Greens Go Nuclear?
Environmentalists embrace a former foe to combat global warming
April 14, 2005
Leif Utne Utne.com
The environmental movement was largely built on opposition to
nuclear power. Who can forget the high seas adventures of
Greenpeace's flagship, the Rainbow Warrior, in the 1970s and 80s,
sailing its ragtag crew into danger zones in the Pacific to stop US
and French nuclear tests? Or the anti-nuke campaigns of the German
Green Party, whose members laid themselves across train tracks to
block shipments of nuclear fuel and radioactive waste? No issue is
as integral to the identity of modern environmentalists.
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No issue, that is, except perhaps global warming; which is why a
number of prominent environmentalists have begun to rethink their
positions on nuclear power. In the past year, British scientist
James Lovelock, developer of the Gaia theory, futurist Stewart
Brand, founder of the Whole Earth Catalog, Hugh
Montefiore, longtime trustee of Friends of the Earth, and others
have publicly called for massive new investments in nuclear energy.
'The primary cause of global climate change is our burning of
fossil fuels for energy,' writes
Brand in Technology Review. 'So everything must be
done to increase energy efficiency and decarbonize energy
production.'
The argument is that nuclear power is a proven technology, which
has come a long way in terms of safety and efficiency since the
days of the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl disasters. 'Clean coal,
solar-powered roof tiles, wind farms in North Dakota -- they're all
pie in the emissions-free sky,' converted nuke boosters
Peter Schwartz and Spencer Reiss write in the February issue of
Wired. 'But zero-carbon reactors are here and now. We
know we can build them. Their price tag is no mystery. They fit
into the existing electric grid without a hitch. Flannel-shirted
environmentalists who fight these realities run the risk of ending
up with as much soot on their hands as the slickest coal-mining
CEO.'
Problems like waste storage, accidents, high construction costs,
and the danger of weapons-grade material falling into the wrong
hands are surmountable, says Brand, if environmentalists would take
the reins. 'The best way for doubters to control a questionable new
technology is to embrace it, lest it remain wholly in the hands of
enthusiasts who think there is nothing questionable about it.'