Sunday, September 25, 2011

DEFECTIVE ENVIRONMENTAL EIA REPORTS FOR INDIAN REACTORS

DEFECTIVE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REPORTS FOR INDIAN REACTORS
http://mvramana.yolasite.com/resources/EIAReview-PublishedVersion.pdf  [see this web for Details]
http://www.damsafetyaction.org/TX/docs/Texas-LargeDAM-EAPExample.pdf
http://tshivajirao.blogspot.com/2011/08/diaster-consequences-of-kovvada-nuclear.html
The  above web asites and their links must be studied to estimate the deficiencies in this article on EIA.
This article is not a comprehensive compilation of the basic components of an EIA Report made for any Chemical industry or a Hazardous Big Dam as specified by the Union ministry of Environment& Forests.see web sites :http://cwc.gov.in/main/downloads/EAPChapters.pdf

The environmental impact assessment process for nuclear facilities: An examination
of the Indian experience
M.V. Ramana , Divya Badami Rao
Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Environment and Development, ISEC Campus, Nagarbhavi, Bangalore

India plans to construct numerous nuclear plants and uranium mines across the country, which could have
significant environmental, health, and social impacts. The national Environmental Impact Assessment
process is supposed to regulate these impacts. This paper examines how effective this process has been, and
the extent to which public inputs have been taken into account. In addition to generic problems associated
with the EIA process for all kinds of projects in India, there are concerns that are specific to nuclear facilities.
One is that some nuclear facilities are exempt from the environmental clearance process. The second is that
data regarding radiation baseline levels and future releases, which is the principle environmental concern
with respect to nuclear facilities, is controlled entirely by the nuclear establishment. The third is that
members of the nuclear establishment take part in almost every level of the environmental clearance
procedure. For these reasons and others, the EIA process with regard to nuclear projects in India is of dubious
quality. We make a number of recommendations that could address these lacunae, and more generally the
imbalance of power between the nuclear establishment on the one hand, and civil society and the regulatory
agencies on the other.
1. Introduction
India plans a large expansion of nuclear power. The Indian
Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) projects that hundreds of nuclear
reactors will be constructed over the next few decades (Grover and
Chandra, 2006). There is widespread concern about the potential
environmental impact of these projects. At those sites that have been
selected for new reactors, there has been significant grassroots level
opposition. The formal manner in which this has been expressed most
often is through the public consultation part of the environmental
impact assessment (EIA) process.
The Environment Impact Assessment Notification of 2006
(EIAN2006) lists “nuclear power projects and processing of nuclear
fuel” as requiring environmental clearances. However, not all facilities
that are involved in the processing of nuclear fuel are subject to this
procedure, for example, the reprocessing plants that chemically
process radioactive spent fuel discharged from nuclear reactors,
including civilian reactors.1 Barring such exceptions, nuclear facilities
do have to be granted environmental clearances by the Ministry of
Environment and Forests (MoEF).
This paper examines the effectiveness of the environmental
impact assessment process for nuclear facilities in India. We focus
on the three key components: the EIA study itself, the public
consultation, and the expert committee that oversees the clearance.
By analyzing a number of nuclear projects that have received
environmental clearances so far, we investigate if the process has
actually identified the project's potential adverse impacts, the quality
of the impact assessment, and the extent to which public concerns
have been incorporated into decision making.
We end with a number of recommendations that could help
improve this process. Broadly speaking, the thrust of these recommendations
is to improve the balances of power between the nuclear
establishment on the one hand, and the regulatory agencies and civil
society on the other hand. As our discussion below shows, currently
the DAE and associated organizations possess overwhelming political
power and can ensure favorable decisions in almost all cases.
2. Environment impact assessment studies
The EIA for nuclear projects is commissioned by the project
authorities themselves. As Wathern (1988) has identified, the
problem is that in the absence of “adequate safeguards, proponents
may be tempted to regard EIA simply as a means of obtaining project
authorization and present only those results which show proposals in
Environmental Impact Assessment Review 30 (2010) 268–271
⁎ Corresponding author. Program on Science and Global Security, 221 Nassau Street,
Floor 2, Princeton, NJ 08542, USA. Tel.: +1 609 258 1458.
E-mail addresses: mvramana@gmail.com (M.V. Ramana), di.badamirao@gmail.com(D.B. Rao).
1 According to an official in the Ministry of Environment and Forests who preferred
not to be identified, reprocessing activities avoid the clearance process because they
“take shelter under the strategic program”, i.e., they claim that there may be nuclear
weapons related activities which cannot be disclosed.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

DISASTER PLANNING DUE TO NUCLEAR ACCIDENTS

COST TRADEOFFS IN CONSEQUENCE MANAGEMENT AT NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS
A RISK BASED APPROACH TO SETTING OPTIMAL LONG-TERM
INTERDICTION LIMITS FOR REGULATORY ANALYSES’
Vinod Mubayi,  Safety and Risk Evaluation Division
Department of Advanced Technology, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York

