NUCLEAR WHAT??? NOT ANOTHER JOKE!!

Posted by Unknown On Tuesday, May 4, 2010 16 comments
Did you know that in the interiors of East Malaysia, many still do not have piped water, electricity or a proper sewage disposal system? Even in the east coast of the peninsular, there are many who do not have piped water in their homes. In many inner city areas, the elderly are living below the poverty line. A great many do not own their own property and there is always a shortage of low cost housing for the poor. In spite of all these and other pressing needs in many other areas, our government can think of spending money to build A NUCLEAR POWER PLANT BY 2021 as reported HERE. I am NOT joking.

The report said:

Malaysia has approved a proposal to set up a nuclear power plant which will start operating from 2021, Energy, Green Technology and Water Minister Peter Chin announced today.

It is the first country in Southeast Asia to announce a nuclear power plant, a sensitive matter in the ASEAN grouping which has always espoused a nuclear-free zone.

Malaysia now relies on a combination of fossil fuels and hydro-power to generate electricity.

Chin said his ministry has been given the go-ahead by the Economic Council to start identifying suitable sites but declined to reveal possible sites or the total power to be delivered.

He only disclosed that the nuclear plant needed to be built in an area with high power demand, which could possibly mean in any of the industrialised states in the west coast.

“Building of the first plant needs a lead time of at least 10 years.

“We need to look at the safety aspects, human resources and the location,” he said, adding that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had the final say on whether the plant could be built.

Technology know-how and providers may possibly come from South Korea, China, France or Japan, the minister added.

Chin stressed that a nuclear plant was sorely needed to meet the country’s accelerating energy needs and ensured its energy security, an issue that is high on the agenda of most Asian nations now living with high oil prices.

“Nuclear energy is the only viable option toward our long term energy needs.

“Our energy mix is rather unhealthy. We are depending too much on coal and oil,” he told reporters after launching the first Carbon Neutral Conference on Sustainable Buildings South East Asia.

He also said despite nuclear energy’s astronomical start-up costs, it was more cost — and energy — efficient than dotting the country with coal-fired power plants.

The government would be ready to explain to the people the need for one to counter possible political and environmental fallout or uproar, he added.


Do we need a nuclear power plant? Does our country have the resources to make and manage a nuclear power plant? We already have far too many dams in the pipeline in East Malaysia and now they want to explore nuclear energy. Don't they remember that our country has huge gas reserves that have been untapped?

CLICK HERE to access 530 000 links about the dangers of nuclear plants. I wonder if
Energy, Green Technology and Water Minister Peter Chin is aware of the dangers. I find his title quite an irony - note the bold fonts. Green technology but advocating nuclear energy. A different kind of oxymoron indeed! What is wrong with this world???

Consider the following information taken from HERE:

DANGERS OF NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS

There are many dangers in the use of nuclear power plants. The most prominent of these dangers include nuclear meltdowns; however, a variety of other problems can arise. There have been a number of situations in which these dangers have become real disasters, giving birth to safety and regulatory agencies.

Function
1. While nuclear power plants offer a substantial source of power, there are a wide variety of dangers associated with the use of nuclear power. These dangers have created a general fear of nuclear power plants across the United States and much of the world. Nuclear power plants are dangerous from the initial mining operations to gather uranium all the way through the final stages of disposing the byproducts safely. Many scientists are attempting to address these dangers; however, the risks are still prevalent in the technology.

Significance
2. The greatest fear about nuclear power plants is a severe accident in the nuclear reactor. When the whole system or an individual component of a nuclear power plant causes the reactor core to malfunction, it is known as a nuclear meltdown. This occurs most commonly when the sealed nuclear fuel assemblies that house the radioactive materials begin to overheat and melt. If the meltdown becomes too severe, the radioactive elements within the core can be released into the atmosphere and around the area of the power plant. These radioactive materials are highly toxic to all organic life.

Because of the geometric design of the reactor cores, a nuclear explosion is impossible; however, smaller explosions such as the release of steam are possible.

History

3. Nuclear meltdowns or disasters have occurred at various levels since the creation of nuclear power.

The first known partial core meltdown occurred in Ontario, Canada, in 1952. Various disasters occurred in the following years, including the release of radioactive elements into the air on at least four occasions.

The most significant disasters took place at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania in 1979 and Chernobyl in Ukraine in 1986. The Three Mile Island accident was a partial core meltdown of a pressurized water reactor. It resulted in the release of 43,000 curies of krypton and 20 curies of iodine-131 into the environment. The Chernobyl disaster reached a level 7 (major accident), according to the International Nuclear Event Scale. Following an initial steam explosion that killed two people, the reactor was destroyed and nuclear fallout was spread around the area. It was necessary to evacuate 600,000 people, and an estimated 4,000 died from radiation-induced cancers. CLICK HERE for more.

CLICK HERE for NUCLEAR ENERGY FACT SHEET.

CLICK HERE for THE PROBLEMS OF NUCLEAR POWER.

I am totally speechless, appalled, mortified and horrified at this revelation. Are they for real??? How can anyone be so absolutely detached from reality and rot in ignorance? How do you feel about this announcement?

Please leave a comment to share your thoughts/views. Thanks! Have a nice day!

16 comments to NUCLEAR WHAT??? NOT ANOTHER JOKE!!

  1. says:

    Anonymous The ultimate perverse and bad joke!

    What logic got, ah? Green Minister proposing the ultimate dirty energy!?

