A plea for a return to science on the nuclear power issue

I get mail:

German physicist Peter Heller wrote a passionate plea for a return to science on the nuclear power issue, published in German here: http://www.science-skeptical.de/blog/fukushima/004149/

With Dr. Heller’s permission, I’ve translated it in English. But having gone over the content, I think his plea is worthy of a much wider audience – more than what NTZ can offer. So I send this to you with the kind request that you consider publishing it at WUWT.

Best regards,

P Gosselin

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German physicist Peter Heller makes a passionate plea for a return to science on the nuclear energy issue. He wonders if ignorance and fear will cause us to abandon the legacies of Einstein, Heisenberg and others.

Fukushima

By Dr Peter Heller, http://www.science-skeptical.de

Astronomer, Physicist

There’s no place on earth I would rather be right now than at Fukushima – right in the atomic power plant, at the centre of the event. I say this because I am a physicist and there is no other place that could be more exciting and interesting for a physicist. The same goes for many, if not most physicists and engineers, on the planet.

Already at a young age I knew one day I would study physics. As a boy, I received a telescope for Christmas, and from that point on my view was fixed on the night sky; gazing at star clusters, nebula and galaxies was my favourite preoccupation. It was only later that I learned that these lights and the twinkling in eyepiece were actually the expressions of a chaotic and violent force of nature – the direct conversion of matter into energy during the fusion of an atomic nucleus.

My curiosity carried me, as if on a high, through 10 semesters of study and subsequent graduation. It was a time of discovery that involved the tedious task of understanding. At times I felt exasperation and self doubt with respect to the sheer complexity and breadth of what there was to learn. Yet, there were times of joy whenever the fog lifted and the clarity and beauty of physical descriptions of natural phenomena moved in its place. It was a time that, unfortunately, passed all too quickly and is now some years in the past.

The great minds that accompanied me through my studies were Planck, Sommerfeld, Bohr, Einstein, Heisenberg, and a host of others who, for us physicists, are still very much alive today. They are great thinkers who contributed to unravelling the puzzles of nature and the forces which keep the world together through the most minute structures. I devoured the stories of Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner, of Enrico Fermi and Edward Teller – to name a few – and on how they created completely new technologies from theoretical concepts, how the energy stored in the nucleus of an atom could be used for the good of man and how it became possible in a single process to tap into this source of affordable, clean and plentiful energy on a large scale as never seen by man. Electricity illuminates our world, drives our machines, allow us to communicate over great distances, thus making our lives easier and more comfortable. It is a source of energy that staves off poverty and enables prosperity.

Electricity: manufactured by splitting atomic nuclei with neutrons, gained through the direct conversion of mass into energy. It is the principle by which (via the reverse process of fusion) the stars twinkle in the night sky, a principle by which our sun enables life on our planet.

As a physicist it fills me with great joy and pride to see how man is able to rouse this force of nature at the most minute structural level, then amplify, control, and use it for our benefit. As a physicist I have the fundamental understanding of the processes – I can imagine them and describe them. As a physicist I have neither fear of an atomic power plant nor of radioactivity. Ultimately I know that it is a natural phenomenon that is always around us, one we can never escape – and one that we never need to escape. And I know the first as a symbol of man’s capability to steer the forces of nature. As a physicist I have no fear of what nature has to offer. Rather I have respect. And this respect beckons us to seize the chances like those offered by neutrons, which can split nuclei and thus convert matter into energy. Anything else would be ignorance and cowardice.

Dark times in history

There were times in history when ignorance and cowardice overshadowed human life. It was a time when our ancestors were forced to lead a life filled with superstition and fear because it was forbidden to use creativity and fantasy. Religious dogma, like the earth being the centre of the universe, or creationism, forbade people to question. The forbiddance of opening a human body and examining it prevented questions from being answered. Today these medieval rules appear backwards and close-minded. We simply cannot imagine this way of thinking could have any acceptance.

But over the recent days I have grown concerned that we are headed again for such dark times. Hysterical and sensationalist media reporting, paired with a remarkably stark display of ignorance of technical and scientific interrelations, and the attempt by a vast majority of journalists to fan the public’s angst and opposition to nuclear energy – pure witch-burning disguised as modernity.

