http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf62.html
xxviii. Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/feature/2010/4/liquid-fluoride-thorium-reactors
Thorium Fuel for Nuclear Energy, http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/feature/thorium-fuel-for-nuclear-energy/3
xxix. "Federation of American Scientists:
Status of World Nuclear Forces." Fas.org.
A.P.J. Abdul Kalam was the 11th President
of India, from 2002 to 2007, and pioneered the Vision for an Economically
Developed India by 2020. He is at apj@abdulkalam.com
Srijan Pal Singh is an expert in the area
of sustainable development and is an Electrical Engineer with an MBA from
the IIMA. He is at 7srijanpal@iimahd.ernet.in