Friday, 11 March 2016

Five years from Fukishima...No No No Mr Wigley



I came across this PAWB article during my daily trawl of events. It was somewhat of a synchronicity..particularly as it is five years from Fukushima and we must remember this. There are frequent debates on the scientific merits of nuclear power and while I am an opponent of it on a scientific level as well as a social and political one. Nuclear power by its very form, nature and structure does not fit into the green model of democracy or structure or accountability. Nuclear power by definition is centralised , risky, needs its own security and police force and belongs to the large powerful nation state.

Wales is a small country it needs to be committed to a decentralised model of politics. Renewable energy is the only way forward to an independent Ecosocialist Wales. It would give the people and communities of Wales direct control over its economy and power supply. I worry about the implications of Daffyd Wigleys comments for many of the excellent EcoSocialists within Plaid. I worry about a post May challenge to its leadership from Rhun ap Iorwerth and his pro nuclear leanings. The article from PAWB was a response to an article in November in the Daily Post. I fear that with the blotting out of the Lib Dems in May an Ap Iorweth Leadership following the style of the naked populism of Peter Black and Neil Macavoy will make Plaid the centralist of the Liberal Democrats. I hope that this will not be the case and many like myself look forward to working with Plaid after May. The dream of an independent, non nuclear non aligned Wales can only come from a cross fertilization between the two parties and those more subtle Corbynistas who do not follow the centralisation of the old Brit left. This is the article 



Sorry Mr Wigley – you’re very wrong

A number of inaccurate statements by Dafydd Wigley (Plaid Cymru) in his Daily Post article on nuclear power on November 5 need to be challenged. Firstly, he says that we need new nuclear power stations to meet “an electricty supply crisis by mid-century.” Demand for electricity has actually fallen in the British state in the past few years. Electricty storage is developing very quickly and note how the biggest economy in Europe, namely Germany is closing all its nuclear stations by 2022 and undertaking a renewable energy revolution. There is no reason why we cannot power our own renewable energy revolution with the best renewable resources in Europe at our disposal.
The massive amount of land bought for the Wylfa B project is a green field location and involves its extensive trashing. Would Dafydd like to comment on the need to store doubly hot and doubly radioactive waste from possible new Wylfa reactors on site for at least 160 years? Does he relish the destruction of the natural beauty of the bay at nearby Porth y Pistyll by building an industrial jetty across it to import building materials?
On the matter of the French EPR reactor proposed for Hinkley and Sizewell, those currently under construction in Finland, France and China are hopelessly over budget and behind schedule. Dafydd’s concerns about decommissioning costs for the EPR reactor apply equally to the ABWR reactor proposed by HitachiGE for Wylfa and Oldbury. He is therefore being inconsistent by welcoming Hitachi’e ABWR to Wylfa as “it is used successfully in four reactors at three different locations”.

What Dafydd fails to mention is that not a single ABWR in Japan is in operation since the triple meltdown of the Fukushima reactors. Even when they were in service they only managed a 56% load factor, well short of the 80% needed to pay their way. They obviously suffered numerous problems leading to shutdowns. Furthermore, a proposed ABWR project for the South Texas site in the USA was abandoned in spring 2011 because nobody wanted to invest in it.

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