Freedom of research

So it fills me with sadness and anger on how the work of the above mentioned giants of physics is now being dragged through the mud, how the greatest scientific discoveries of the 20th century are being redefined and criminalized. The current debate in Germany is also a debate on freedom of research. The stigmatization and ostracism of nuclear energy, the demand for an immediate stop of its use, is also the demand for the end of its research and development. No job possibilities also means no students, which means no faculty, which then means the end of the growth of our knowledge. Stopping nuclear energy is nothing less than rejecting the legacy of Einstein, Heisenberg, Bohr and all others. It is tantamount to scrapping it, labelling it as dangerous – all in a fit of ignorance. And just as creationists attempt to ban the theory of evolution from the school books, it almost seems as if every factual and neutral explanation in Germany is now in the process of being deleted.

The media suggests a nuclear catastrophe, a mega-meltdown, and that the apocalypse has already begun. It is almost as if the 10,000 deaths in Japan were actually victims of nuclear energy, and not the earthquake or the tsunami. Here again one has to remind us that Fukushima was first hit by an unimaginable 9.0 earthquake and then by a massive 10-meter wave of water just an hour later. As a result, the facility no longer found itself in a highly technological area, but surrounded by a desert of rubble. All around the power plant the infrastructure, residential areas, traffic routes, energy and communication networks are simply no longer there. They were wiped out. Yet, after an entire week, the apocalypse still has not come to pass. Only relatively small amounts of radioactive materials have leaked out and have had only a local impact. If one considers the pure facts exclusively, i.e. only the things we really know, then it exposes the unfounded interpretations of scientific illiterates in the media. One can only arrive to one conclusion: This sorrowful state will remain so.

In truth, this does not show that the ideologically motivated, fear-laden admonitions and warnings were correct. Fukushima illustrates that we are indeed able to control atomic energy. Fukushima shows that we can master it even when natural disasters beyond planning befall us. Still, at Fukushima the conflict between human creativity/competence continues to clamour against the bond energy in atomic nuclei. It’s a struggle that that shows what human intelligence, knowledge gained, passion, boldness, respect, and capability to learn allow us to do. Personally this does not fill me with apprehension, but with hope. Man can meet this challenge not only because he has to, but most of all because he wants to.

Even though I have not practiced physics for some time now, I will never be anything other than a scientist and researcher, and there would be no other place I would rather be than on site at Fukushima. There is no other place at the moment where so much can be learned about atomic energy, which keeps our world together deep inside, and the technical possibilities to benefit from it. Do we have the courage to learn? Do we accept – with respect and confidence – the opportunities we are confronted with? Fukushima will show us possibilities on how to use the direct conversion of matter into energy in a better and safer way, something that Einstein and others could have only dreamed of.

I am a physicist. My wish is to live in a world that is willing to learn and to improve whatever is good. I would only like to live in a world where great strides in physics are viewed with fascination, pride, and hope because they show us the way to a better future. I would only like to live in a world that has the courage for a better world. Any other world for me is unacceptable. Never. That’s why I am going to fight for this world, without ever relenting.

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Translated from the German, with the permission of Peter Heller, by Bernd Felsche and Pierre Gosselin. Original text appeared here: http://www.science-skeptical.de/blog/fukushima/004149/

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Kohl
March 20, 2011 11:44 am

Roger says “Yet those same physicists that he so admires stated that atomic power should never, ever be used because of the immense harm it will do”
Ah, Roger. By all means make sure the facts do not get in the way of your argument!
You will find that those physicists of whom you speak were not talking of ‘nuclear power’ but of the ‘power of nuclear’ weapons. Many were unwilling to work on them at all. All were very unhappy about doing so. But that is not the same thing at all as the use of nuclear power for production of energy.

