a single survivor of the fallen tower of babel steps out from beneath the rubble and immediately suffocates in the silence
30 May 2011
The Last Mountain
24 May 2011
Jadugoda: The disgusting underbelly of India's nuclear industry
Jadugoda has been referred to as ‘India’s Navajo Nation’, which under any other circumstances would be considered a great compliment, given the incredible beauty of Navajo lands. Located in the eastern state of Jharkhand, it has a 40+ year history of uranium mining and levels of contamination and negative health effects that reflect this. While it may be true that Jharkhand is an ‘environmentally friendly state [that] has lots of tourism potential. Whether you like pristine nature or the thrill of adventure, whether you are on a religious introspection, or health rejuvenation, Jharkhand can enchant your senses,’ with an estimated 48,000 tonnes of uranium ore in its bedrock, it seems fair to say that enchantment will require some strategic touring, a lengthy list of areas to avoid.
The problems at Jadugoda detailed in a 2010 WISE-Uranium report include displaced persons, political repression of displaced persons, a long, on-going history of labor union strikes, repeated pipeline bursts and tailings spills, health crises and lack of responsible government oversight. Given that the Uranium Corporation of India Ltd. (UCIL) is a public sector holding of India’s Department of Atomic Energy (DEA), the level of government complicity in ignoring and/or denying the problems at all of the country’s uranium mines is hardly a shock. It’s important to note that UCIL not only operates 6 mines in Jharkhand, but also has ore processing plants there to leach the ore and then mill the uranium for use in nuclear reactors. A public hearing is being held today to discuss UCIL's plans to extend the life of the Jadugoda mine, and while one wants to hope said extension will be denied, the overall picture of India’s nuclear ambitions leads this writer to expect otherwise.
The Jharkhandi Organization Against Radiation (JOAR) has been staging protests locally and at UCIL hearings for many years now, in addition to conducting their own environmental and health monitoring activities. The film Buddha weeps in Jadugoda offers an in-depth look at what they have been faced with and is full of personal testimonies that certainly rival the horrific experiences of those still suffering from the Bhopal catastrophe. . In one segment of the film, a Deputy Manager of a mill is speaking to a group of local villagers and, after explaining how there will be little uranium left in the waste stream, he has the audacity to make the situation sound almost poetic:
yes, the harmful dust may fly over you
but it is as safe as the sand in the river
but do not worry
we are here to protect you
the energy rays that come out will not reach your homes
it will become gas and go up
without harming you in any way
i'm convinced people gets these kinds of managerial jobs not because they're good managers or engineers, but because they get high marks when it comes to treating others with arrogance, hubris and outright idiocy. Here is part 4 of the film, focusing on the health problems people have been facing. Indian Doctors For Peace And Development published a study in 2007, Black Magic of Uranium at Jadugoda, which documents these at several villages near mining sites. They found that 4.5% mothers reported congenital birth defects, while nearly 10% report death of infants due to congenital defects. Higher rates of sterility and cancers affect the indigenous people disproportionately.
Reading about situations like this always leads me to ask about motivation; in this case, what is driving India to produce so much uranium. i found a very informative slide show put together by UCIL, reflecting such bold ambitions for India’s nuclear power program that one can’t help but wonder if these folks have been drinking the contaminated village water. The country has a 3 stage nuke power program that includes Pressurized Heavy Water Reactors, Boiling Water Reactors, Faster Breeder Reactors and Thorium-based reactors; they are also planning to construct 2 VVERs (Russian designed). The projected power potentials (in megawatts) go from 10,000 MWe in Stage One (PHWRs), to 530,000 MWe in Stage Two (Fast Breeder Reactors), to POWER POTENTIAL IS VERY LARGE in Stage Three (Thorium Based Reactors). Surely and under the circumstances, ‘very large’ is an inadequate, fantasy caliber assessment for long-term energy output. If AREVA or TEPCO came out with that, you know the stockholders would just laugh them out of the boardroom. At any rate, India’s DEA has big plans for a so-called clean energy future, but like all grande national plans, ironies abound.