ABSTRACT
The consequences of severe accidents at nuclear power plants can be limited by various protective actions, including emergency responses and long-term measures, to reduce exposures of affected populations. Each of these protective actions involve costs to society. The costs of the long-term protective actions depend on the criterion adopted for the allowable level of long-term exposure. This criterion, called the “long term interdiction limit,” is expressed in terms of the projected dose to an individual over a certain time period from the long-term exposure pathways. The two measures of offsite consequences, latent cancers and costs, are inversely related and the choice of an interdiction limit is, in effect, a trade-off  between these two measures. By monetizing the health effects (through ascribing a monetary value to life lost), the costs of the two consequence measures vary with the interdiction limit, the health effect costs increasing as the limit is relaxed and the protective action costs decreasing. The minimum of the total cost curve can be used to calculate an optimal long term interdiction limit. The calculation of such an optimal limit is presented for each of five U.S. nuclear power plants which were analysed for severe accident risk in the NUREG-1150 program by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
1 INTRODUCTION
The consequences of accidents at nuclear power plants are estimated in terms of the radiological doses to the affected populations due to the release of fission products from the core inventory following core damage and (possibly) containment failure. The resultant health effects arise from several exposure pathways whose relative importance is a function of the time period following the release.
In the short-term, Le., within a few days following the  accident, the important pathways are: inhalation exposure due  to breathing of contaminated air; cloudshine exposure from the passage of the radioactive cloud plume; and groundshine exposure from standing on ground contaminated by the  deposition of radioactive material. Short-term exposure and  the resultant acute health effects, such as prodromal vomiting fatal impairment of vital organs, etc., can be reduced by emergency protective actions. These include evacuation or sheltering and relocation of potentially affected population downwind of the release.
The long-term population dose is due primarily to three exposure pathways: groundshine from living on contaminated land, inhalation exposure from resuspended particles deposited on the ground, and ingestion of contaminated food  or water The long-term population dose (and thus the number of  latent cancers) can be reduced by decontamination  of  contaminated land and buildings, by relocating people away from contaminated areas, by prohibiting the consumption of contaminated food or the production of crops including dairy and meat products on contaminated farmland, or by permanently prohibiting the reoccupation of land or property which cannot be decontaminated in a certain period of time in a cost effective manner.
Each of these actions involve costs to society.  The sum of these costs are usually termed as the “offsite costs.” The short- term emergency action costs depend on the population immediately affected by the release and the fraction of that population which is assumed to be evacuated and temporarily.
‘This work was supported by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

relocated away from the passage of the radioactive plume. The costs of long-term protective actions depend on the criteria selected for the allowable levels of long-term exposure of potentially affected populations. This criterion, called the  “long term interdiction limit,” is expressed in terms of the projected dose to an individual over a certain time period from the long-term exposure pathways. In the probabilistic risk assessments carried out for the WASH-1400 program (U. S. NRC, 1979, the consequence calculations performed using the CRAC code (U. S. NRC, 197s) assumed a long-term interdiction limit of 25 rem over a 30 year period. The consequence analyses carried out in the NUREG-1150 program (U. S. NRC,1989) using the MACCS code (Jow, 1990) assumed a long-term interdiction limit of 4 rem in 5 years (2 rem in the first year following an accident and 0.5 rem per year thereafter over the next 4 years).
Relaxation of the long term interdiction limit, i.e., allowing a higher dose over a certain period of time. will lead to higher doses to the population and more latent cancers but will decrease the offsite costs since smaller amounts of property and food will have to be condemned. Conversely. a more stringent long term interdiction limit, Le., a lower level of dose over the same time period, will lead to smaller health effects but increase the offsite costs. Thus, the two measures of
offsite consequences-health effects and offsite costs-are inversely related and a particular choice of an interdiction limit is, in effect, a trade-off between these two consequence measures.
For a given source term involving a release of long-lived radionuclides, e.g., isotopes of cesium, strontium, lanthanum. etc., the offsite costs and the latent health effects can. In principle, be calculated using a consequence code for a particular choice of the long term interdiction limit. By monetizing the latent health effects through ascribing a monetary value to life lost, the tradeoffs between the offsite costs and the latent health costs can be studied. As the interdiction limit is varied, these two costs will vary inversely. the health costs increasing as the interdiction limit is relaxed and the offsite costs decreasing. The general shape of the curves of the two costs as a function of interdiction limit is shown in Figure 1. The sum of these two costs are the total
costs and the minimum of the total cost curve can be used to obtain an optimal interdiction limit.
This paper presents the results of a calculation of the optimum long term interdiction limit for each of five U. S. nuclear power plants which were analyzed for severe accident risk in the NUREG-1150 program by the U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Based on accident source terms representing the entire spectrum of releases considered at each of the five plants (Grand Gulf, Peach Bottom, Sequoyah, Surry, and Zion), site specific calculations using the latest version of the h4ACCS probabilistic consequence assessment (Chanin, 1993) code were carried out to obtain values of the consequence measures, latent fatalities and offsite costs, as a function
of the long-term interdiction limit.
The latent fatalities were monetized and the total cost curve of Figure 1 was evaluated based on the approach developed in Section 2 below. The monetization of latent fatalities depends on the selection of a statistical value of life (SVOL). Section 3 contains a review of various methods for estimating the SVOL, including the Human Capital (or Loss of Output) and the Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) concepts which are widely used in the economic valuation of risk and safety. Data from a number of surveys of the nuclear. chemical, and hazardous employment industries are synthesized to arrive at an estimate of the SVOL Section 4 presents the calculation of the offsite costs and latent fatalities for various selected values of the long-term interdiction limit derived from the consequence analysis using the MACCS code based on the source terms from the plants
