Although I have a great deal of respect for George Monbiot and would agree with most of what he says I must admit that there have been several other issues that I thought he was completely wrong on but kept my mouth shut because I know that no two people ever agree on everything. Do you know how hard it is for me to keep my mouth shut when I don’t agree with something? If you don’t you haven’t been reading my writing.
Since he published his views on the climategate e-mails in which he condemned the scientist before he even had all the facts I’ve felt a bit uneasy about quoting him because I don’t really know if I can trust his opinion anymore. However, I still never criticized him.
What he seems to be defending with his conversion to nuclear energy is Business As Usual (BAU) which is to say that he wants what ever will keep the industrial revolution going so long as he feels it will cut carbon emissions. I would agree that there are many problems with renewable energy and would be the first to say that it will never power our economy at its current rate let alone allow for continuous growth. I would also say that the less we have of it the better because George is correct that renewable energy will have environmental impacts of its own.
However, I don’t feel that we need BAU to live a prosperous lifestyle. I think we can do that with a limited supply of renewable energy sources such as wind, solar or thermal. We can downsize our economy and still live a good life. And sure, sooner or later humans will no longer have the resources to even build the equipment to supply renewable energy but if we go nuclear, which itself would only be a temporary source of energy due to limited resources, we will leave behind radioactive waste that will be around for a million years or more and we don’t have any idea what repercussions that might have for future generations. Especially if those generations don’t have the means to retain that waste which is the predicament we are in right now.
I think that this time I can’t keep quit on my disagreement with George. I would have to agree with the author of the article I’ve reposted below. Nuclear energy is not the way to go. Nuclear is a filthy and unsafe form of energy. It’s time to stop this madness.
George, in my view, you are dead wrong.
Ronnie Wright
World Change Café
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Why Climate Activist George Monbiot Has Gone Nuclear -- And Why He's Wrong
"As a result of the disaster at Fukushima," wrote Monbiot, "I am no longer nuclear-neutral. I now support the technology." Here's why he's made a big blunder.
Over the years British environmental writer George Monbiot has provided readers with thought provoking and insightful arguments. He has been a champion of the climate change movement and a fervent critic of the wars in the Middle East. Yet, since the ground shook and the devastating tsunami crashed on Japanese shores, something inside Monbiot seems to have rattled a few screws loose. He's now gone nuclear.
Monbiot wasn't always this way. In fact, he admitted just two weeks ago that he wasn't sure exactly where he stood on the issue, writing, "I'm misinterpreted for the thousandth time, let me spell out once again what my position is. I have not gone nuclear."
Five days later he changed his mind. "As a result of the disaster at Fukushima," wrote Monbiot, "I am no longer nuclear-neutral. I now support the technology."
One tenet of Monbiot's misguided argument includes the muddled rationale that if one opposes nuclear power then one would have to support coal incineration as a viable alternative. There is no question that coal kills. In fact, concentrated amounts of coal ash may indeed contain more radiation than nuclear waste. Tens of thousands die of lung and heart disease every year caused by coal. There is no question that we ought to oppose both as healthy energy producing sources.
Monbiot's position would be laughable if it weren't so damn tragic. As the Japanese face the world's largest nuclear accident in a quarter century, here's one of the leading environmentalists in the UK defending the very technology that caused it. In the past Monbiot has been careful to defend his positions with valid supporting evidence, even chastising others for not holding up to his standards. But in the case the nuclear power Monbiot appears satisfied in cherry picking scientific facts when it comes to the infamous Chernobyl's 1986 disaster in order to support his stance.
"The Chernobyl meltdown was hideous and traumatic. The official death toll so far appears to be 43: 28 workers in the initial few months and 15 civilians by 2005," wrote Monbiot, who cited World Health Organization and the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation as his source. However, even the World Health Organization concluded that approximately 4,000 people would eventually die as a result of radiation exposure from Chernobyl, a statement Monbiot seemed content with dismissing.
Even so, both the UN and WHO seem to have drastically underestimated the true human cost of the Chernobyl meltdown. The New York Academy of Sciences in 2010 released the most significant and vital English language report on the deaths and environmental devastation caused by Chernobyl. After pouring through thousands of reports and studies conducted in Eastern Europe and Russia, the Academy concluded that nearly one million people have died as a result of radiation exposure.
