Nuclear Power is not an alternative!

 

Haaretz, August 7, 2009

Going nuclear - power, that is 

By Gal Luft 

Israel's demand for electricity is projected to nearly double in the next 20 years, while use during peak hours is currently nearing the maximum generating capacity. Without a significant increase in capacity, the country could soon suffer from chronic power shortages. The recent discovery of natural gas off Israel's northern Mediterranean coast may give some the impression that the country's energy security is guaranteed for decades to come. This is a false assumption.

While natural gas is a good short-term solution for Israel's power needs, the quantities of gas that can be commercially produced from this latest find are far from certain, and even under optimistic scenarios they would not be enough to satisfy the country's growing long-term energy needs. This is why close examination of the economic and strategic cost-effectiveness of civilian nuclear power is warranted.

This is a particularly timely idea, since most of Israel's neighbors, some well endowed with oil and gas reserves - including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Morocco, Yemen, Iran and Algeria - have concluded that nuclear power should play a role in their energy portfolio. 

No energy source is free of risks or challenges. This is certainly true for nuclear power. Issues related to waste disposal, terrorist threats and nuclear safety should not be underestimated. But nor should they be overstated to the point where nuclear power is eliminated from the discussion about Israel's energy security future.

Nuclear power is one of the cheapest sources of steady, reliable electricity. It is clean, emits neither greenhouse gases nor harmful pollutants and, contrary to popular perceptions, is very safe. Across the world, 437 nuclear power plants are currently operating safely in 30 countries, and provide 16 percent of the world's electricity needs. There have been only a few isolated incidents, including the deadly accident in Chernobyl.

Many countries are now realizing that despite its limitations, nuclear power can be a vital part of their energy security. France is nearly 80 percent reliant on nuclear power and is completely insulated from Russia's shenanigans and natural gas cutoffs; the United States has 104 commercial reactors and growing; and China and India are building dozens of plants. Italy has just reversed its 20-year-old anti-nuclear policy. Even in Germany, where anti-nuclear sentiment is part of the culture, there has been a change of heart toward nuclear power.

While building a nuclear power plant is not cheap operational costs are likely to decrease over time, as opposed to thermal plants, which rely on increasingly expensive coal and natural gas. Unlike oil and gas, which come mostly from countries hostile to Israel, the relatively small amount of uranium needed to fuel a nuclear power plant could be obtained from major uranium exporters and some of Israel's most trusted allies, such as Australia, Kazakhstan, Canada and South Africa.

Because of the high population density in the coastal plain, any nuclear power plant would have to be situated in the Negev. A station there could have the added advantage of being able to provide cheap energy to aid in the region's economic development. The brackish water of the Negev aquifer could not only be used to cool the plant, but could also, together with piped-in Mediterranean water, be desalinated in the process using the plant's excess heat.

Conventional wisdom holds that in order to develop civilian nuclear power, Israel must sign the non-proliferation treaty (NPT), and abandon its long-held strategy of nuclear ambiguity. But this axiom is already being altered by the seemingly unstoppable nuclearization of the Middle East, which is likely to change many aspects of Washington's foreign policy. Additionally, the NPT regime was recently breached, with the 2008 signing of the U.S.-India nuclear deal, which allows India, not an NPT signatory, to obtain uranium fuel and equipment from the United States. With this precedent, Israel may find it easier to negotiate civilian nuclear deals with foreign countries without compromising its national security.

Should Israel decide to go for nuclear power, it should be done in a way that advances the trend of privatizing the electricity market. The state-owned Israel Electric Corporation has no innate advantage when it comes to constructing and operating nuclear power plants. Its monopoly in the power sector has been a source of inefficiency and wasteful spending. There is no reason why a nuclear power plant should be used to further bolster this monopoly.

In the end, the decision on whether to deploy nuclear power will have to be a product of a serious and comprehensive analysis, one that takes into account all the pros and cons, the economic feasibility and the efficacy of competing energy sources, including coal, natural gas and renewable energy. This process should be undertaken by a national commission diverse enough to present the full range of options and considerations. The benefits that nuclear power would hold for Israel are difficult to ignore. The Israeli public deserves a serious, well-informed debate on the issue.

Dr. Gal Luft is executive director of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, a Washington-based think tank focused on energy security.

Click for the published op-ed on the Haaretz website
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Haaretz, August 18, 2009

Letters to the Editor  

Germany still against nuclear power

In his op-ed "Going Nuclear - power, that is," (Gal Luft, August 7 Week's End) the author writes that the Israeli public deserves a serious, well-informed debate on the issue. His article however does not contribute to such a debate. There are many claims in his article that deserve to be refuted. I will concentrate on his claim, that "even in Germany, where anti-nuclear sentiment is part of the culture, there has been a change of heart toward nuclear power."

In Germany, during the government of the Social Democrats and Greens in 2001, the parliament decided to phase out nuclear power and determined that the last nuclear power plant would be disconnected in 2020. There has been no attempt by the current government of Social Democrats and Conservatives to revoke this decision. Almost nobody in Germany currently proposes the building of new nuclear power plants.

One of the controversies of the current election campaign is about the question as to how long the existing nuclear power plants will be connected to the power grid. Liberals and Conservatives want to extend this period, while Greens and Social Democrats want to close the nuclear plants as soon as possible.

Repeated accidents at a nuclear power plant in northern Germany have even brought members of the Conservative party to the point of threatening the electric company responsible for this nuclear power plant with the removal of the license to operate it.

In polls, a majority of Germans continue to support the phasing out of nuclear power. Given this background, you can hardly speak of a "change of heart towards nuclear power in Germany."

A serious and well-informed debate in Israel on the issue of energy security should include the "Desertec Industrial Initiative." The idea is of a Euro-Mediterranian energy partnership, whereby solar energy would be produced mainly in North African states and would partly be used in Europe. This initiative deserves discussion in Israel in connection with Israel's own energy needs as well as in connection with the possibilities and opportunities of regional cooperation.

Joern Boehme
Director
Israel Office of the Heinrich Boell Foundation

Click for the published letter on the Haaretz website