studied in the NUREG-1150 program. The consequences have been weighted by the frequencies of the releases to provide a risk-based profile of the consequences at each site. The total cost curve is then constructed in section 5 and the minimum of the curve is used to estimate the optimal value of the longtemi interdiction limit at each plant site.
2 BASES OF CONSEQUENCE CALCULATIONS
The MACCS consequence code used in this study calculates, for any specified release of radionuclides. Downwind transport, dispersion, and deposition of the radioactive material, Radiation doses received by exposed populations, Mitigation of doses by emergency response actions, The acute effects of large radiation doses received during the initial phases of an accident that result in injuries or early fatalities within one year following exposure, The chronic effects of lower radiation doses. Including latent cancer fatalities and injuries, received over long
periods that influence decisions on land interdiction and population relocation, and Offsite costs of emergency response and long-term protective actions for user-specified long term interdiction
limits.
For calculating the incidence of latent cancer fatalities and injuries due to exposure to low-LET radiation, the original version of MACCS used dose/response models published in 1985 by Evans, et al. (1985). which in turn drew heavily from the 1980 BEIR I11 report (National Research Council, 1980). Subsequently, the MACCS model was modified to incorporate refinements from the 1990 report (National Research Council, 1990) of the Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR V) of the National Research Council which included revised dosimetry for the A-bomb survivors, several years of additional experience of the cohort in the Life-span study, and new analytical approaches to the risk calculations. The health effect models implemented in the latest version of MACCS are presented in the report by S. Abrahamson, et al. (1991). The central estimates for latent cancer incidence and fatalities are summarized in Table 1. The risks for non-fatal cancer were derived by subtracting the fatality risks from the incidence risks. The latency periods for each cancer type were taken from the report by Evans, et al. (1990). Note that the risks assume that leukemia and bone cancer are 100 percent fatal. This is no longer strictly true because of improved methods of treatment; however, reliable statistics on the rate of non-fatal cases are not yet available, and in any event this would cause only small adjustments in the risk estimates. It is assumed that fatalities from skin cancer and benign thyroid nodules are negligible.
2.1
The offsite costs include costs of emergency actions, disposal of contaminated foods, cleanup and interdiction of contaminated land and structures, and long-term relocation of people and condemnation of land and property. The costs depend on the severity of the release, site-specific features (land and property values, etc.), and the mitigative actions taken during and after the accident. The actions taken are input to MACCS by the user. For a particular plant, a site data file is constructed using land use and economic data in the Final Safety Analysis Reports (FSARs) and the latest U.S. statistical abstracts.
In the early stages of an accident, costs are associated with emergency evacuation and relocation. These costs depend on the number of people affected and the duration of the emergency evacuation/relocation period. The evacuated individuals are allowed to return only if the projected groundshine dose does not exceed a preset criterion for the duration of the emergency phase. Otherwise, people are relocated for at least the  duration of the phase which can range  from one day to one week.
Following the emergency phase, there can be an intermediate period of up to one year during which people will remain relocated, depending upon projected doses from the groundshine and resuspension inhalation pathways. In the long-term phase, decontamination or interdiction decisions are made for farm and non-farm areas. Three successively higher levels of decontamination each associated with respectively higher costs can be modeled by MACCS. If the decontamination efforts plus natural decay over a period cannot reduce the projected long-term doses below a (user-specified) value or the cost of decontamination exceeds the value of the farmland or non-farm property, then the property or land is condemned. The discounted value of the condemned land (or property) is added to the other offsite costs.
MACCS takes into account costs associated with depreciation of property values in contaminated areas as well as losses resulting from interdiction of property during any period of
interdiction. If people must be permanently resettled because their property is condemned, then a further cost is added. based on personal income losses and moving costs for a transitional period.
Other offsite costs are associated with the disposal of contaminated farm products and restrictions on crop production from contaminated farmland. In areas where decontamination has to be carried out or the land has to be interdicted, milk is discarded for three months and other crops for one year. In other areas, dose criteria are used to determine whether milk or other food products should be discarded.
Offsite Costs of Protective Actlons
Further, farmland which has been contaminated is interdicted and cannot be used for crop production until a protective action criterion based on projected doses from ingestion of crops grown on that farmland is met. The cost of this interdiction is the estimated annual value of farm production multiplied by the number of years that production is prohibited. If the interdiction period exceeds eight years, the cost is taken to be the total estimated value of the interdicted farmland.
While MACCS calculates the offsite health impacts of radiological exposures, Le.. the number of early and late fatalities and injuries, it does not compute any costs related to the occurrence of these health effects. These costs include, for example. medical treatment costs, and costs related to loss of human life (whether calculated based on “1oss ‘of income” approach or the “willingness to pay” approach) which are analyzed in section 3.
2.2 Total Costs as a Function of Long-Term Interdiction Umit
The total cost of an accidental release can be expressed as the sum of the offsite protective action costs. OC, and the health-related costs, HRC. The offsite costs are calculated by the consequence code (as discussed in detail above) for a selected value of the long term interdiction limit, r (denoted in mrembear). To monetize the health effects, early and latent fatalities, calculated by the consequence code, the healthrelated costs are expressed as:
HRC = EFC + LFC
where EFC = early fatality costs and LFC = latent fatality costs. The early fatality cost can be simply written as:
EFC = SVOL EF
where EF is the number of early fatalities and SVOL ($) is the selected statistical value of life. The latent fatalities are 3 function of the long term interdiction limit r and have to be discounted to present value due to the latency period between the time of exposure and the induction of the cancer. Table 1 displays the risks and latency periods for various types of cancer due to radiation exposure. We can then write the (discounted) latent fatality costs as the product of SVOL and the number of latent cancers:

With the exception of the statistical value of life, SVOL, and the latency period of different types of cancers, li’ all the other quantities in the above equation are calculated by the consequence code. The latency periods for different cancer types are obtained from the central estimates of Table 1. Various approaches to obtaining estimates of SVOL are discussed below in section 3.
3 M E STATISTICAL VALUE OF LIFE (SVOL)
For regulatory purposes, the health consequences of radiation doses must be expressed in units that can be conipared with other damages from a radiation release (loss of production, abandonment of property and buildings, etc.) and with the costs of potential safety enhancements for reducing the risks of an accident and/or mitigating its consequences. This implies assigning a monetary value to human injuries and fatalities. Whatever method is utilized to make this assignment will inevitably require societal judgments to be made at some point in the analyses about the Statistical Value of Life (SVOL) to be used in the regulatory decision making process.
A number of methods have been suggested for valuing the benefits of safety measures and costing of risk. Two broad sets of objectives underlie these methods: national output maximization and social welfare maximization. In the output based method, the cost of an incidence (fatality or illness) is estimated to be the discounted present value of the loss of the person’s future output (or earnings) due to the incidence. Allowances are typically made for non-marketed output (such as housewives’ services) and various other costs, such 3s medical and legal expenses. The main objection to the output based method is based on the argument that most people value safety because of their aversion to death and injury, not because they want to save productive resources and enhance the Gross National Product (GNP). There have been some adhoc methods suggested to deal with this criticism: the present value of future output is multiplied by a factor that takes into account “pain, grief, and suffering.” In the social welfare maximization approach, the individual willingness-to-pay for safety is estimated, and aggregated over all the affected individuals. Economists appear to favor willingness- to-pay (WTP) because, in theory, it reflects a person’s real utility (or value) of safety. Also, the notion is that, if there was a market for “buying” safety, then this approach would yield the price that consumers would be willing to pay.
In most cases where public policy is involved, the analyst would estimate the maximum willingness-to-pay of individual stakeholders and average these figures over all the people involved. It is usually more straightforward to estimate the discounted present value of future output than WW. In addition. as we will discuss below, the WTP approach has a number of inherent difficulties associated with it. The strongest argument for the WTP approach is that it is better at conceptually assessing the premium that people put on “pain, grief. and suffering” than merely evaluating lost output or income. Given the advantages and disadvantages ofeach approach, one cannot say that either is preferred by an overwhelming preponderance of evidence. In recent years, the WTP approach is the one that appears to have gained the most popularity among risk analysts and economists.
Estimates of individual WTP are typically obtained through either the “revealed-preference” (or “implicit value”) or the “questionnaire” (or “contingent market”) approaches. The revealed preference approach involves estimating marginal incomes (or wage differentials) in cases where people trade-off income against risk of fatalities (or illnesses). Examples of the use of revealed preference include, the existence of higher wages for riskier jobs like working on oil rigs, the use of a more costly, heavier, but safer, car at a loss of fuel economy etc. This approach has the advantage of being based on real world situations where markets actually exist. However, it is usually quite difficult to isolate the income trade-off associated with only the particular safety issue under consideration. In addition, there is insufficient data on WTP for safety enhancements
at nuclear power plants or other nuclear facilities. Thus one cannot rely totally on revealed preference from past cases for providing ,WTP estimates for the issue under consideration. Another limitation of the revealed preference approach is that, in most cases, it provides only information on what the aggregate (or average of aggregate) revealed preference would be. This limitation could be overcome by using a fairly disaggregated population set. and examining the individual revealed preference; however, this is usually not done because of procedural limitations.
The questionnaire (“contingent valuation”) approach essentially involves asking a sample of the population of interest how much they would be willing to pay, or would require in compensation, for a decrease in the risk of a given type. Mitchell and Carson (1989) give a detailed and comprehensive account of the contingent valuation method. The advantage of this method include its straightforwardness and the ability to ask those directly affected by the problem what
they consider to be the value of safety. The main difficulty in implementing the questionnaire approach is in ensuring that the questions are understandable in bath scope and content.
The problem is that most people show a great deal of ambiguity when dealing with low probability, high consequence events. Thus the response to seemingly simple questions may show a high degree of inconsistency. In addition, there is ample evidence from the public economics literature that people frequently respond to value elicitation questions by deliberately misrepresenting their true preferences. There has  also been additional theoretical work in recent years that show that people’s behavior when subjected to risky situations does not follow the axioms which lead economists to believe that WTP was the best method to elicit a person’s maximum expected utility responses.
Assessing the SVOL for the purposes of decision-making is another controversial issue. Zeckhauser (1979, for instance. contends that many would argue that life is priceless, and thus
there is difficulty in coming to an agreement on how to value life. Indeed, the valuation of life involves sociological, legal. philosophical. and political issues, not just economics. In spite of a11 these problems with using the WTP approach for obtaining the value that people (and society) place on improving safety, there is a general agreement among economists that such an approach is better than either using some ad-hoc method to estimate the SVOL or the output (present value of income foregone) approach.
3.1 WTP for Nuclear Safetv
In estimating the SVOL in the nuclear power industry, there is the notion that one could use a single measure across the board. In the case of nuclear facilities, a distinction can be made between two types of risk public exposure risk versus risks that are experienced by workers in the nuclear industry.  In the risk perception and communications literature, these would fall into the nonvoluntary versus voluntary risk categories. It is clear from the recent literature on risk perception and risk communication that people assess voluntary and nonvoluntazy risk differently. There is much greater concern among the public about risk situations that they do not control, such as nuclear power production, than risk situations that they voluntarily participate in such as driving an automobile. Thus it is important in the assessment of nuclear power safety to consider public exposure risk and industry worker exposure risk separately. Public exposure risk is something that affects people who do not control the event or events leading to the exposure situation. Also the effects may occur over a long period of time. Conversely worker exposure risk is due to situations that are closer to things that can be controlled by those who are at risk. Further, these risks are much more immediate and may be more severe. Since there has not been a comprehensive study based on the WTP concept for analyzing these two types of risks in the nuclear industry, we have to use information from closely related situations. In the case of public exposure risk, we use the numerous studies of radon exposure and radon reduction in private residences to evaluate the SVOL In addition, we will also summarize SVOL estimations from other related risks such as carcinogenic chemicals. In the case of worker risk, there are a number of studies in “hazardous” industries such as mining in which WTP studies have been done. These studies will be the basis of our estimates for WTP in reducing risk to workers in the nuclear industry. However, most people are faced with a number of voluntary risk situations in their day-to-day life. There are a number of studies that have estimated cost-of-life saved for everyday decisions, such as installing and using smoke alarms. Some of the pertinent data from these studies are summarized in the following sections.