Viv Evans
March 20, 2011 11:44 am

A heartfelt plea – not so much for more nuclear power stations, but for people to engage with science, to become more rational, and especially for young minds to be allowed to become open to the awe one can experience through science.
It is sad that today’s general attitude is indeed more governed by feelings than by rational thinking.
Thus – people ‘feel’ that AGW must be right, because ‘pollution’ by CO2 feels so wrong.
Thus – people feel frightened by ‘nuclear’, in the same way some people feel frightened by spiders, because they haven’t made the effort to learn the first thing about it/them.
These ‘feelings’ are of course aided, abetted and driven by today’s MSM.
I hope you’ve noticed that, one week on, there’s a new kid on the block, the intervention in Libya.
Reports on the plants at Fukushima are slipping below the fold … danger over, or loss of interest?
Or, perhaps, no real danger in the first place, except fear of not selling enough print issues?

rbateman
March 20, 2011 11:45 am

Leif Svalgaard says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:12 am
One might also question the rationale behind storing spent fuel rods in pools wordwide.
Politically, you cannot get rid of this stuff and neither can it be recycled (again due to political quagmire).
So, 95%(if I am informed correctly) of the UO2 in spent fuel rods sits in pools of water being kept cool.

Theo Goodwin
March 20, 2011 11:47 am

James Sexton says:
March 20, 2011 at 10:59 am
“Wonderful essay. Sadly, it is intermixed with a bit of ignorance itself… Why he felt compelled to lash out at creationists while discussing nuclear energy policy is beyond me, but if he wants to be taken seriously, he should take the time to intellectually engage with a creationist, instead of practicing the very thing he’s wailing against.”
Political Correctness is the main tool in the ongoing destruction of Western Civilization. The Politically Correct are invariably dictating to everyone that offensive issues cannot be discussed. The Politically Correct insist that only they can define the term ‘offensive’ as it occurs in this context. All of us, including Dr. Peter Heller, must learn that free speech means free speech and cannot mean anything less than free speech. Ban the Creationists and you give aid and comfort to those who would ban the physicists, the nuclear engineers, the power company CEOs, and anyone who does not share the existing mantra of the MSM, academia, and the Left. Political Correctness is a raw grab for power and it comes from people who believe in raw power only.

Kohl
March 20, 2011 11:50 am

The principal point seems to me to be that the number killed or injured by the nuclear plant has been … zero? And that should be put against the number killed by the earthquake and tsunami ….. 7000 so far?
Clearly, the logic of the alarmist argument should be applied to both. No one should ever be allowed to live in an earthquake/tsunami zone again. Look at the immense harm it might do. (‘might’ is a little misplaced here – ‘will’ is more exact).
In the end, I too am confounded by the irrational fear surrounding anything to do with ‘nuclear’.

March 20, 2011 11:51 am

Tsunami-sensitive areas in the world.
Had the engineers known a little about storms and tides, they would indeed have built the reactors more out of harm’s way – a bit higher up. You see, the coast is formed (after the ice age) by the collective forces of tides, waves and storms. Where tides are absent, the coast has never experienced a rising sea level, with the result that a tsunami can overrun low-lying land that has never been eroded away. Combined with the absence of serious storms, a coast then becomes tsunami-sensitive.
As an aside, in the absence of tides, protective dunes cannot form either – see the coastal pictures at Fukushima. More about this: http://www.seafriends.org.nz/oceano/beachgo.htm and particularly http://www.seafriends.org.nz/oceano/beachnew.htm which defines the beach/dune laws, also generally unknown.
It has never been reported why the Sumatra tsunami ran so far inland either and caused so much damage in some places but not in others. But look at the world map of tide heights, to see that north Sumatra experiences no tides at all, and no storms either. It is extremely tsunami-sensitive, like the north and west of Japan. There are more tsunami-sensitive places in the world, where it would not be wise to construct expensive infrastructure: http://www.seafriends.org.nz/oceano/waves2.htm
It is amazing that such simple facts are not generally known.

March 20, 2011 11:54 am

Thank you very much for posting my essay here. Pierre and Bernd helped (many thanks to them) with the translation, because I am not very experienced in English.
But: The picture does not show me nor am I a “Professor of Physics” from Harvard. As mentioned in my text I do not work as a professional researcher, I left university soon after receiving my Ph. D. (I am not a professor). I am a little bit younger than the professor and I live in Germany and never lived anywhere else on this planet. The essay is an answer to many comparable essays of individual viewpoints of the opponents of nuclear power in the current debate in Germany. Many people at the moment are talking about their fears (“German Angst”), I wanted to say something about hopes.
REPLY: Apologies, identical names. Do you have a CV/bio page that I can properly reference? – Anthony