Dr. Janette D. Sherman, who edited the volume, explained the discrepancy between the UN's assessment and the Academy's regarding Chernobyl, "[The UN] released a report ... and they only included about 350 articles available in the English language, but [the New York Academy of Sciences] looked at well over 5,000 articles ... by people who were there and saw what was going on. We are talking about medical doctors, scientists, veterinarians, epidemiologists, who saw what was happening when people in their communities were getting sick and dying."
In the Academy's book that includes the report, titled Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment, they argue that the World Health Organization and the International Atomic Energy Agency, which reports to the UN, formed an agreement in 1959 which states one will not release a report without the agreement of the other.
"This is like having Dracula guard the Blood Bank," attests Dr. Sherman, "because [the World Health Organization] is beholden to IAEA before they can release a report."
Additionally, the IAEA was set up to promote nuclear power, so any evidence that damages its credibility directly challenges the IAEA's intentions. In fact massive protests have taken place in Geneva in an effort to stop this agreement, which is still in place.
"This agreement ... needs to be stopped," adds Dr. Sherman.
Back to George Monbiot, whose has opted to side with the IAEA instead of the prestigious and universally regarded New York Academy of Sciences. It's a shame not only for Monbiot's credibility but also for the climate change movement in general. Striking a nail in his own coffin, Monbiot even went on Democracy Now! to debate what he deemed the exaggerated perils of nuclear power. There is no telling when his radioactive madness will end.
Here's to hoping George Monbiot brushes up on his understanding of nuclear fallout and that Fukushima doesn't end up being Japan's Chernobyl.
Joshua Frank is an environmental journalist and author of "Left Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush." He is co-editor, with Jeffrey St. Clair, of "Red State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots Resistance in the Heartland." Frank and St. Clair are also the authors of the forthcoming book, "Green Scare: The New War on Environmentalism." He can be reached at brickburner@gmail.com.
This article was reposted from AlterNet.
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I spent nine days travelling around the South Australian Outback with Jim Green and other Friends of the Earth activist back in 2008 learning about the impact nuclear testing and uranium mining has had on indigenous Australians. During that time I came to respect Jim as a source of trusted knowledge on the issue of nuclear energy. Here is his response to George Monbiot’s claims that only 43 people died after Chernobyl.
Ronnie Wright
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Do We Know The Chernobyl Death Toll?
By Jim Green
Did 43 people die after Chernobyl - or almost a million? Jim Green explains why the answer is hard to calculate, and why George Monbiot has got it wrong by several orders of magnitude
With the 25th anniversary of Chernobyl falling on 26 April, debate is brewing over the estimated death toll from the nuclear disaster. Indeed the debate has erupted with a heated exchange between journalist George Monbiot and anti-nuclear campaigner Helen Caldicott. In the wake of Fukushima, Monbiot has been advocating strongly for nuclear power as the best way to reduce carbon emissions. Along the way, he’s set out to debunk what he sees as the prevailing myths about going nuclear. One of these is the Chernobyl death toll.
Monbiot claims that the "official death toll" from Chernobyl is 43. Caldicot puts the death toll at 985,000. Someone’s wrong. Perhaps they both are.
The debate over the Chernobyl death toll turns on the broader debate over the health effects of low-level ionising radiation — and in particular the cancer risk it poses. The weight of scientific opinion holds that there is no threshold below which ionising radiation poses no risk and that the risk is proportional to the dose: the "linear no-threshold" (LNT) model.
Uncertainties will always persist. In circumstances where people are exposed to low-level radiation, epidemiological studies are unlikely to be able to demonstrate a statistically significant increase in cancer rates. This is because of the "statistical noise" in the form of widespread cancer incidence from many causes, the long latency period for some cancers, limited data on disease incidence, and various other data gaps and methodological difficulties.
Notwithstanding the difficulties, there is growing scientific confidence in the LNT model. An important study in this regard is the 2006 report of the Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionising Radiation (BEIR) of the US National Academy of Sciences.
The BEIR report comprehensively reviewed available data and concluded that:
"The balance of evidence from epidemiologic, animal and mechanistic studies tend to favor a simple proportionate relationship at low doses between radiation dose and cancer risk. … [T]he risk of cancer proceeds in a linear fashion at lower doses without a threshold and … the smallest dose has the potential to cause a small increase in risk to humans."