3.2 WTP for Reducing Public Exposure Risk
In this section we provide some data on risk reduction measures for radon which also presents a radiological risk. The main purpose for reporting on SVOL estimates from reducing radon risk is that radon is the closest analogy to radiological risk due to nuclear power plants for which some numerical estimates are available. However. a number of caveats are in order. There is a  continuing debate as to the magnitude of radon in U. S. homes and the level of risk and, for a number of reasons, householders have been reluctant to spend money to avert radon in the home. Thus, we are left with “expert judgment” estimates made by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) of how much it will cost to reduce the risk of radon. rather than true WTP estimates that are obtained from either questionnaires or market behavior. Radon gas is considered to be the second leading cause (after smoking) of lung cancer in the United States. Much of  the initial work on radon was on exposure of mine workers in the U.S. and Czechoslovakia. Subsequently, there was the realization that insulation of homes to conserve energy also trapped radon gas inside the buildings for much longer, resulting in added health effects of radiation. The UNSCEAR (1977) Report estimated the average 2URn concentration to be 1 pico-curie per liter (pCi/L). Another measure for reporting radon concentration is ‘working level” (WL) which is the radiation level of 100 pCi/L of Rn in equilibrium with its daughters. Clearly since the duration of exposure is also an important indicator of whether or not radon would be a health hazard. the measure working level months (WLM) is also used. The estimates of risk due to inhalation of radon decay products in homes are extrapolated from epidemiological
studies of underground miners. Based on published information up to 1986, Puskin and Nelson (1989) used a linear relative risk model to make their radon risk projections. In calculating risks for indoor exposures to the general public, they made corrections, on an age specific basis, for differences in breathing rate and lung morphology, which reduced the projections by about 40%. The central estimate of risk from constant lifetime exposure was 3.6 x lo4 fatal cancer/WLM (working level months). The range of their estimates is from 3.05 x lo4 to 4.2 x lo4 fatalitiesWLM.
EPA considers any indoor air radon concentration of more than 4 pCi/L to be unsafe. and advises mitigation. Reducing the indoor radon to 4 pCi/L will affect about 4.4 million houses, and avert 6.000 fatal cancers annually. The time period for taking action varies from a few years for concentrations of near 4 pC& to months for near 20 pCi& and weeks if above 200 p C i L The EPA estimate is that each pCifL reduction in radon concentration in a single residence corresponds to roughly 0.01 lung cancer deaths averted over a SO-year period. Puskin and Nelson (1989) have estimated that if the households that had 7 pCi/L were targeted for remedial measures, about 2400 lung cancer deaths would be reduced annually.
The cost of mitigation would be $400 to $5000 in “up-front costs” plus annual costs 0€$100-$200 in operations, monitoring, and maintenance. depending on the remedial action taken (1989). Given these figures, Puskin and Nelson have calculated the SVOL in the context of radon to be between $4OO,ooO and $7,000,000. The average of these figures would be approximately $3.7 million.
Since the public’s perception of its risk of exposure to accidents at nuclear power plants is partly based on the risk of getting cancer, it is also of interest to examine chemical carcinogens as well. A recent study by Travis, Pack, and Fisher (19873) examined 23 regulated and seven unregulated chemical carcinogens to determine cost per life saved. A related paper by Travis, et al. (198%) provides figures on lifetime risk estimates for 131 chemicals. The SVOL (in 1990 $) estimated in their study varies over a wide range from $0.12 million to $208 million. The mean value of SVQL in their study was $31.7 million.
In addition, there have been a number of studies that have examined the WTP for reducing public risk generally. The results of major studies show a range from $93,000 to $22 million (1990 $). Very few of these are related to radiological risk, although safety is the main concern. The mean value of these studies works out to $4.4 million per life saved.
3.3 WTP for Reducinq Occupational Risk Recent estimates of the dollar value of avoided dose in the AL4RA (as-low-as-reasonably-achievable) context, and the actual values being used in the nuclear industry. appear to be based on a trend toward acceptance of the WTP approach to the valuation of detriment. A greater concern on the part of management and workers with radiation safety along with the additional costs of hiring and training crews to perform in high radiation environments and stricter limits on exposure have led to higher monetary values of avoided dose than the earlier estimates based on the approach of estimating medical costs and the loss of potential earnings. A recent article by Baum (1991) on the valuation of avoided dose at U. S. nuclear power plants reported that in 1989 U. S. nuclear power plants were using values that ranged from $1,OOO to $20.000 per personrem. The mean and median were calculated by Baum to be $7,000/person-rem and $10,000/person-rem in 1990 dollars. respectively.
The issue in the nuclear industry is the risk to workers in the power plants and other nuclear facilities. The perceived risk to nuclear industry workers is similar to the perceived risk of working in hazardous industries, such as mining. oil rigs etc. Graham and Vaupel (1983) examined a number of cases involving hazardous occupations and obtained SVOLestimates ranging from $0.03 million to $336 million (1990 $). There have been a number of WTP studies on occupational risk as well. In this context, the measure used is “revealed preference” where the willingness-to-accept wage differentials in order to compensate for a risky job is taken to indicate how people value the risk. Based on this concept, a number of authors have evaluated the SVOL These range from a low of $25O,OOO to a high of $10 million (1990 $)with a mean of $3.1 million.
A number of organizations such as the Consumer Product Safety Commission, Environmental Protection Agency, the Health and Human Services Department. the National Highway Transportation Safety Agency, and the Occupational Safety and Health Agency have estimated the cost per life saved in a number of cases, other than direct employment. These figures are also indicative of how people perceive their day-to-day risk. The estimates range from a low of $80,000 to a high of $29 million. Graham and Vaupel(l983) show that OSHA figures that are directly related to hazardous occupations had a median value of $24 million per life saved. The figures estimated by the other organizations ranged from $100 thousand for the Consumer Product Safety Commission to $5.2 millionestimated by the EPA.
3.4 Summary of SVOL based on Willinaness To Pay
The information presented above is summarized in Table 2. The mean estimates of the SVOL from the various public exposure risk studies ranges from 3.7 to 31.7 million (1990dollars). Table 2 also shows that the m a n values of SVOL from the hazardous occupation risk studies range from a low of $3.1 million to a high of $14 million (1990 dollars). The mean of these values of SVOL works out to approximately $10 million (1990 $). We adopt this value to
estimate the total cost given in Equation (3) above.
4 OFFSITE CONSEQUENCES ESTIMATED IN THE
