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[cdn-nucl-l] ITER : Ottawa to let reactor bid die



http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Artic
le_Type1&c=Article&cid=1066601707009&call_pageid=970599119419
Oct. 20, 2003. 01:00 AM 
Ottawa to let reactor bid die
Balking at cost of fusion experiment
Darlington proposed for $12B project
PETER CALAMAI, SCIENCE REPORTER

OTTAWA-The federal government is deliberately letting the clock run out on
Ontario's bid to host a $12-billion experimental nuclear reactor planned by
the world's leading industrial nations.

The federal stalling, confirmed by senior officials, effectively kills any
chance for the province to compete next month against bids from Europe and
Japan as the site for ITER, the International Thermonuclear Experimental
Reactor.

"We're just going to skulk away in the night," said a disheartened member of
the ITER team.

Ottawa's inaction will be a major blow to premier-elect Dalton McGuinty, who
told Prime Minister Jean Chrétien that his new Liberal government would
match any federal financial support. Canada's share of building and
operating the reactor is estimated at $2.3 billion.

But officials close to the discussions here said federal cabinet ministers
fear huge cost overruns on the project, which seeks to recreate and control
the nuclear furnace inside stars like the sun.

Instead of publicly rebuffing McGuinty's plea for federal financial support,
sources say the federal cabinet will simply not announce any decision before
a crucial Nov. 5 negotiating meeting in Beijing of the five other ITER
partners - the U.S., European Community, Russia, China and South Korea.

"It's very tough to attack a non-decision," said a disheartened Murray
Stewart, president of the ITER Canada host team.

The federal tactics amount to a rejection of an ITER endorsement earlier
this year by a blue-ribbon panel of business leaders and scientists
assembled by University of Toronto president Robert Birgeneau.

"Canada cannot afford not to be part of ITER," the panel concluded.

The benefits for ITER participants would be "enormous" if fusion reactors
eventually succeed in generating power, the experts said. The ITER
experiment would run for 20 years after construction of the 13-storey
reactor was complete in 2014 but never produce any usable electricity.

The initial 10-year construction phase of the project was supposed to pour
$1.2 billion into the Ontario economy and eventually create 400 new jobs in
Clarington, home to ITER's proposed site at the Darlington nuclear power
station.

While Ontario backed the bid financially from the start of formal
negotiations in June, 2001, Ottawa always said its endorsement depended on a
promise of no cost to the federal government. But strong bids from France,
Spain and Japan now mean that without federal backing, the Darlington site
won't even be on the table at the crucial Nov. 5 meeting.

Ottawa and Queen's Park would have to pay the $2.3 billion even if one of
the competing sites was chosen. And the bill could well be higher.

"The parties have agreed that no one will be allowed to withdraw during the
construction phase without paying their full share of all the eventual
costs," said Stewart.

Canada's stealth withdrawal from the ITER project is unlikely to derail a
final decision on the reactor site now choreographed in meetings that
culminate with an energy ministers' summit in Washington by mid-December to
endorse the choice by officials. The federal inaction also leaves Canada
without any toehold in the nuclear fusion field since the country's only
research program was cut in 1997 in the name of deficit reduction. 

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