Earth Care | November 03, 2011 | 4 comments

Sorting out the cost of Fukushima; again, the people pay

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ampersand
“THIS is a war between humans and technology. While that war is being fought, we should not talk about bankruptcy.” So says a Japanese official responsible for channelling the first tranche of ¥5 trillion ($64 billion) in government support to Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) following the meltdown of its three reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant after the tsunami on March 11th.

The support has two valid aims. It helps pay compensation to the 89,000 people forced to abandon their homes within a 20km (12.5-mile) radius of the plant. It also spares Tepco the chaos of insolvency as it races towards a year-end deadline for Fukushima’s full shutdown.
First, as a basis for holding the company to account.
Despite failing to anticipate the devastating earthquake and tsunami, and a dismal performance after they hit, Tepco’s management remains broadly in place, and shareholders and creditors are being bailed out. Injecting money into the company smacks of the sort of complicity between the nuclear industry and its political overseers that helped get Japan into this nuclear mess. Though the ¥5 trillion will pass through Tepco’s hands, the company has no legal obligation to register it as a loan on its balance-sheet or say how it will be repaid. For now, taxpayers, not the shareholders or bondholders, bear all the risk.

Second, to ensure that Tepco’s financial restructuring is safe. The firm has agreed to cut costs by ¥2.5 trillion over the next ten years, but this may well compromise safety. Already there are reports of workers slopping about in radioactive water wearing leaky boots. In the short run the state can better oversee this transition as an owner with day-to-day responsibilities, before privatising Tepco in order to re-establish the necessary division between operator and regulator.

Third, as a demonstration that the government will no longer grant special favours to the nuclear industry. Failure to intervene would underline how Tepco, along with Japan’s other power utilities, continues to intimidate the government. The utilities have huge political power, helped by a pliant media and the support of big businesses selling services at inflated prices. If the government fails to discipline Tepco, it will struggle to win the country’s confidence over other aspects of nuclear oversight. That includes the promise by Yoshihiko Noda, the prime minister, to conduct “stress tests” to ensure that the rest of Japan’s 54 nuclear reactors, most of them now suspended, can safely be restarted.

At Fukushima, more bills will come due, including for removing radioactive topsoil from a vast area. The longer the government dithers over nationalising Tepco, the more the costs will rise and the impetus for action will wane. Tens of thousands have lost homes, businesses and confidence in their children’s health as a result of the disaster at Fukushima. Don’t let their suffering be for nought.
http://www.economist.com/node/21536600?fsrc=nlw|hig|11-3-2011|editors_highlights
  1. groups:
    Earth Care,   Co-Evolution,   Environmental Law
  2. tags:
    Fukushima; nuclear power; nuclear disasters
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4 comments // Sorting out the cost of Fukushima; again, the people pay

  • artemis6
    • 0
      artemis6  
    • I weep for the people of Japan , who have lost so much , yet they take MORE .... When they recover themselves a bit , i will be shocked if these people do NOT rise up against their oppressors .

    • 7 months ago
  • ampersand
    • +1
      ampersand  
    • artemis6:

      If the people of Japan, in one of the most hierarchical cultures on earth, refuses to accept the manipulation and corruption of its interlocking big business and political class any longer, it would be one of the most thorough-going social revolutions of modern times.

      The distance the Japanese culture traveled in the disastrous aftermath of WWII was nothing short of phenomenal. It's true, that some of the changes were imposed to release the grip of the military-political caste, but they worked in transforming Japan from a broken and destitute shell with almost no resources, (the original reason for the the war), into the most advanced economy and culture on earth.

      Tragically, what we've witnessed in the last few decades is the strangulation of that by re-growth of the tiny business/political centered only on a corrupt stability.

      Not an unusual story, it seems, in the history of mankind, but one that requires the same remedy that Thomas Jefferson saw necessary in every generation.

      The devastation of the planet has been accelerated by the concentration of capital and technology, but the growing connection of us all through communication CAN provide an answer to that.

      As always, the trick is getting the information early enough to take effective action.

      Mankind and the planet lost the first of those races, but there is a thread of hope that it's not over yet.

    • 7 months ago
  • artemis6
    • 0
      artemis6  
    • ampersand:

      A few days ago - i almost posted it - i saw a video of 100 women 'siting in' near TEPCO headquarters , if memory serves me right . I actually was very moved . I well know what conviction and courage it must have taken . A great injustice has happened . The people all MUST feel it . A tragedy was made many times WORSE than it needed to be . You do not just forget that sort of thing and move on ....

    • 7 months ago
  • ampersand
    • +1
      ampersand  
    • For a really scary evening, get last week's New Yorker and read the article about the extent of the failures at Fukashima to contain the disaster.

    • 7 months ago
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