Japan is currently facing some of its worst days since the Second World War.
When the earthquake struck Japan, The Fukushima I, Fukushima II, Onagawa Nuclear Power Plant and Tōkai nuclear power stations, consisting of a total eleven reactors, automatically shut down. However, since there was no electricity or power to help the cooling systems function, there were soon major explosions at Fukushima I and leakage of radiation. Several thousand people were evacuated from areas near the nuclear reactors. Several world leaders have stated that Japan has almost lost control of the situation.
This chain of events has also led many countries to set up reviews of their own nuclear plants. However, most Indian scientists agree that such a situation is hardly possible in India, since in India building a nuclear plant within a radius of 400 kilometres of a seismic zone, is strictly not permitted. The Department of Atomic Energy was also quick to assure the country that the diesel power backups for our nuclear plants have been constructed at altitudes high enough to avoid flooding in any situation.
Closer home, South Africa has plans of setting up six new sixteen hundred megawatt projects, in the pipeline. Africa remains the world’s largest producer of platinum and diamonds and hence requires increasing amounts of energy to meet its industrial and economic needs. However, following Japan’s catastrophic chain of events, African governments are stressing on increased security checks. Investors too, are concerned on the issues that the Japan nuclear crisis seems to have thrown up. The South African government will take a final call on the proposed energy plants by the end of the month.
Switzerland’s Energy minister, Doris Leuthard, too, has suspended the approval of three nuclear stations, insisting on the revision of safety standards in the country, after the horrors of Japan.
Although most heads of states have ordered probes into exactly how safe are their respective countries’ nuclear plants, most are holding off decisions on new power plants till the Japan situation becomes clearer and the effects can be seen more visibly. Right now, the world is still reeling under the effects of the tsunami, for no one really thought that such a Chernobyl like repeat would be possible, until Nature decided to show us otherwise.
– By Debashree Hazarika
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