The protests in Kudankulam will continue if the government doesn't reassess the root cause of public unrest.
Even as trust in India's nuclear power programme
in the international arena grows steadily, trust on its domestic front
has been eroding over the last few decades.
Since the 1-2-3 Agreement between India and the US
in 2005, the UK, Canada, Russia, France, South Korea, Kazakhstan and
even Namibia have signed civilian nuclear co-operation agreements with
India to export uranium and nuclear technology.
Australia too, with the world's largest known
uranium resource, is now in the cusp of finalising a deal to export the
commodity to India.
On the home front however, it is quite a different
picture. Protests against the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP) in
Tamil Nadu, India's largest so far, first started in 1988 with no more
than 1,000 villagers turning up at a rally in Tirunelveli. This number
has now snowballed to nearly 10,000 men, women and children in the most
recent protests that turned violent on September 10.
The resistance has also taken many new innovative
forms: From protestors submerging themselves in the Arabian Sea in
emulation of the "Jal Satyagraha" activists in Madhya Pradesh, to sea-based protests that included 700 boats carrying 3,000 fishermen.
Expanding nuclear programme
Even India's own Comptroller and Auditor General's
2012 report gave a scathing review of the Atomic Energy Regulatory
Board (AERB), highlighting the structural weaknesses of the regulator
and its inability to ensure that safety requirements are met by the
Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL).
The NPCIL has also been hauled to court by anti-nuclear activists for failing to disclose the safety report for the KKNPP.
Why then, is the rest of the world so ready to
trust India's nuclear establishment while its own people are ever more
doubtful of the country's experts?
For one, the trust issues in international
relations rarely go beyond concerns over non-proliferation and military
applications of uranium and nuclear technology, and India has done well
on both fronts.
But with the Fukushima disaster
just over one year behind us, India's nuclear establishment has found
itself confronted by the public on a large scale for the first time over
the same questions of safety and regulatory capture in Japan.
In addition to that, India's nuclear programme
today is expanding faster than ever before in the country's history.
Since its inception in 1957, India only had small to medium sized
indigenous reactors, between 100MW to 540MW. These contribute a mere 3.2
percent of India's energy mix today.
This is set to change exponentially with
mega-projects like the KKNPP, which is just the beginning of an
ambitious expansion programme to increase the share of nuclear power to
25 percent by 2050. This involves building large nuclear parks housing
four to six reactors of capacities ranging from 1,000MW to 1,650MW.
The scale of such projects alone changes the
dynamics of risk in terms of cost, impacts and human resource issues.
But more importantly, unlike the early indigenous reactors made with
Indian technology, these mega-projects are in collaboration with foreign
companies from Russia, France and the US, which raises questions about
liability.
This is where poor legislation has done greater disservice to the industry by the Civil Nuclear
Liability Act of 2010, which introduced clauses to make technology
suppliers responsible in the case of an accident, contrary to the
international standard which places liability on the operator of the
facility.
As a solution to this, the government offered Russia a waiver of the
nuclear liability agreement for the Kudankulam plant, setting a
precedence for negotiations with the French and US reactors too.
This not only makes a mockery of the 2010 Act, but portrays the
nuclear establishment as acting more in the interests of foreign
companies instead of the local population, further eroding public
trust.
These recent developments - coupled with
pre-existing fears about radiation and health impacts - create a feeling
of risk that is not based on the lack of information, but on feelings
of fairness and the lack of trust in the experts and the organisations
they represent.
The explosion of protests in Kudankulam will
continue and spread to the other planned mega projects if the government
does not reassess the root cause of public resistance.
Environmental costs and risks
This is not about the logics of the technology,
energy security or India's growth imperative, but about feelings of
disempowerment, unequal access to the benefits of nuclear power and the
uneven distribution of the environmental costs and risks that host
communities have to bear.
But this conflict of interests is not inevitable.
The reality is that both camps share common interests. Both want India
to develop, modernise and strengthen its position as an emerging global
power. But the contention lies in who bears the cost of India's growth
and who enjoys the benefits.
"Why
then, is the rest of the world so ready to trust India's nuclear
establishment while its own people are ever more doubtful of the
country's experts?"
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And while a perfectly equitable world is
impossible, a more attainable goal for now is to have a more equitable
decision-making process that engages with all stakeholders. For this to
happen, "feelings" have to be acknowledged on both sides.
On the one hand, the nuclear establishment in
India needs to recognise that local community fears about radiation may
be imagined, but have very real economic consequences when the fishermen
are unable to sell their catch in the local market because people
suspect the fish may be contaminated.
On the other hand, the local community must be
patient with the technology. They need to come to terms with a "no 100
percent safe" guarantee and rather focus on working with the nuclear
establishment and those with the expertise to build resilience against
the risks as a joint effort.
Greater focus could be placed on local level
collaboration - not just communication. The Department of Atomic Energy
already has localised regulation and environmental monitoring groups in
each of its plants.
Why not bring in community leaders as
co-regulators at the local level? India's nuclear scientists are privy
to the fact that the locals know their land better than they do. Why not consider innovative ways of integrating these spheres of knowledge into their safety systems to enhance robustness?
Finally, it is important to recognise that people
develop social relations with their environment in the same way nuclear
scientists attach their sense of identity to the nuclear organisation.
These relations form the basis of their sense of ontological security,
without which, all further plans for nuclear expansion will be perceived
as a threat and be met with resistance.
Investing in infrastructure like hospitals,
schools and markets help support this sense of security and is a small
price to pay compared to the coffers of money spent on mobilising
thousands of police to quell unarmed civilians.
It would be pointless if India succeeds in
securing international uranium supply but not have the social licence to
expand its nuclear programme at home. They may be able to push the
project forward for now, but in a post-Fukushima era, public opinion can
no longer be ignored.
The nuclear establishment is beginning to realise
this and is making efforts in public outreach and communication. But
meaningless knowledge transmission is like filling a glass that is
already full.
By reorienting the agenda towards trust-building,
the nuclear industry will not only gain the social licence to operate,
but also improve resilience of the local community in partnership with
the nuclear community.
Catherine Mei Ling Wong is a PhD
student at the School of Sociology, Australian National University. Her
research focuses on organisational risk, safety culture and the role of
technology and environment in the nuclear power sector in India.
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