We report below the offsite consequences including the health effects and offsite damage costs calculated from the source terms developed in the NUREG-1150 study of severe accident risks for five commercial nuclear power plants. NUREG-1150 is a comprehensive, integrated risk study which incorporates the most recent information and insights on accident progression, phenomenology, containment response and source terms to obtain quantitative estimates of the risk and its uncertainty for various consequence measures, such as early fatalities and latent cancers. The plants analyzed in NUREG-1150 are: Unit 1 of the Grand Gulf station (a BWR-6 boiling water reactor. with a Mark-111 containment), Unit 2 of the Peach Bottom plant (a BWR-4 boiling water reactor with a Mark-1 containment), Unit 1 of the Suny station (a three-loop pressurized water reactor. PWR, with a subatmospheric containment), Unit 1 ofthe Sequoyah plant (a four loop PWR with an ice condenser containment), and Unit 1 of the Zion plant (a four loop PWR with a large dry containment). In the NUREG-1150 methodology, the accident sequences leading to core damage are binned into plant damage states  which setve as the entry points to the accident progression event tree (APET). The outcomes of the APET are binned into the accident progression bins (APBs) whose characteristics are used to generate the source terms for each bin. By repeated sampling from the distributions which characterize the uncertainty in the key variables. many thousands of source ternis are generated.
Each source term is characterized by a set of variables which includes: fractional releases from the core inventory of nine radionuclide groups (noble gases, iodine, cesium, barium, strontium, ruthenium, cerium, and lanthanum), timing and duration of the release, and the release height and energy. Since it would be impractical to run the consequence code for all of the source terms they are partitioned into groups based on their health effect weights, Le., their potential for causing early and latent fatalities. The source term parameters which mainly impact the health effect weights are the radionuclide release fractions and the timing of the release (the latter is especially important for the early fatalities category).
Consequence calculations are then performed for the mean source term in each group. The distributions of the outputs of the consequence calculations, which sample the effects of the variability due to weather at each site, are then combined with the distributions resulting from the analyses of plant damage states and the accident progression bins to obtain the integrated risk of a particular consequence measure. Further details of the methodology used to obtain integrated risk in the NUREG-1150 study are contained in Reference (U. S. NRC. 1989). The consequence calculations reported for each of the NUREG-1150 plants are based on the mean source term groups (after partitioning) for accident sequences initiated by internal events, equipment failures and human errors, while the plant is at full-power operation. The source term groups analyzed cover a wide range of accidents such as: small and large loss of coolant accidents (LOCAs), containment bypass releases (interfacing system LOCAs and steam generator tube ruptures), anticipated transients without scram (ATWS) events, loss of all ac power (station blackout) events.
These source terms cover a wide spectrum of releases and consequences ranging from small radionuclide releases with negligible or minor consequences (less than the population dose reported for the Three Mile Island accident. for example) to very large releases and consequences (approaching or surpassing the Chemobyl accident). Hence, these source terms are believed to be a reasonably representative sample of the range of releases and their frequencies which could arise from (internally initiated) severe accidents at U.S. nuclear power plants. They are thus appropriate for use in a study devoted to examining the offsite costs of accidents at nuclear power The source terms analyzed in this study have been taken from the individual plant reports of NUREG-1150. These reports are contained in the NUREG/CR-4551 series of reports
and include Grand Gulf (Brown, 1990). Peach Bottom (Payne. 1990), Sequoyah (Gregory, 1990), Suny (Breeding, 1990) and Zion (Park, 1993). In performing the consequence calculations, the emergency response assumptions were the same as those assumed in the NUREG-1150 study. The long tern] protective assumption used in NUREG-1150 were to interdict land which could give a projected dose to an individual via the groundshine and resuspension inhalation pathways of more than 4 rem in 5 years (2 rem in the first year and 0.5 rem per year for the next 4 years). Banning of contaminated food and interdiction of agricultural land for crop growing was based on FDA protective action guides for exposure from ingestion for the food groups and crops modeled in the MACCS code (representative of an average U. S. diet). For each source term. the MACCS code calculates distributions of the consequences based on Monte Carlo sampling from one year of site-specific hourly weather and wind direction data. Apart from the variability due to weather. there is a very large variation in the consequences arising from the different source terms at each plant due to differences in the release parameters such magnitude (that is, fractions of the core inventory released), timing and energy. To obtain a single value of mean (averaged over weather) consequences which is representative of all of the source terms analyzed at each plant we constructed frequency-averaged mean consequences defined as follows. For any mean consequence, Ci,fo r a source term i. the frequency-averaged value C is  
where is the frequency of source_ term i and N is the total number of source term groups. C can be understood as a frequency-averaged conditional mean consequence value, that is the mean value (averaged over weather) of the consequence conditional on the occurrence of the accident and weighted by the frequency of the accident. The results are shown in Table 3 for each of the NUREG-1190 plants.
4.1 Variation of Offsite Costs and Doses with the Lona-Term Interdiction Limit
To estimate the effect of varying long-term interdiction dose limits on offsite costs, latent fatalities, and population doses, we have recalculated the consequences at each of the NUREG-1150 plants for the following limits: 3.5 rem in 5 years (0.7 rem o r 700 millirem per year), 2.5 rem in 5 years (500 millirem per year) and 1.5 rem in 5 years (300 millirem per year). These calculations were performed for all of the source terms at each plant out to a distance of SO miles. From these results, frequency-averaged mean conditional consequences were constructed at each plant for each of the long term interdiction limits in the manner described above. The results out to SO miles are shown in Tables 4 through 8 for Grand Gulf. Peach Bottom, Sequoyah, Surry and Zion, respectively.
The results show the features qualitatively displayed in Figure 1. As the interdiction limit is reduced the offsite costs progressively increase while the population dose and latent cancers decrease. Ultimately. a law of diminishing returns should set in as the interdiction limit is reduced: the reduction in total dose (and thus the number of latent cancers) should get smaller as progressively larger costs of condemning land and property are incurred.
5 MINIMIZATION OF TOTAL COSTS
The data on offsite costs and latent fatalities in Tables 4 through 8 has been used in equation (3) to obtain the variation in total costs out to SO miles as a function of long-term interdiction level for each of the five plants. These calculations assumed an SVOL of $10 million and a discount rate of 7% per year. The latency period of different latent cancer types  were taken from Table 1. The values of EF, early fatalities, were taken from Table 3; early fatalities do not change with variation of the long-term interdiction limit.
The results for the total costs as a function of the long term interdiction limit are shown in Figures 2 through 6 for each of the five plants. These results display quantitatively the qualitative curve shown earlier in Figure 1. For most of the plants, the minimum of the total cost cuwe for the chosen SVOL lies in the range of 500 to 700 mrem per year. For this particular SVOL, an interdiction limit of 500-700 mrem per year thus represents an optimum from the standpoint of
minimizing the total costs. This finding has significance for regulatory cost-benefit analyses of safety enhancements at nuclear facilities.
6 REFERENCES
Abrahamson, S., M. A. Bender, B. B. Boecker, E. S.Gilbert, B. R. Scott, 1991, “Health Effects Models for Nuclear Power Plant Accident Consequence Analysis, Modifications of Models from Recent Reports on Health Effects of Ionizing Radiation, Low LET Radiation, Part 11: Scientific Bases for Health Effects Models,” NUREG/CR-4214, Rev. 1. Part 11, Addendum 1, LMF-132, Inhalation Toxicology Research Institute, Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental ResearchInstitute, U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington. DC.