The report notes that uncertainty remains because of the unavoidable methodological difficulties: "Even with the increased sensitivity the combined analyses are compatible with a range of possibilities, from a reduction of risk at low doses to risks twice those upon which current radiation protection recommendations are based."
Governments clearly believe that low-level radiation is to be avoided — hence the 20 kilometre evacuation zone around the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan, widespread restrictions on food and water consumption, and the growing number of countries imposing restrictions on the importation of food from Japan.
Back to Chernobyl. There is general agreement that 30 to 60 people died in the immediate aftermath of the accident. Beyond that, epidemiological studies generally don’t indicate a statistically significant increase in cancer incidence in populations exposed to Chernobyl fallout. Nor would anyone expect them to because of the data gaps and methodological problems mentioned above.
Elizabeth Cardis from the International Agency for Research on Cancer explains that emergency and recovery workers and residents of contaminatted territories will have the greatest total lifetime numbers of excess cancers, noting that "these increases would be difficult to detect epidemiologically against an expected background number of 41,500 and 800,000 cases of cancer respectively among the two groups."
For a few marginal scientists and nuclear industry spruikers, that’s the end of the matter. The death toll from Chernobyl was 30 to 60. Full stop. But for those of us who prefer mainstream science, we can still arrive at a scientifically defensible estimate of the Chernobyl death toll — even if epidemiological studies don’t help — by using estimates of the total radiation exposure, and multiplying by a standard risk estimate based on the LNT model.
The International Atomic Energy Agency estimates a total collective dose of 600,000 person-Sieverts over 50 years from Chernobyl fallout (see the IAEA Bulletin, Vol.38, No.1, 1996). A standard risk estimate from the International Commission on Radiological Protection is 0.05 fatal cancers per Sievert. Multiply those figures and we get an estimated 30,000 fatal cancers. Now let’s recall that, according to the BEIR report, the LNT model may overstate risks or understate them by a factor of two. Thus the estimated death toll ranges from something less than 30,000 — up to 60,000.
A number of studies apply that basic methodology — based on collective radiation doses and risk estimates — and come up with results varying from 9000 to 93,000 deaths. While that tenfold difference seems significant, it is explained by the differing approaches and assumptions used in the various studies. For example, whether or not they consider radiation exposure across Europe or just in the most heavily contaminated countries of Eastern Europe. (And of course that tenfold difference is peanuts compared to the many orders of magnitude separating Monbiot’s 43 and Caldicott’s 985,000.)
Monbiot says he asked Helen Caldicott for sources about the Chernobyl death toll. Here are some of the most important studies which he didn’t mention in his article. Firstly, reports by the UN Chernobyl Forum (pdf) and the World Health Organisation in 2005-06 estimated up to 4000 eventual deaths among the higher-exposed Chernobyl populations and an additional 5,000 deaths among populations exposed to lower doses in Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine.
A study by Elizabeth Cardis and her colleagues published in 2006 in the International Journal of Cancer estimates 16,000 deaths. Research published in 2006 by UK radiation scientists Ian Fairlie and David Sumner estimated 30,000 to 60,000 deaths. And finally, a 2006 report commissioned by Greenpeace estimates a death toll of about 93,000.
So where do Monbiot and Caldicott fit in the context of these scientific studies of the Chernobyl death toll? They don’t fit anywhere at all. Caldicott relies on a Russian report titled Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment. Suffice it here to note that the study uses a loose methodology to arrive at an unlikely conclusion.
Monbiot sides with the marginal scientists in arguing that low-level radiation is harmless. He cites a report from the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) to claim that the "official death toll" from Chernobyl is 43. But the UNSCEAR report made no effort to assess the effects of widespread low-level radiation exposure. Specifically, the report states:
"The Committee has decided not to use models to project absolute numbers of effects in populations exposed to low radiation doses from the Chernobyl accident, because of unacceptable uncertainties in the predictions. It should be stressed that the approach outlined in no way contradicts the application of the LNT model for the purposes of radiation protection, where a cautious approach is conventionally and consciously applied."
So UNSCEAR cites "unacceptable uncertainties in the predictions" as its reason for shying away from an assessment of the impacts of widespread radiation exposure. The rest of us needn’t be so shy. And we shouldn’t be shy about criticising Monbiot or anyone else who claims that just 30 to 60 people died as a result of Chernobyl.
Reposted from NewMatilda.com
© 2013 Created by Grant Hill.
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