A bad nuclear incident near our shores has the potential to bankrupt Ireland, according to a research scientist at University College London (UCL).
Even a relatively minor incident that does not cause any radioactive fallout here could still cost the State €4 billion, about as much as the annual yield from corporate taxation, said Dr Paul Dorfman who is based in UCL’s Energy Institute. He also sits on an Environmental Protection Agency advisory committee looking at radiological protection.
The worst case, where Ireland experiences high levels of radioactivity contaminating food and water, could cost in excess of €161 billion. It would wipe out our significant export capacity for agricultural products and require us to import safe foodstuffs from outside a toxic zone.
Empirical study
Dr Dorfman bases his comments on a research study by the Economic and Social Research Institute released by the Department of Climate Action and Environment on November 21st.
The research, “The Potential Economic Impact of a Nuclear Accident – An Irish Case Study”, attempts to assess the costs if a nuclear incident occurred in northwestern Europe.
It proposes four scenarios and sets costs for each, while acknowledging that estimating these costs “is fraught with difficulty”. It also says that these estimates are all probably on the low side………
Health impact’
Dr Dorfman sits on the Radiological Protection Advisory Committee within the EPA. “This study to my mind makes perfect sense, the numbers make perfect sense and the study itself says these values underestimate the costs because of downstream health impacts,” he said.
The worst case scenario would be enough to “bankrupt the Irish economy”.
“The point is for the Irish Government to reflect on this in the context of its own energy future. The Government may need to reflect very clearly about future plans for a UK nuclear renaissance given the risks to Ireland are substantial,” he said.
The Government must live up to its responsibility to attempt to block the UK nuclear expansion “give the colossal impact these events could have”.
Ireland should not become an “imprisoned rider” on this. “It should empower itself.”
Major incidents are rare but relying on a low probability doesn’t help. “It doesn’t cater for the reality that accidents arise accidentally. The nuclear engineers justify the plant is safe, but all major accidents so far have been beyond their design base and are cascading. Once they go wrong they keep on going wrong,” he said. http://www.irishtimes.com/news/science/nuclear-incident-off-our-coast-has-potential-to-bankrupt-ireland-1.2889522
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