Baum, J. W., 1991, “Valuation of Dose Avoided at U. S.Nuclear Power Plants,” Nuclear Plant Journal, pp. 40-46.
Breeding, R. J., et al., 1990, “Evaluation of Severe Accident Risks: Surry, Unit 1,” NUREG/CR-4551, SAND86-1309. Vol.3, Rev. 1, Part 1, Sandia National Laboratories.
Brown, II: D., et al., 1990, “Evaluation of Severe Accident Risks: Grand Gulf, Unit 1,” Sandia National Laboratories. NUREGKR-4551, SAND86-1309. Vol. 6. Rev. 1, Part 1.
Chanin, D., et al., 1993, “MACCS Version 1.5.11.1: A Maintenance Release of the Code,” Sandia National Laboratories, NUREG/CR-6059, SAND92-2146.
Evans, J. S., D. W. Moeller and D. W. Cooper, 1985, “Health Effects Model for Nuclear Power Plant Accident Consequence Analysis,” NUREG/CR-4214, SAND85-7185, Sandia National Laboratories, U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC.
Evans, J. S., 1990, “Health Effect Models for Nuclear Power Plant Accident Consequence Analysis, Low LET Radiation.
Part I: Introduction, Integration, and Summary, NUREG/CR-4214, SAND85-7185, Rev. 1, Part I, Sandia National Laboratories, U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Cornmission,Washington, DC.
Fisher, A., L G. Chestnut, and D. M. Violette. 1989, “The Value of Reducing Risks of Death: A Note on New Evidence,” Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 8,
Gorham, E D., et al., 1993, “Evaluation of Severe Accident Risks: Methodology for the Containment, Source Term, Consequence, and Risk Integration Analyses,” Sandia National Laboratories, NUREG/CR-4551, SAND86-1309. Vol. 1, Rev. 1. pp. 88-100.
Graham, J. D. and J. W. Vaupel, 1983, ‘‘‘The Value of Life: What Difference Does It Make?” in R. Zeckhauser and Leebaert (eds.), What Role for Govemment, Duke Press Policy Studies, pp. 176-186.
Gregory, J. J., et a!., 1990, “Evaluation of Severe Accident Risks: Sequoyah, Unit 1,” NUREG/CR-4551, SAND86-1309, Vol. 5, Rev. 1, Part 1, Sandia National Laboratories.
Jow, H. N.. J. L Sprung, J. A. Rollstin, L T Ritchie, D. I. Chanin, 1990, “MELCOR Accident Consequence Code System (MACCS),” NUREG/CR-4691, SAND86-1562, Sandia National Laboratories.
Mitchell, R. C., and R. T. Carson, 1989, Using Surveys to Value Public Gooak: The Contingent Valuation Method, Washington, DC: Resources for the Future.
National Research Council, Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR 111), 1980. “The Effects on Populations of Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation: 1980,” National Academy of Science Press, Washington. DC.
National Research Council. Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR V). 1990. “Health Effects of Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation,” National Academy of Science Press, Washington, DC.
Park. C. K.. et al., 1993, “Evaluation of Severe Accident Risks: Zion, Unit 1,” NUREG/CR-4551, SAND86-1309, Vol. 7, Rev. 1, Part 1. Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Payne. A. C., et al.. 1990. “Evaluation of Severe Accident Risks: Peach Bottom, Unit 2,” Sandia National Laboratories, NUREG/CR-4551. SAND86-1-309, Vol. 4, Rev. 1, Part 1.
Puskin, J. S. and C. B. Nelson, 1989. “EPA’s Perspective on Risks from Residential Radon Exposure,’’ Journal of the Air Pollution Control Association, Vol. 39. No. 7. pp. 915-919.
Russell. M. and M. Gruber, 1987. “Risk Assessment in Environmental Policy Making,” Science. Vol. 236, pp. 286-290.
Travis. C. C.. S. R. Pack, and A. Fisher, 1987a, “Cost-Effectiveness as a Factor in Cancer Risk Management,” Environment International, Vol. 13, pp. 469-474.
Travis, C. C., S. A. Richter, E. A. C. Crouch, R. Wilson, and E. D. Klema, 1987b, “Cancer Risk Management,” Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 21, No. 5. pp. 415-420.
UNSCEAR, United Nations Scientific Committee on Effects of Atomic Radiation, 1977, Sources and Efects of Ionizing Radiation. New York.
U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1975, ‘‘ReactorSafety Study,” WASH-1400. NUREG-75/014. U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1975, ”Reactor Safety Study, Appendix VI: Calculation of Reactor Accident Consequences,” WASH-1400, NUREG-75/014.
U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1989, “SevereAccident Risks: An Assessment for Five U.S. Nuclear Power Plants.” NUREG-1150, Vol. 1.
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Shalll Indians go bankrupt if one Nuclear Plant explodes as in Japan in 2011?

