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To save the planet, follow Gulf’s lead on nuclear power

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23 Jul 2022 02:07:59 GMT9
23 Jul 2022 02:07:59 GMT9

There is a delightful irony in the fact that, even as the sun sets slowly on the era of fossil fuels, two of the countries with the oil and gas reserves that have powered the global economy for decades are now at the cutting edge of the nuclear power renaissance.

The UAE is already generating electricity at its Barakah nuclear plant. When all four of its reactors come online, the plant will provide a quarter of the country’s power.

Saudi Arabia — blessed not only with the great gift of oil that transformed its fortunes, but also with vast reserves of the uranium required for nuclear generation — is also planning its first reactor in collaboration with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Oil and gas will continue to flow from the region for years to come. But what both countries understand — and what those calling for an immediate halt to the production and consumption of fossil fuels refuse to acknowledge — is that without the revenues from fossil fuels, the expensive transition to renewable energy simply cannot be accomplished.

“Renaissance” might seem an odd term for a technology that lit its first lightbulbs almost 70 years ago. But over the years of fossil fuel plenty, nuclear power has had plenty of bad press.

Partly this is because the technology has been tainted by association with the atomic bombing of Japan at the end of the Second World War, which is about as logical as refusing to drink water because people have been known to drown in it.

Others point to the potential for disaster. The latest example of such anti-nuclear propaganda is the book “Atoms and Ashes” by Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy. Plokhy gleefully romps through the well-thumbed catalogue of nuclear accidents — Chernobyl, Three Mile Island and Fukushima are the headliners. But as one science commentator pointed out, these examples “do not adequately support his ultimate conclusion that nuclear energy isn’t a safe choice for powering our future.”

Mistakes were undoubtedly made and corners surely cut in the early years of reactor design. But lessons have been learned and modern reactors are extremely safe. The thorny issue of spent fuel disposal is also being solved.

More to the point, despite the widespread science fiction hysteria about nuclear energy, there have been only two major accidents — Three Mile Island was a partial reactor meltdown with no casualties — the consequences of which were far less severe than many have been led to believe.

After Fukushima, nations that really should have known better were panicked into abandoning nuclear power for purely political reasons.

Jonathan Gornall

To date, 46 deaths have been directly attributed to the 1986 explosion at Chernobyl, although the overall number of fatalities linked to the accident is widely disputed, along with the scale of the health impact from the radiation. Either way, the accident was the result of a flawed Soviet-era reactor being operated by badly trained personnel.

The plant at Fukushima was damaged in 2011 by a tsunami, triggered by the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in Japan. No one died.

Compare these nuclear disasters with the toll of fossil fuels — for a start, the estimated 8.7 million people who die each year because of related air pollution, to say nothing of the countless lives that have been lost to coal mining.

No form of mass energy production is without risk. In 1975, the collapse of the Banqiao hydroelectric dam in China killed more than 170,000 people. But did the world abandon hydroelectric power? No.

Yet, after Fukushima, nations that really should have known better were panicked into abandoning nuclear power for purely political reasons. Germany, faced with nationwide anti-nuclear protests and pressure from the green vote, pulled the plug on nuclear generation virtually overnight.

Until 2011, 25 percent of the country’s energy came from 17 nuclear reactors. Today, the three that remain operational are marked for shutdown by the end of this year. Meanwhile, Germany is reopening shuttered coal-powered plants.

The reality is that nuclear power is the ultimate clean, reliable energy source. Wind, solar and hydropower are great, but when the wind does not blow, the sun does not shine and water does not flow, there are only two options — fossil fuels or nuclear.

This is recognized and embraced by the UAE and Saudi Arabia, countries where major decisions can be taken and acted upon swiftly and whose leadership in the nuclear field bodes well for all our futures.

In working with the IAEA, the two Gulf states are showing what can be achieved in a remarkably short time and are encouraging the global nuclear industry to develop ever more compact and affordable nuclear reactors. In turn, this is paving the way for other nations, further down the development ladder, to follow suit.

Whenever world leaders gather for climate change conferences, much of the debate centers sanctimoniously on the need for developing countries to curb their appetites for fossil fuels. Coming from the European nations that launched the fossil fuel era and whose economies were powered with coal and oil, this is laughably hypocritical.

The West should stand up to the perversely disruptive green lobby, recognize nuclear energy as the planet-saving technology it is and, instead of suggesting that developing countries kick the fossil fuel habit and hamper their economic growth, support them with the funding and know-how they need to embrace nuclear power.

Without it, the world could well be doomed. In 2005, 66.5 percent of global electricity was generated by burning fossil fuels. In 2019, it was 63 percent. In 14 years, we have made almost no progress.

The solution, as the UAE and Saudi Arabia recognize, is nuclear power. It is time for the world to grow up, ditch the irrational attitude toward nuclear energy and follow their leadership.

  • Jonathan Gornall is a British journalist, formerly with The Times, who has lived and worked in the Middle East and is now based in the UK. Copyright: Syndication Bureau
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