Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Despite Japan’s Crisis, Vietnam Aims to Win Region’s Nuclear Race

Wednesday, March 23, 2011
By MARWAAN MACAN-MARKAR
IPS WRITER

BANGKOK — Vietnam’s race to build nuclear power plants has barely skipped a beat despite the troubling scenes unfolding in Japan, where a nuclear nightmare has gripped the country for over a week. It places the Southeast Asian nation at odds with its regional neighbours who have similar plans but are urging caution.

Led by the country’s ministry of science and technology, Hanoi has declared that the unfolding crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi plant in Japan—where desperate efforts are underway to cool the overheated nuclear complex—will not derail the construction of Vietnam’s first nuclear plant in the south- central province of Ninh Thuan.

"Vietnam is planning to build nuclear power plants," Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Le Dinh Tien said at a press conference last week, according to the Vietnamese media. "Information and assessments of the blasts at the Fukushima No. 1 plant will act as a foundation to help Vietnam’s relevant authorities appropriate nuclear power programmes in the country."


A multi-billion dollar deal inked between Russia and Vietnam last October to build the Ninh Thuan plant triggered what some analysts describe as a race to tap nuclear technology to meet the region’s growing energy needs. By 2031, Vietnam hopes to achieve its goal of having eight nuclear plants in operation.

Other countries with similar blueprints for nuclear energy include Thailand, which aims to build five nuclear plants; and Indonesia, with ambitions for four nuclear plants. The Philippines, on the other hand, built the controversial Bataan Nuclear Power Plant in the early 1980s—it has never been commissioned and fuelled.

But unlike Vietnam, the governments in Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines have appeared less strident with regards to their respective nuclear agendas following the grim news flowing out of Japan—the aftermath of the dual shocks of the most powerful earthquake to hit the country, followed by a tsunami, that damaged the Fukushima Daiichi plant on the country’s northeastern coast.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has captured the mood in some of the region’s capitals though his note of caution against the country’s first nuclear power plant due to begin operations in 2020. "He has expressed concerns over safety at the nuclear plants, with accidents and terrorist attacks being the main worries," Panitan Wattanayagorn, a spokesman for the government, told IPS.

Indonesian Environment Minister Gusti Muhammad Hatta has weighed in as well, telling ‘The Jakarta Post’ that "there is no need to hurry to build a nuclear power plant except if we start running out of energy resources."

Philippines President Benigno Aquino has been the most unequivocal—rejecting the need for nuclear energy in his country in the wake of the crisis unfolding in Japan. Aquino wants a greater push towards non-nuclear energy sources, according to the Philippines media.

Filipinos like Lotong Velasco are among a growing chorus of anti-nuclear activists in Southeast Asia who are using the crisis in Japan to raise their voices against the region’s race for nuclear power. "The Bataan power plant is a structure full of defects and we do not want it to begin operations," Velasco told IPS during a telephone interview from Morong, the seaside town where the plant is located.

"We need to avoid the nightmare in Japan happening in our own backyard one day," added the Velasco, vice chairman of the Nuclear Free Bataan Movement Net. "It has been built near the Pinatubo volcano."

Little wonder why anti-nuclear activists are troubled by the emerging divide across Southeast Asia between Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines, all of which have democratic cultures that offer space for public discussion over nuclear policy, and Vietnam, under the iron grip of the communist party, where criticism and opposition to public policies are tolerated selectively.

"Vietnam’s nuclear policy is a worry for the region," says Tara Buakamsri, the Southeast Asia campaign director for Greenpeace, the global environmental lobby. "They need to do more studies and need to set up an independent nuclear safety regulatory commission in line with requirements of the International Atomic Energy Agency before proceeding further."

Nuclear plants in Indonesia and the Philippines are worrying because both countries lie within the Pacific Ring of Fire - a belt around the Pacific Ocean prone to large numbers of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. "People’s lives would be put at risk if nuclear plants are built and operate in such areas," Tara argued.

The region is further hampered by the lack of a nuclear safety protocol in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), a 10-member regional bloc that includes Brunei, Burma (or Myanmar), Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

For now, the only agreement Asean’s members have inked on nuclear safety is the 1995 treaty to keep the regional bloc a zone free of nuclear weapons. It not only limits the use of nuclear weapons, but also checks against member countries threatening to use nuclear arms against other members in the bloc.

