A required check-list for nuclear ambitions

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A required check-list for nuclear ambitions

  • Published: 18/11/2009 at 09:25 AM
  • Online news: Opinion

After several aborted attempts during the past 50 years, Thailand is on the brink of launching a nuclear-power programme. Its proposed schedule of building two nuclear reactors by 2020 and two more by 2021 is overly ambitious, given the embryonic state of its nuclear infrastructure and its dependence on extensive foreign assistance.

The lure of nuclear: The cooling towers of the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant in Spring City, Tennessee, USA. Concern over global warming caused by burning fossil fuels is reviving the debate on the merits of nuclear energy.

Legislative hurdles and foreign investors' concerns about political instability and liability are likely to be problematic. Budgetary constraints due to the impact of the global economic slowdown will add to the hurdles, as will public scepticism over the safety of nuclear energy.

However, a visit to Bangkok in mid-November reinforced my view that these difficulties are unlikely to derail Thailand's nuclear plans altogether. Thailand's rationale for developing nuclear energy is entirely benign: a desire for greater energy security combined with concerns over the environmental impact of burning fossil fuels.

Safe and sustainable implementation of nuclear power requires a strong legal and regulatory framework, with a licensing and oversight body that is truly independent. Regulators must be free from political influence and bureaucratically separate from organisations in charge of operating nuclear facilities and promoting nuclear energy.

Thailand's Office of Atoms for Peace already has this independent regulatory authority.

Choosing the right vendor will be key. Cognisant that a nuclear accident anywhere is a nuclear accident everywhere, akin to the impact that accidents at Chernobyl and Three Mile Island had in bringing nuclear plans around the world to a halt for nearly 20 years, nuclear vendors have more than an altruistic motive to supply nuclear technology responsibly.

Not all foreign suppliers, however, insist that any nuclear power plants that come online meet the highest standards of safety and security. Nor do all vendors provide the same level of wider safety and technological support.

This is particularly the case with vendors that are not as engaged across all levels of infrastructure as are companies such as US-based Westinghouse and France's Areva. Nuclear suppliers should also agree on minimum safety requirements on the part of recipient countries, including adherence to IAEA safety, security and nuclear-waste conventions. Supplier responsibility would also be enhanced by transparency in nuclear-cooperation agreements, such as in the United States, where they are on the public record and subject to congressional oversight.

Only two Asean countries have ratified  the Convention on Nuclear Safety, and only three are parties to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material. Thailand is not yet among these states.

No Asean country is yet party to the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management, and the only Asean state which is party to any nuclear liability convention is the Philippines.

In addition to fulfilling such major commitments, there is more that Asean members can do on a smaller scale to create the institutional bonds that will be necessary to create regional unity, such as through regular and proactive participation in mechanisms like the Steering Committee of the Asian Nuclear Safety Network.

Transparency is also vital. IAEA compre hensive safeguards are the internationally mandated standard but they do not provide sufficient assurance of peaceful use. At a minimum, they should be buttressed by the safeguards of the Additional Protocol. Even this measure, however, is not a panacea against proliferation.

The Additional Protocol cannot stop a determined proliferator, nor does it address threats associated with nuclear smuggling. It does, however, give the IAEA further access rights and requires additional information from states that together help the agency provide credible assurances regarding the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activity.

The Additional Protocol thus has become an international norm for confirming a state's non-proliferation credentials and should be ratified and implemented by all states in the region, as everywhere else in the world. Countries that are seriously considering adopting a national nuclear power programme should therefore ratify and implement the Additional Protocol as one of their first steps.

Thailand signed this instrument in 2005 but has not yet finished bringing domestic law into conformity with it, or preparing the declaration required under the Additional Protocol. Countries considering supplying nuclear-power technology may well require the Additional Protocol as a condition of supply. Quiet encouragement from potential suppliers could strengthen the incentives for bringing this safeguards-strengthening measure into force in countries such as Thailand that have not yet finished the ratification process.

When implementation of the Additional Protocol is the norm in Asean, its members would then have more moral authority to encourage ratification in Burma, where the transparency afforded by the Additional Protocol will bring the most benefit to regional security.

Mark Fitzpatrick is director of the Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Programme at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, and Editor of the recently published IISS strategic dossier on Preventing Nuclear Dangers in Southeast Asia and Australasia.

