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COP26 – Another Failure For The Planet

This article is more than 2 years old.

As COP26 wraps up today, the elephant in the room was why nuclear power was excluded from the adult’s table.

The World Nuclear Association had all of its members' applications to establish exhibits at the COP26 climate summit's civil society "Green Zone" rejected. The UK government, which is managing the Glasgow Science Center's Green Zone, said there was limited exhibit space available.

Right…but there was plenty of space for the Soroptimists, the The Froglife Trust and The British Dragonfly Society.

The Green Zone is billed as a space for organizations to host workshops, panel discussions and keynote speeches which promote dialogue, awareness, education and commitments on the climate crisis. So why in the world would you want to raise awareness about the most useful, most misunderstood, tool we have to replace coal-generated electricity?

As reported by the Scottish outlet, the Ferret, a Scottish environmental group said that it was “right” to keep the nuclear industry out. Ironically, this group failed to note that COP26’s claims for being quite green comes from getting 70% of its power from nuclear. Nuclear is the only reason southern Scotland receives the cleanest power in the U.K., generated by the Torness and Hunterston B nuclear power plants. It has nothing to do with wind turbines.

So COP26 will be another failure in a long line of well-meaning attempts to wrangle climate change and decrease global emissions sufficiently to limit damage this century. Contrary to the feel-good back-slapping about the declaration that we can keep warming to 1.5°C just by saying so, and the announcement of the Net Zero World Initiative, global emissions will continue to increase until at least 2040, the tipping point date that has everyone so scared – for good reason.

There were some clear heads in the group. COP26 leaders received an open letter signed by 12 leaders of labor unions from all across Europe, calling for nuclear power to be given higher priorities.

French President Emmanuel Macron announced the construction of new EPR nuclear reactors.

China will build 180 new large nuclear reactors by 2035.

Craig Piercy and Steven Nesbit of the American Nuclear Society sent a letter to the COP26 leadership on behalf of over 10,000 nuclear engineers, scientists, and technologists, urging COP 26 delegates to insist that any agreement arising from COP26 include a strong role for nuclear technology in achieving carbon reduction targets.

Even U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, John Kerry, was serious about nuclear, saying ”The task ahead of us — limiting global average temperature rise to well below 1.5°C and achieving net zero emissions by 2050 — is a formidable challenge and an immense economic opportunity. The global clean energy transition will require deploying, at massive scale, the full range of clean energy technologies available, including nuclear energy, over the next decade and beyond. The United States pioneered the peaceful uses of nuclear around the world and remains the world’s largest producer of nuclear power, which accounts for 20% of our electricity mix, and more than half of our carbon-free power.”

But on Thursday, a horrible thing occurred, something I fear foreshadows the future. IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi stated that, “No one died from radiation at Fukushima.”

After which he was met with laughter.

This is disgusting. And is why the great hope of COP26 will fail. It’s run by a bunch of snowflakes that only embrace the science they like, just what they accuse the fossil fuel industry of doing. They don’t even listen to their own climate gurus.

In a previous open letter to the COP leadership and the IPCC, the world’s leading climate scientists James Hansen, Ken Caldeira, Kerry Emanuel, Tom Wigley reiterated, “There is no credible path to climate stabilization that does not include a substantial role for nuclear power… A major expansion of nuclear power is essential to avoid dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system this century… We’ve done the math and we can’t power the world without nuclear energy.”

And it doesn’t matter that every legitimate study by actual scientists, have shown again and again that the radiation released from Fukushima never concentrated enough in any one place to cause health effects. The United Nations declared, “It is unlikely to be able to attribute any health effects in the future among the general public and the vast majority of workers from exposure to radiation following the leaks and explosions at the earthquake-damaged power plant in March of 2011.”

The one person claimed to have died of lung cancer from Fukushima was a life-long smoker and never received enough dose from the accident to get cancer, especially in such a short time period after the event. The latency period for lung cancer from radiation is longer than five years and 74 mSv spread over four years is not enough dose to cause any health effects, being lower than background radiation in many many places on Earth.

But they so wanted to find someone. Still, the only residual health effects from Fukushima continue to be from stress, depression and fear.

This goes deeper than just thinking Fukushima was death incarnate. It goes to show the shallow resolve many climate activists have to their cause. If they really cared about solving such an existential threat to the entire planet, they would do their homework, listen to their own climate scientists, consult with actual nuclear scientists and figure out how to best address this looming threat with every tool we have.

Instead, they cleave to a mantra that wind and solar and batteries will do the job just fine.

But if you listen closely, you can hear Putin laughing.

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