"People are alarmed and if they don’t know what their governments are doing or plan to do, that sense of alarm can spread," Simon Tay, chairman of the Singapore Institute of International Affairs, told IPS. "Governments should pause and evaluate and open up the process [of building nuclear power plants] for discussion."

Southeast Asian governments need to draw lessons from Asian giant China. In China the events in Japan have prompted a "stop at present [to their nuclear power programme] as they re-evaluate," Tay said. "Southeast Asian countries—with no experience in nuclear energy—should too."

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

nuclear Energy is a worse thing that men has created . because nowadays they even don`t know where to hide the nuclear waste safety .

Anonymous said...

Hide in your mama's vagina, LOL

Anonymous said...

VC do want to want to do at theirs country! Ours Khmer government dont do shit for the country but cheated Khmer people. If the government want money they need to open it own business instead of robbing the Khmer people.

Anonymous said...

Some people post very constructed,1:18PM,

Some other seems to have brain damaged, 5:32pm

Anonymous said...

Yep, fuck you too 7:52PM

Anonymous said...

Nuclear power generation by far the cleanness energy and very cheap!
But the Nuclear waste is a major problem and to find a suitable storage place is also a major problem.

Cambodia must pursue Nuclear power generation if Cambodia want to be self sufficient because the whole world is moving toward Nuclear power generation!

Anonymous said...

No harm. If you travel by air you are radiated through security check point.

Cell phones are major concern for emitting radiation. Brain damage could be a problem in the long usage thereof.

Microve wave oven could damage cell tissues in the body.

Anonymous said...

cambodia should protest this because if anything happened, cambodia is next door, too, so vietnam got to think about the consequences that nuclear power plant accident can affect cambodia right next door, too, you know!

Anonymous said...

2:04 AM,

Very good point you have raised.

Anonymous said...

WELL!TELL THE VIETCONG BUILD THE NUCLEAR INSIDE THEIR OWN CAPITAL(HANOI city)NOT IN CETRAL SOUGHT VIETNAME.IF SOMETHING SHALL HAPPEN....!!!,THEY MUST BE DIED WITH THEIR god UNCLE FUCKING HO CHI MOG....OR...MAD...MING!.I`M CAMBODIAN DO NOT GIVE A SHIT ABOUT..THE VIET-CONG.I DISLIKE COMMUNIST...ANYWAY!.BURNING IN HELL ALL GOSSE VIET-CONG!.

Anonymous said...

stop build nuclear plant, ok! we all share only one planet together, if something happened to earth, where else are we, humans, going to go live? on mars? not to mention, the closest earth-like planet in our galaxy is lightyears away(1 lightyear= 1 trillion miles, you know!)

Anonymous said...

NO NO! HUN SEN and IT CCP will let Hanoi built the nuclear reactor in Phnom Penh(Land Consession 99yrs) and sent clean electricity back to all Vietnam! just in case of nuclear accident, Vietnam will be safe from radiation!

LOL

Anonymous said...

Les centrales nucléaires en Asie du Sud-Est : c'est absurde ! un grand danger pour la population de ces pays.
Les entretiens sont très stricts , très rigoureux , très coûteux , si on ne veut pas subir les catastrophes liés aux atomes d'uranium.
Personne n'arrête les particules radioactifs : Iode , Cesium , quand un accident dans une centrale ait lieu.
Le pays riche , comme le Japon avait du mal à maitriser les catastrophes ! alors les pays en voie de développement ! on ne jouent pas avec le feu ! .
Rien que les problèmes de conflit armée ,les terroristes , les centrales nucléaires ne sont pas faits pour résister à ces choses là.
Un accident avec rejet des produits radioactifs non contrôlé d'une centrale nucléaire en Thailande ou au Vietnam , ce sont des pays limitrophes : Cambodge , Laos , Birmanie , Thailande , Vietnam subissent des conséquences.
Ne mettez pas la vie de tout le monde en danger ! SVP !

Anonymous said...

Aaaaaccccchhhhhh!

Vietnam/Youn Bastards always want to kill all Khmer/Cambodian people.

The more suffers and pains from Khmer/Cambodian people, the more Khmer/Cambodian people will be dangerous to Youn/Vietnam.

There will be more Khmer heroes who stand strong together.

The people in the world and UN will be on Cambodian/Khmer people's sides because it is the right things to do to destroy Youn/Viet bastards. Youn/Viet bastards should be dead soon and go the hell.

Khmer people will me like Rocky movies! Let's destroy Youn bastards in Cambodia!