In addition to the irony of devastating environment and health with more and bigger uranium mines in order to ‘go clean’, the country will still need to import uranium and this they are having trouble doing because of their refusal to sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT). In 2008, Kevin Rudd got the Australian government to veto selling uranium to India until it signed the NPT, and since then, other countries have joined the ban against uranium sales to New Delhi. According to The Australian, ‘Depletion of its uranium reserves caused India's production of nuclear power to fall last decade. Its 19 nuclear plants produce only 4 per cent of its electricity, but that level is expected to doubled over the next 25 years as new plants are commissioned.’ The irony, of course, is that the purpose of the NPT was to promote ‘peaceful’ i.e. energy, applications of nuclear materials, yet even though India needs the energy more than it needs a few hundred nuclear warheads, they are sacrificing the former out of principle (i suppose) to possess the latter. Never fear, a solution is at hand. Bloomberg reported earlier this month that Nuclear Power Corp. of India is considering a venture with state-run UCIL to start buying mines overseas. Maybe they’ll move into Navajo country, wouldn’t that be ironic to the extreme?
There are few issues as pressing as energy in this century, because its ripple effects are so strong. JOAR and its peer organizations at uranium mines around the world may not have all the answers, though my guess is that they are probably more concerned than the rest of us when it comes to finding a way forward for energy and climate that incorporates values of environmental justice and sustainability into the broader equation. Uranium mining runs counter to those values, and no matter how clean and advantageous the nuclear power lobby makes those reactors look, there is no escaping what lies underneath them, no way around the damage inflicted by uranium mining. I, for one, do not want to see a group of congenitally damaged descendants who live atop tailing sites left carrying the ball after the last reactor is shut down, cracked apart or washed away in a tsunami.
22 May 2011
Circling in on the Arctic Circle
The Nuuk Declaration, just signed on 12 May 2011 by 10 participating states of the Arctic Council (the aforementioned five, plus Finland, Sweden, the Faroe Islands and Iceland), reads very nicely from environmental, indigenous rights and food security standpoints, but intent and action are forever at odds in such international memoranda. It's hard to envision how more oil and gas exploration are compatible with 'developing best practices in the prevention of marine oil pollution', just as it is unclear how indigenous rights are to be secured when no indigenous nations were included in the council's negotiations. Greenland is giving Cairn Energy - or perhaps Capricon, its 'nonlisted subsidiary' (whatever that means) - licenses for exploratory drilling over 102,000 square kilometers off Greenland's coast. The company posted $1.6 billion in revenues for last year and has major operations in India, Albania and Spain. As of yet, there don't appear to have been any mishaps in their Arctic operations, but the Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico hadn't had a troublesome history either, until it exploded. If the terms of the declaration are ever realized, then at least whichever country is responsible for the next big Arctic oil slick won't be alone in trying to (unsuccessfully) make it go away.
20 May 2011
Good luck with that
At any rate, i do wish Obama the best of luck negotiating with a state which, aside from setting terms of weapons sales agreements, has historically rejected the entire concept of negotiations. As long as the dollars keep pouring in, why should they do otherwise? The EU has embraced the same type of relationship with Israel, 'demanding' it end the occupation of Palestine (that would mean retreating to the same borders Obama cited), while concurrently pursuing further integration of Israel into the EU's economy and vice versa. The BDS movement on both sides of the Atlantic will hardly make a dent in these massive coffers, though i wouldn't say that makes it a wasted, pointless effort. The problem remains that in spite of all the international rhetoric inicating otherwise, Israel always gets what it wants and does what it wants, the intransigent state extraordinaire with a tightly knit entourage of G20 enablers.
19 May 2011
Well, that was prescient
The Project for Excellence in Journalism at the Pew Research Center released a report last week that looks at how people in the United States access and use internet news sites. An overview of the results is here, with links to detailed analyses by topic. Among these – here’s where my own little blog turns out to be prescient: ‘Drudge Report: Small Operation, Large Influence’.