Douglas
March 20, 2011 11:54 am

ew-3 says: March 20, 2011 at 10:40 am
[Sadly I think the good Dr is going to be disappointed. ——we’ve really gone backwards. It’s largely generational. The people that gave us sputnik and NASA were the warriors of WWII. They understood sacrifice and discipline. —-We’ve become too soft too risk averse. Our education system is in shambles and has become too political.
We need some major calamity to take place to wake us up.]
———————————————————————————
Well ew-3 I hope you are wrong about Dr. Heller’s plea and his view and hope for the future – his comment was like a guiding star for me.
But I do agree with you regarding our becoming soft and risk averse. There is no doubt that the education system has been subverted by politics from the bottom to the top.
Douglas

Tom in Texas
March 20, 2011 11:56 am

One might wonder about the rationale in a tsunami-prone country to build power plants on the coast…
Or locating backup generators in the basement while placing spent (dry?) fuel rods on the roof.

Allen
March 20, 2011 11:57 am

Learning opportunities from this natural disaster will keep government-funded agencies in the black for years to come. Let’s hope that something like science is practiced by them and that we don’t stop our scrutiny about their claims to the truth.

EW
March 20, 2011 11:57 am

German is depressive. Just a week ago in a TV debate one person said that Germany must abandon this nuclear “technology of yesterday” and that there’s another good reason for it – young people don’t want to study something so ugly, most of the engineers is between 50-60 years of age and there will be soon a shortage of specialists fro running the plants safely.
Incredible.

Douglas
March 20, 2011 12:04 pm

Leif Svalgaard says: March 20, 2011 at 11:12 am
Max Hugoson says:March 20, 2011 at 10:44 am
the “sea wall” is going to have to be: 14 meters high.
One might wonder about the rationale in a tsunami-prone country to build power plants on the coast…
—————————————————————–
We’ve all got 20/20 hindsight.
Douglas

Doug Badgero
March 20, 2011 12:08 pm

“kim says:
March 20, 2011 at 10:21 am
The Endarkenment Beckons.”
This is the most telling comment and it is not just about nuclear. The issue is will we be allowed to honestly answer the questions that are asked or will political correctness creep farther into science than it already has? Will we be allowed to do the work necessary to add to our understanding or will more and more areas be off limits to discussion, experiment, and advancement?

crosspatch
March 20, 2011 12:08 pm

Let us not forget that the workers at the plant also experienced this earthquake and tsunami. Many have friends and relatives who are dead, missing, or displaced in a shelter somewhere suffering terrible conditions. The workers there are human beings. That they have been able to keep these plants together, practically with their bare hands, is itself a heroic act. Those workers deserve medals.
In this country, we watch an industrial event that has released no dangerous levels of radiation, contaminate none of the surrounding environment, killed nobody by radiation, inured nobody by radiation, sickened nobody by radiation — and we must now rethink our infrastructure lest we also suffer “disasters” that don’t kill or hurt anyone or don’t contaminate our environment?
It’s just crazy irrational.

March 20, 2011 12:08 pm

Kohl — I gently suggest you study the history of nuclear non-proliferation. Those stellar physicists – some of whom I much admire – knew quite well that even atomic power plants (the term they used back then) could and would be used to create weapons. They knew quite well how the plutonium with which they were working was created. They wanted the entire thing to be stopped. Weapons, electricity, all of it. They knew what they were doing. And nobody in positions of power listened.
So here we are 65 years later, as a civilization, 6 or 7 billion people held hostage to the next great earthquake, beyond what a nuclear power plant was designed to withstand, or the next great tsunami – surprise!!! Who knew they could reach 100 feet!!!! Or the next clever sabotage effort that succeeds, or any of dozens of other ways for the genie to escape the bottle.
If all this atomic power is such a grand idea, why then is there so much angst world-wide over Iran building a nuclear power plant – and North Korea doing the same? Weapons-grade plutonium is not the only way these things can sow death and destruction and agonizing illness that lingers for years. Or worse, babies born with birth defects from radiation to their parents. Dirty bombs with spent nuclear fuel wrapped around a conventional explosive will ruin your day. Any physicist should know this, and every physicist should acknowledge this.