Shall Indians be made bankrupt with explosion of one Nuclear plant like in Japan in 2011?
http://georgewashington2.blogspot.com/2011/04/ap-risk-of-nuclear-catastrophe-could.html

Thursday, April 21, 2011 [in the wake of Fukushima Nuclear accident]

Preface: I am not against all nuclear power, solely the unsafe type we have today. Future designs - like thorium reactors (see this and this) - may be a different animal altogether.

AP has a good article (via the Washington Post) on nuclear power economics:
Nuclear power is a viable source for cheap energy only if it goes uninsured.
***
Governments that use nuclear energy are torn between the benefit of low-cost electricity and the risk of a nuclear catastrophe, which could total trillions of dollars and even bankrupt a country.
The bottom line is that it’s a gamble: Governments are hoping to dodge a one-off disaster while they accumulate small gains over the long-term.
The cost of a worst-case nuclear accident at a plant in Germany, for example, has been estimated to total as much as €7.6 trillion ($11 trillion), while the mandatory reactor insurance is only €2.5 billion.
“The €2.5 billion will be just enough to buy the stamps for the letters of condolence,” said Olav Hohmeyer, an economist at the University of Flensburg who is also a member of the German government’s environmental advisory body.
The situation in the U.S., Japan, China, France and other countries is similar.
***
“Around the globe, nuclear risks — be it damages to power plants or the liability risks resulting from radiation accidents — are covered by the state. The private insurance industry is barely liable,” said Torsten Jeworrek, a board member at Munich Re, one of the world’s biggest reinsurance companies.
***
In financial terms, nuclear incidents can be so devastating that the cost of full insurance would be so high as to make nuclear energy more expensive than fossil fuels.
***
Ultimately, the decision to keep insurance on nuclear plants to a minimum is a way of supporting the industry.
“Capping the insurance was a clear decision to provide a non-negligible subsidy to the technology,” Klaus Toepfer, a former German environment minister and longtime head of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), said.
As I've previously noted:
In 1982, the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs received a secret report received from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission called "Calculation of Reactor Accident Consequences 2".

***
In that report and other reports by the NRC in the 1980s, it was estimated that there was a 50% chance of a nuclear meltdown within the next 20 years which would be so large that it would contaminate an area the size of the State of Pennsylvania, which would result in huge numbers of a fatalities, and which would cause damage in the hundreds of billions of dollars (in 1980s dollars).
Similarly, renowned physicist Michio Kaku told Democracy Now today:
The American people have not been given the full truth, because, for example, right north of New York City, roughly 30 miles north of where we are right now, we have the Indian Point nuclear power plant, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has now admitted that of all the reactors prone to earthquakes, the one right next to New York City is number one on that list. And the government itself, back in 1980, estimated that property damage would be on the order of about $200 billion in case of an accident, in 1980 dollars [more than $500 billion in today's dollars], at the Indian Point nuclear power station.
But AP notes that doesn't include the real costs:
The cost of a nuclear meltdown at the Indian Point reactors some 24 miles north of New York City has been estimated at up to $416 billion in a 2009 study. But that does not take into full account the impact on one of the world’s busiest metropolises.
“Indeed, a worst-case scenario could lead to the closure of New York City for years, as happened at Chernobyl, ... leading to almost unthinkable costs,” University of Pennsylvania’s Howard Kunreuther and Columbia University’s Geoffrey Heal said.
Japan's economy was already on the ropes prior to Fukushima. America's economy is already on the ropes, and yet a U.S. nuclear accident could be a lot worse than Japan
As I wrote on April 8th:
Whenever there is a disaster, those responsible claim it was "unforeseeable" so as to escape blame.
For example:
·         It happened with 9/11
·         It happened with the financial crisis
·         It happened with the BP oil spill (see this, this, this, this and this)
·         It happened with the Japanese nuclear accident
The big boys gamble with our lives and our livelihoods, because they make a killing by taking huge risks and cutting costs. And when things inevitably go South, they aren't held responsible (other than a slap on the wrist), and may even be bailed out by the government.
And as I noted the same day, nuclear accidents, oil spills and financial meltdowns all happen for the same reason ... the big boys cutting every possible corner in order to make more money:
[Nobel prize winning economist Joseph] Stiglitz wrote Wednesday:
The entire financial sector was rife with agency problems and externalities. Ratings agencies had incentives to give good ratings to the high-risk securities produced by the investment banks that were paying them. Mortgage originators bore no consequences for their irresponsibility, and even those who engaged in predatory lending or created and marketed securities that were designed to lose did so in ways that insulated them from civil and criminal prosecution.
This brings us to the next question: are there other "black swan" events waiting to happen? Unfortunately, some of the really big risks that we face today are most likely not even rare events. The good news is that such risks can be controlled at little or no cost. The bad news is that doing so faces strong political opposition - for there are people who profit from the status quo.
We have seen two of the big risks in recent years, but have done little to bring them under control. By some accounts, how the last crisis was managed may have increased the risk of a future financial meltdown.
Too-big-to fail banks, and the markets in which they participate, now know that they can expect to be bailed out if they get into trouble. As a result of this "moral hazard", these banks can borrow on favourable terms, giving them a competitive advantage based not on superior performance but on political strength. While some of the excesses in risk-taking have been curbed, predatory lending and unregulated trading in obscure over-the-counter derivatives continue. Incentive structures that encourage excess risk-taking remain virtually unchanged.
So, too, while Germany has shut down its older nuclear reactors, in the US and elsewhere, even plants that have the same flawed design as Fukushima continue to operate. The nuclear industry’s very existence is dependent on hidden public subsidies - costs borne by society in the event of nuclear disaster, as well as the costs of the still-unmanaged disposal of nuclear waste. So much for unfettered capitalism!
***
In the end, those gambling in Las Vegas lose more than they gain. As a society, we are gambling – with our big banks, with our nuclear power facilities, with our planet. As in Las Vegas, the lucky few - the bankers that put our economy at risk and the owners of energy companies that put our planet at risk - may walk off with a mint. But on average and almost certainly, we as a society, like all gamblers, will lose.
That, unfortunately, is a lesson of Japan’s disaster that we continue to ignore at our peril.
The bottom line is that if we continue to let the top 1% - who are never satisfied, but always want more, more, more - run the show [in a cavalier, staggeringly risky manner] without challenge from the other 99% of people in the world, we will have more Fukushimas, more Gulf oil spills and more financial meltdowns.