Something I didn't notice before...
"Tom Adams, National
Post"
Tom, are you on staff at the Post now?
Adam
-----Original
Message-----
From: cdn-nucl-l-admin@informer2.cis.McMaster.CA [mailto:cdn-nucl-l-admin@informer2.cis.McMaster.CA]
On Behalf Of Tom Adams
Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2002 1:19 PM
To: CNS
listserv
Subject: [cdn-nucl-l] Error in National Post article on AECL
funding
(Author's note: This article incorrectly states AECL's annual
subsidy as $100 million. Although that figure was promised by the federal
government as the limit of subsidization of AECL, in fact the figures every
since that promise was made have been substantially higher.
Tom
Adams)
Financial Post, 2002 March 20
Last call for AECL
subsidies
After 50 years of grants, Canada's nuclear industry still
asks for more, seeming oblivious to the fact 'the world is abandoning nuclear
power'
Tom Adams
National Post
Should Canada
continue to bankroll that perennial money loser, Atomic Energy of Canada
Limited's nuclear reactor sales program? Herb Dhaliwal, the new federal Minister
of Natural Resources, will soon be putting that question before the
federal Cabinet, along with two reviews designed to inform their
opinion.
Such reviews are not new. Mr. Dhaliwal's predecessors have
been churning them out for 50 years, most recently in 1995 and 1998. One
of the current crop of expert reviewers brought in to help the government
decide, Nesbitt Burns, was an advisor back in 1995. The other reviewer,
KPMG, employs Reid Morden, until three years ago AECL's chairman and
CEO.
What is new is skepticism from a prominent Cabinet member.
Whether the government should continue the $100-million a year subsidy is
"what the review's all about," Mr. Dhaliwal said hours after taking over
his new portfolio earlier this year. "What is the future of our Candu
reactor and atomic energy? Because if we're not making any sales and there's no
potential, should we continue to invest in those areas or
not?"
Mr. Dhaliwal has good reason to ask hard questions. In 1995,
and with help from Nesbitt Burns, AECL committed to sell 10 reactors in 10
years. Since then, only two were sold, both to China. The last hot
prospect, Turkey, declined the nuclear option in July 2000. As Turkish
Prime Minister Bülent Ecevit then observed: "The world is abandoning nuclear
power."
In the 1998 review, AECL committed to snag business in
Southeast Asia by setting up offices in Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia.
So far, no bites there, despite billions of dollars in bait that AECL has
dangled before potential purchasers.
The only pending "sale" is to
complete a Candu in Romania called Cernavoda 2 that was actually sold in
1977 yet remains only 40% complete. The process of completing it has been
complicated by a series of misadventures, including shoddy work by slave
labourers and the execution of the project's sponsor, former dictator
Nicolae Ceausescu. Like so many nuclear projects before it, the project
awaits yet another subsidy from the Canadian government in the form of a
Canada Account loan from Export Development Corporation, this time for
$390-million.
AECL's drive to find foreign customers gained new
urgency in 1993, when Ontario Hydro decided it could no longer afford to buy
Candu reactors. To stave off its own bankruptcy, Ontario Hydro began to
phase out its existing nuclear plants by closing one reactor less than
halfway through its planned service life and tearing up its plans to build,
jointly with AECL, 10 more reactors. In 1997, Ontario Hydro pulled the
plug on another seven operating reactors, admitting to an Ontario legislative
committee that it would be unable to meet its financial obligations due to
its nuclear problems.
Once the nuclear industry promised
electricity too cheap to meter. Now the industry cares little what its power
costs to consumers, an attitude
that goes some way to explain its
failure. AECL scientist Jeremy Whitlock, the industry's unofficial voice through
his on-line nuclear presence and comments in the press, minces no words in
presenting his industry's perspective. When asked whether he and his nuclear
colleagues thought nuclear-generated power was cheap, he replied: "I
submit to you that this is an irrelevant question, and if you think that any of
us suppose otherwise, you have simply not done your homework." Instead of
cost, Mr. Whitlock prefers to measure value through complicated desk
studies that attempt to value the "life cycle factors of the
technology."
AECL has lived off an uninterrupted stream of federal
government subsidies for 50 years. In 1996, George Lermer, then dean of the
faculty of management at the University of Lethbridge, reported that
between 1947 and 1994, the federal government had invested $19-billion (in
2001
dollars) in AECL and its Candu program, over and above any
offsetting gain to the federal government or federal taxpayers. Prior to
Ontario Hydro's forced closure of one-third of its remaining reactor fleet
in 1997, Mr. Lermer concluded: "The Candu project should have been
declared a commercial failure and wound up at least two decades ago." Instead,
the federal government has since provided the nuclear industry with
billions more in financing.
Always a wily follower of Ottawa fads,
AECL adapts its message to suit. Sometimes it casts itself as a cure to regional
disparity to pick up regional development dollars. That is how Cape Breton
obtained an unneeded heavy water plant costing hundreds of millions. Sometimes
it is
a champion for the Third World poor -- all the better to tap
the Canadian International Development Agency for foreign aid dollars.
School children in Thailand received some of AECL's nuclear "education,"
paid out of funds earmarked for aid. In recent years, AECL has thrown a
green cloak over its shoulders and tried to get paid for not emitting greenhouse
gases. From its beginnings, AECL has excelled at tapping
into
government export credit subsidies.
AECL has
succeeded in gulling so many, in part, because AECL has been allowed to conceal
itself from scrutiny. Despite a legislative obligation to report annually,
its corporate plans have not been filed with Parliament since 1995. In 1998,
AECL stopped reporting its overseas "agent fees," used indirectly in the
past to bribe foreign officials. The public and the press have been kept in the
dark along with government agencies and the federal Cabinet. Whether
Canadians continue to be kept in the dark, and whether we continue to be forced
to support what has become the longest-lived failure in industrial
history, is now up to Mr. Dhaliwal.
Tom Adams is executive director
of Energy Probe, a Toronto-based think-tank.
TomAdams@nextcity.com.
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