    Truly a "sek si ngoh fan" rationale!
    Chernobyl doth eagerly beckon.

    ~wits0~

  1. says:

    Anonymous Is our country heading down the drain?

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear ~wits0~

    Can you imagine morons with oxymorons?

    tsk tsk tsk

    Moral decadence at its peak?

    This is Bolehland..

    Sighs

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Anon @ 10.02pm

    Perhaps we are swimming in the monsoon drains and trying to keep our head above waters...

    And yet, some have the audacity that we are in La-La Fairyland where all can live happily ever after!

  1. says:

    storm62 Don't worry, the BN government will be long gone before this can happen.

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Storm62

    Thanks for the comforting thought. Great to hear from you again. Many are hoping for the march to Putrajaya to be completed as soon as possible. What a lovely thought :-)!

    Take care and God bless you!

    Cheers

  1. says:

    stephen I am of the opposing view and in favour of nuclear energy.It provides clean abundant energy, lowers greenhouse gases, reduces our carbon footprint and preserves whatever limited reserves the world has.

    Whatever negatives there are can be overcome with proper planning and execution of the building and operation of the plant.
    Japan relies heavily on nuclear power and this from a country with a strong aversion to anything linked to atomic bombs.

    I see this as the energy source of the future.we better get used to it.

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Stephen

    My old friends were involved with the Papan issue (check out: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1309&dat=19841203&id=0rQTAAAAIBAJ&sjid=548DAAAAIBAJ&pg=6584,573463) and I am well aware of the dangers of radiation fr nuclear plants.

    I agree with you re the planning etc and have no doubt that developed and efficient governments can take security and protective measures.

    The question is - Can Malaysia do that?

    Also, did you know that Malaysia has very large reserves of gas (largely untapped) that can provide a safe and alternative source of energy? I propose that this alternative be explored and exhausted FIRST before launching a foray into nuclear plants - the cost of which Malaysia cannot afford and does not have the expertise to manage...

    In due time, it will probably be an energy source but by then, there might be other safer avenues too.

    Take care and thanks for sharing your views.

    Have a nice day!

    Cheers

  1. says:

    Anonymous "The question is - Can Malaysia do that?"

    No way.

    And the Gomen is waiving all such known risks and realities aside simply for the selfish considerations amd interests of its ruling elites.

    ~wits0~

  1. says:

    ahoo Must build project of national and international impact to make some people more wealthy.

    We can't even utilize the capacity churn out by the current suppliers and yet we are talking about nuclear. I guess THEY are just not clear enough of what is essential for the people. Have we thoroughly try out alternative green source like solar and wind ?

    Let us all just cast them to the opposite bench in the coming GE13 for them to realise that Malaysians are no fools, ya.

  1. says:

    ahoo We can't managed our police force well enough and now we wan to try nuclear.

    What outcome can we expect from a third world mentality mind ?

    Can we trust people with poor maintenance culture in the management of nulear facility ?

    Too much to risk as we cannot play, play with nuclear. Leave that to the future as you have said it well, MWS. Not now as we are still too much into compromise mode in this and that to dabble into nuclear without exploring other alternatives. We must first have a no nonsense culture in work ethics like the Japanese before we can compare ourselves to the likes of them in owning a nuclear plant.

  1. says:

    Darth Vader This is another avenue for leakages.My rationale is very simple. All nuclear plant is custom design for its customers and there is no way the public will be able to know the true value of the nuclear plant. If one question the cost of a nuclear plant, then the government will say that this design is very unique to Malaysia and thus the "EXTRA COST". As long as a few out-dated Act is no repealed, there is no way the public will not as the documents will be stamped "RAHSIA".

    Who will be able to maintain the nuclear plant? Our engineers from UiTM? Will the user manuals in English, Koreans, Japanese, French, Mandarin? How many nuclear engineers we have in Malaysia?

    There are alternative energy which we dont mind payinmg more as long as the generation of electricity is safe. Did the "Sinister" of GREEN ENERGY study other alternative energy?

    WE ARE DOOMED WITH MORONS RUNNING THE COUNTRY

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear ~wits0~

    Exacty - and may I add - bulldozing their way through and they will not be satisfied until we are reduced to ground zero while they are fattened!

    Outrageous!

    Cheers

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Ahoo

    You have spoken well. Very true and relevant observations that you have shared with us. At the same time, more in our country have to be enlightened - and that is one formidable task as numbers are few and resources are limited but let's do the little that we can in our own neighbourhood or work place.

    Take care and God bless you!

    Shalom

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear ahoo

    There is a lot to do for our leaders to get things into place to meet the needs of our rakyat in every single area of our lives.

    Life is precious - so are our resources. As custodians for Mother Nature, our leaders had better take their roles more seriously lest we pay the price of their indifference!

    Take care and thanks for sharing your civic-conscious views.

    God bless you always, ahoo.

    Shalom

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Darth Vader

    Many thanks for a very powerful comment where you have highlighted salient and pertinent points for us to note.

    Indeed in this country, we have to contend with many types of legislation that bind rather than empower us.

    With the declining standards i education, I truly worry not just for the maintenance of such nuclear plants but also for the everyday business of this nation, especially when it comes to voting.

    Our youth have to be more enlightened and trained to take over from morons indeed!

    Take care and have a blessed evening. Thanks again for sharing your knowledgeable thoughts with us.

    Cheers

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