DirkH
March 20, 2011 12:08 pm

EW says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:57 am
“German is depressive. Just a week ago in a TV debate one person said that Germany must abandon this nuclear “technology of yesterday” and that there’s another good reason for it – young people don’t want to study something so ugly, most of the engineers is between 50-60 years of age and there will be soon a shortage of specialists fro running the plants safely.”
Hehe. That person probably never had to buy a gas centrifuge. Otherwise he would know that Germans make the best ones.

Jerry Gustafson
March 20, 2011 12:12 pm

Roger Sowell
Nuclear power would be very cheap if not for the cost associated with endless lawsuits and extra environmental studies that must be factored in whenever a nuclear plant is proposed to be constructed. Also, the subsidies are mostly in the form of federal loan and insurance guarantees not actual money spent by the government. Gwyneth Cravens in her book ,Power To Save The World, sites estimates that nuclear power could cost as little as two cents per kwh based on actual construction and operating costs.
Waste storage too would be a non problem if we recycled the fuel rods, reusing the non fissioned material in them . Doing this would reduce the amount of wast to a very small amount .

TheJollyGreenMan
March 20, 2011 12:13 pm

Sorry, but I tend to have another perspective on this issue. We had an engineering systems failure at Fukushima plant. Once the physicists have done their bit they should stand aside and let the engineers take over.
The emergency water should be part of a passive system, no pumps etc. required to operate the system. The solution is simple. Store the emergency water upstream, on a hill, the natural head of the water will ensure a supply of water even in the event of a power failure. Sorry, but in the mining industry we lost a lot of assets until all emergency fire fighting water was stored in large header tanks.
There was a flaw in the civil and systems engineering design relying on active instead of passive systems. And this applies to power stations built at sea level or in the high Alps or Andes.

Douglas
March 20, 2011 12:15 pm

bubbagyro says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:39 am
Leif Svalgaard says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:12 am
[It withstood the earthquake fine—————as an aside, there is no waste problem except for the wastes known as Democrats and ecotards on the ultra-left wing.—- The ecotards made this problem, where rods have to now be stored on site]
——————————————————————–
Bubbagyro. I couldn’t agree more – and it’s the same ecotards who have infiltrated our education system that are destroying the children’s minds – and the future.
Douglas

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 20, 2011 12:19 pm

rbateman says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:45 am
So, 95%(if I am informed correctly) of the UO2 in spent fuel rods sits in pools of water being kept cool.
But nuclear is safe. DOH!

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 20, 2011 12:21 pm

Floor Anthoni says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:51 am
Tsunami-sensitive areas in the world.
Had the engineers known a little about storms and tides, they would indeed have built the reactors more out of harm’s way – a bit higher up

REPLY: They didn’t know about earthquakes and tsunamis?

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 20, 2011 12:24 pm

Douglas says:
March 20, 2011 at 12:04 pm
Leif Svalgaard says: March 20, 2011 at 11:12 am
Max Hugoson says:March 20, 2011 at 10:44 am
the “sea wall” is going to have to be: 14 meters high.
One might wonder about the rationale in a tsunami-prone country to build power plants on the coast…
—————————————————————–
We’ve all got 20/20 hindsight.
Douglas

=======================================================
They didn’t know about earthquakes and tsunamis ahead of time?

Juergen
March 20, 2011 12:24 pm

Thanks for the translation. I agree fully with Dr Peter Heller. He is the exception!
Germany’s media and so called experts have shown a lot of misinformation at the time of Chernobyl and it’s the same this time.
Japan shows that they are doing everything possible and impossible to keep it under control. Great job.
People that jump on a plane, into a car, burn coal, oil or gas, or do anything else that could cause death fear radiation as it is invisible. The media and the politics is doing the rest.

Bob Barker
March 20, 2011 12:24 pm

It amazes me that so many people, who think that it is impossible for human kind to effectively manage nuclear power development and production, have no trouble believing that effective worldwide CO2 mitigation is just a matter of will with only minor technical and economic challanges and inconveniences along the way.

Amino Acids in Meteorites
March 20, 2011 12:27 pm

Kohl says:
March 20, 2011 at 11:50 am
In the end, I too am confounded by the irrational fear surrounding anything to do with ‘nuclear’.
I am confounded by the confidence.