'Nuclear-free
Japan'- Figment of the Imagination
22
May, 2012
Nuclear
power is galvanizing Japan, stirring up public discussions and
outright dissent with demonstrations and all, a rare occurrence in
Japan. It has divided the country in two: those who want nuclear
power generation to resume so that a stranglehold can be lifted from
the economy, and those who want a “nuclear-free” Japan.
Japan’s
power nightmare wasn’t triggered by the March 11 earthquake and
tsunami that resulted in the meltdowns at Fukushima Number One; power
companies could have worked around the vacuum left behind by the four
defunct reactors. But it was triggered by the Japanese people who
finally had had enough. Nuclear contamination in unexpected areas,
scandals of collusion between regulators and the omnipotent nuclear
power industry, mounting evidence of negligence and even malfeasance,
and a history of cover-ups have turned many Japanese against the
nuclear power industry and its regulators. Read.... A
Revolt, the Quiet Japanese Way.
As
a result, each time one of the remaining 50 reactors was taken off
line for scheduled maintenance, local opposition prevented power
companies from bringing it back on line. Until March 11, 2011,
nuclear power produced 30% of Japan’s electricity. By the evening
of May 5 this year, it was zero. “Nuclear-free” Japan had
arrived.
And
so had an energy vacuum: during the demand peak this summer, Kansai,
the Osaka area that is heavily dependent on nuclear power, is
expected to be 15% short on electricity. Other service areas are
impacted as well, but less so. The government issued “voluntary”
power saving targets to cover the shortfalls. If insufficient,
rolling blackouts will be the next step.
Companies
are preparing. Power interruptions, rolling blackouts, and even
“voluntary” power saving targets would strain resources and cause
cascading problems in supply chains. Some companies are relocating
production to less affected areas in Japan or to other countries.
They will curtail the use of air conditioning while allowing Hawaiian
shirts instead of the salaryman garb of suit and tie. Large
manufacturers are increasing their own power generation capacity—at
a price. TEPCO, the owner of Fukushima Number One, is being
nationalized at taxpayer expense (the government may end up owning
76% of the voting rights), and it’s trying to push through a 17%
rate hike for its corporate customers. As power generation has
switched to natural gas, prices for imported liquefied natural gas
(LNG), Japan’s only source, have jumped—causing nine out of
Japan’s ten mega-utilities to spill
red ink. This is going to be one heck of an expensive summer!
Under
heavy pressure from the nuclear industry and Japan Inc. to get
nuclear power back into the mix, the government has tried to overcome
opposition with reactor “stress tests” and other shenanigans. And
it has approved the restart of reactors number 3 and 4 of the nuclear
plant in the city of Oi, Fukui Prefecture; they’d passed the
“stress test” with flying colors.
But
the people failed to bite. Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto, a popular
youngish politician, along with Fukui Governor Issei Nishikawa, Oi
Mayor Shinobu Tokioka, and a number of other municipal officials came
out against restarting the reactors. And Hashimoto pronounced in the
national media what so many had already lamented, that the central
government had no way of guaranteeing the safety of the reactors; and
he called for the creation of a nuclear regulatory agency that would
be truly independent of government and industry alike.
The
government, the nuclear industry, and Japan Inc. will continue to
push their agenda to get the 50 still functional reactors back on
line, one after the other, even if they sit on top of a major fault
or are at the end of their design life. But those who strive for a
“nuclear-free” Japan feel emboldened by their victory of sorts,
and they’re unlikely to lie down. For a deeply cynical series of
images, check out.... Nuclear
Contamination as Seen by Japanese Humor.
Yet
there cannot be a “nuclear-free” Japan. Not for a generation or
two. Japan might succeed in weaning itself off nuclear power in
record time, perhaps even this summer, through a mix of conservation,
innovative technologies to wring power consumption out of production
processes, and increased power generation from fossil fuels. And it
might be able to add with record speed solar, wind, geothermal, and
tidal power generation to its energy portfolio. Given the
confiscatory prices Japan has to pay for natural gas ($15 per million
Btu and up), renewables are an economic option. But what Japan won’t
be able to do quickly is to decommission and get rid of its nuclear
power plants.
It
will take decades and many billions of dollars to decommission each
plant. During that time, the plant will not generate electricity but
will turn into a bottomless, radioactive money pit. While smaller
reactors have been decommissioned, no one has yet fully
decommissioned a large commercial reactor. The strategy has been to
renew the licenses when they expire. The easy way out. For a time.
And even after reactors are decommissioned, they remain in the
landscape as contaminated concrete hulks. Nuclear power is expensive
even if only the first part of its lifecycle—construction and power
generation—are included. No power company can afford at current
electricity rates to decommission its reactors. So the plan is to
hand these expenses to the next generation.
Japan’s
nuclear dilemma is not unique. Germany already made the decision to
exit nuclear power, but in a methodical fashion so that alternative
power generation can be brought on line. All countries with nuclear
power plants will eventually have to deal with the costs of
decommissioning them. And if Japan gets on the forefront, it might
develop unique technologies and become the leader, as it has done so
often, in a nascent industry. Meanwhile, whether its nuclear plants
are generating power or not, they will remain nuclear facilities with
all inherent risks and future expenses.
Japanese
still reminisce about the bubble that blew up in 1989 when the Nikkei
almost hit 40,000 and when the sky-high prices of real estate could
only go up further. The slide down to reality was brutal, and a lot
of people lost their shirts. But there has been one investment that
has worked out phenomenally well for the otherwise hapless Japanese
investor: Gold. Until now. Read.... The
Japanese Are Dumping Their Gold.
But
maybe these housewives or whoever they were got the timing wrong,
once again. Some investors think so. Read.... “This
Is the Bottom for Gold”- John Hathaway.
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