Relate Search: Thailand's Office of Atoms for Peace, Three Mile Island, Safety of Spent Fuel Management, Safety of Radioactive Waste Management

About the author

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Writer: Mark Fitzpatrick
Position: Reporter

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  • brainless farung

    Discussion 8 : 19/11/2009 at 03:08 AM8

    One other point. As the world implements 4g services, the fact that Thailand can't bring itself to implement 3g service due to red tape and corruption, makes it clear that the Kingdom isn't ready for as complex an issue as nuclear power.

  • brainless farung

    Discussion 7 : 19/11/2009 at 02:54 AM7

    It is clear that Thailand is not ready for nukes. It is also obvious that sensible energy policy should consider a multitude of solutions both large and small. Why not absorb excess of rice crop and support rice farmers by using rice to make ethanol for for gasoline vehicles, grow more oil crops for biodeisel to be used on farms and for deisel vehilces, exploit wind generation and hydro where it is practical, encourage conservation (tax incentives?), utilize methane generation on farms that have animals? None of these approaches pollute, or create nuclear waste. Obviously large cities will still require big power plants of some sort, but to suggest that any one solution especially nuclear will be the answer to all needs is irresponsible and short sighted. Our grandchildren will thank us if we impliment sane energy policy, and curse us if we poison their planet to satisfy our greed.

  • freddy

    Discussion 6 : 18/11/2009 at 11:35 PM6

    great thought to Bill and Paul, discussion #2 & #3.
    thailand is too unstable for such a high risk power generator.

    learn how to properly manage large scaled riots (e.g. airport seizure, pattaya chaos, etc) first or educate people to better understand what should be done and what should not at any cost and for any reason whatever.

  • Spain

    Discussion 5 : 18/11/2009 at 11:26 PM5

    Spain has an excellent geographical position and climate for taking advantages of the wind and the solar energy generosity.
    Today, 50% of the production of electricity in Spain comes from the wind!
    (Equivalent to 11 nuclear reactors)
    No more nuclear power plant for Spain!

    Spain data at the end of 2008:
    -Installed capacity of the country's solar-power ventures stood at 3,404.8 MW
    -Wind energy capacity was 16,740 MW,
    -Installed capacity of small-hydro ventures (< 10 MW) stood at 1,882 MW.
    -Seven active nuclear ventures in the country have a combined annual capacity of 7,633 MW.

    Thailand data:
    -Solar: lit noi
    -Wind: lit noi
    -hydro: noi
    -Nuclear: mei mi
    Thailand has also a lot of sun, less wind, but at the end, nothing is moving from the part of government! Many people don’t understand why the Thai government is not leading the country to the maximum they can on renewable energy.

  • Don Aleman

    Discussion 4 : 18/11/2009 at 03:33 PM4

    Nuclear ? Are these the same guys who couldn't remember to replace a Tsunami warning device battery for 5 years.

    Stick to chopping down trees for fuel/energy or face destroying the world !

  • paul

    Discussion 3 : 18/11/2009 at 02:35 PM3

    With the level of systemic corruption in this country it's a very scary thought for Thailand to have any sort of Nuclear Power program.
    Thai's are there own worst enemies when it comes to constructing anything just look at the airport, just imagine the shortcuts and pilfering that would go on building a nuclear power plant here and the repercussions of a potential disaster.

  • Bill

    Discussion 2 : 18/11/2009 at 01:32 PM2

    I doubt if all the issues are yet out on the table for the Thai people to grasp and grapple with. Solar energy is more readily available, less costly to install, can be done quickly, is in bountiful supply this close to the equator ... and most significantly, does not entail the engineering concerns or waste concerns of nuclear energy. Those countries that have it generally face huge burdens for security as well.

  • Somboon

    Discussion 1 : 18/11/2009 at 01:04 PM1

    Very interesting and impressive reading. Everything sounds so good and quite convince.

    But there is a real problem because it it Thailand.

    "Safe and sustainable implementation of nuclear power requires a strong legal and regulatory framework, with a licensing and oversight body that is truly independent. Regulators must be free from political influence and bureaucratically separate from organisations in charge of operating nuclear facilities and promoting nuclear energy." Does Thailand have any of these? Strong legal, regualtory framework, truly independent, free from political influence, and separation of power? No, absolutely none. That is what really scare the h_ll out of people.

    Apparently, the author has not spent enough time in Thailand to know how the Thais think and operate. He reminds me of my Thai leaders who spitting out policies/plans on how to solve the southern problems by sitting in an air conditioned room and never visit the areas long enough to know them.

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