As Jim Carr of the NY Times writes: ‘Yes, Mr. Drudge is a conservative ideologue whose site also serves as a crib sheet for the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity… [The Drudge Report] is, in its own way, a kind of utility, with stable traffic of about 12 million to 14 million unique visitors every month no matter what kind of news is breaking. Everyone goes there because, well, everyone else goes there. ‘ Considering there are over 300 million people in the US, there is relief in knowing that only 5% use Drudge as a guide to what they read; what did surprise me is that the sites most Drudge users are driven to are Yahoo News, MSNBC and CNN, respectively. i suppose i expected more reactionary linkages, but that probably just reflects my own view of those sites as bland, part of the general cerebral meltdown. They should all just follow The Onion's lead and say outright, "Telling you what we want you to know."
Honestly, i’m not on a mission to keep people away from The Drudge Report. It is what it is. The links there statistically come quite close to what people are driven to from Facebook – as least in the US. i think what this shows overall is that when people want to read and recommend news, they shoot from the hip. We all want exposure to lots of stuff without knowing a great deal about any of it - the nature of the information overload beast. A couple of decades ago, i killed my television. By contrast, i treat my laptop as something close to holy… yet we must remain ever vigilant. At the risk of ending up in Lars von Triers 2nd class coach to purgatory, i’m reminded of Adolf Hitler’s remark that ‘all propaganda has to be popular and has to accommodate itself to the comprehension of the least intelligent of those whom it seeks to reach.' The issue isn’t so much the propaganda as it is the quality of the audience.
16 May 2011
Where's my weekly dose of soma?
Anticipating that Eurovision will be THE number one topic in all my classes this week, i dutifully checked out the Guardian UK's contest blog and then immediately wished i hadn't.
Our hosts for the evening are Anka, who is wearing a red dress like a 70s shagpile rug and a over-tight ponytail; Judith, who is wearing Bacofoil and doing the French bits, and a man called Stefan who is the actual Swedish Chef off the Muppets. He is talking about TV vankings. I hope these are rankings.
Ah, there's nothing like a bit of set-piece intro comedy, is there? Lena can't perform last year's winning song, Satellite, because she is also competing this evening, so Stefan and Anke are performing a rockabilly version.
Imagine how bad that could possibly be, and then multiply it by about 7 MILLION.
They have no been joined by 43 Lena lookalikes waving the flags of Europe. And now the actual Lena, doing the final chorus. And a full swing band. And many, many, fireworks.My head hurts.
14 May 2011
Drudging up the Drudge
i guess cuz i was angry about the blog and needed to redirect, or maybe because the atmosphere at my workplace has been rapidly degenerating as closing of the school draws near - for whatever reason, i wandered over to Drudge Report... some things don't ever change... he's still putting out some bizarre, disturbing stuff. Instantly reminded why i've avoided the site for so long, i.e. since about 9/12/2001. Checking it today – well, at least he’s consistent. "Boy rides out storm in dryer" relates the true story of a kid's survival during recent Oklahoma tornado. News of the weird, fair enough. "Mitch would pick Condi as VP" turns out to be totally misleading, since the entire 3 page article is about Mitch Daniel's wife and their rocky marriage; Condi Rice is mentioned only once, in the very last line. i'm sure Matt Drudge would love to see her stalking liberal scum in the White House corridors again, but as far as headlines go, this is pure political trash. Shall i continue? Ok, one more. Walt Disney MegaCorp has trademarked the Seal Team 6 of capture-the-bad-guy fame and is planning to come out with ‘clothing, footwear, headwear, toys, games and “entertainment and education services,” among other things.’ Great. i hope they trademark Mossad next, big profits in Beirut for sure. Thanks Mr. Drudge for keeping us abreast of Disney’s latest money hungry effrontery.
Granted, Drudge is basically a clipping service for people who want to overdigest their slovenly portions of sensationalist ‘news’, so it may be unfair to lash out criticism – they’re just linking to stuff other news agencies are publishing. Nonetheless, i won’t be going there again for another decade, at least. It did take my mind off the blogspot problem,though, which is ultimately the higher purpose being served.
BTW, i was surprised to see that Facebook went ahead on their/its own accord and set up a page for this blog on Networked Blogs. If you happen to read this via FB, please consider adding yourself as a follower. If you're reading directly from blogspot, you could still list yourself. i'm all alone here, it would make me feel better, inspired to keep at it... i know lurking is usually more fun and all, but i'm asking nicely, so do it! :-)