US nuclear-powered submarines and aircraft carriers, both carrying nuclear
weapons, frequently visit Canadian ports. These visits have come to public
attention recently because premier Glen Clark of British Columbia has revoked
the lease that allows US nuclear submarines to test torpedos and other
weapons in the Strait of Georgia -- an action which has angered Jean Chrétien
to the point of his threatening to nationalize the testing grounds so that
the US weapons testing can continue. Canadian Peace Groups oppose the visits
of these nuclear-armed ships because they consider such activity to be
inconsistent with the global movement for the total abolition of nuclear
weapons. In addition, Canadians are exposed to certain unnecessary risks
which are outlined in an article written by an American university professor.
NUCLEAR ACCIDENTS ON MILITARY VESSELS IN CANADIAN PORTS:
SITE-SPECIFIC ANALYSES FOR ESQUIMALT/VICTORIA
by W. JACKSON DAVIS, Ph.D. 15 October 1987
Professor of Biology
Nuclear Policy Program
Adlai Stevenson College
University of California at Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz, California
95064 U.S.A
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This paper reports a quantitative, site-specific analysis of two nuclear accident scenarios aboard military vessels in a Canadian port. Conventional methodology used by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to regulate the U.S. civilian nuclear industry is combined with generally conservative assumptions (that is, assumptions that tend to understate the likely impact of an accident) to evaluate the consequences of hypothetical nuclear accidents aboard military ships in the port of Esquimalt and the adjacent city of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The results are used as a basis for policy evaluations on the issue of port visits. The results also bear upon the proposed acquisition by the Canadian Armed Forces of 10 to 12 nuclear-powered submarines. Although this analysis has been undertaken for a U.S. military propulsion reactor, comparable effects would be anticipated from a similar accident entailing a British Trafalgar class or a French Rubis class submarine.
The first accident scenario analyzed is incineration of a single nuclear warhead in a ship-board fire. Such an accident would produce a radioactive cloud containing plutonium-239 , which would be carried toward the northeast, directly over Esquimalt/Victoria, by the most probable prevailing winds.
•The plutonium concentration in the cloud would exceed U.S. federal
(NRC) limits for air
contamination (10 CFR 20) by up to ten thousand times.
•Ground contamination from fallout would exceed U.S. federal (NRC) limits
for
unrestricted public use by up to one million times.
•Radiation exposure from inhalation of the plutonium would exceed U.S.
federal limits for
"routine" releases by up to one hundred thousand times.
Prompt fatalities have not been considered; instead casualties calculated
here would take
the form of latent cancer fatalities and genetic defects.
•Latent cancer fatalities incurred during the accident would range from 15 to 3,413 depending on thermal lofting, atmospheric stability and the radiation risk factor used, with
•an equal number of additional fatalities from severe genetic defects.
The greatest contamination would occur nearest the accident site, although both air and ground contamination would remain well above the NRC limits up to 50 kilometers from the accident site and beyond. Casualties would be concentrated within 5 kilometers of the accident, but could extend out to several tens of kilometers from the accident site. Under unfavorable meteorological conditions the effects of such an accident could be experienced as far away as Vancouver.
The second accident scenario analyzed is a hypothetical nuclear-reactor accident aboard a ship berthed at Esquimalt. The core inventory of a 100 megawatt (thermal) naval propulsion reactor fueled by highly enriched uranium metal is derived from calculations on research reactor fuel performed with the ORIGEN computer code. Release fractions consistent with existing accident histories and radionuclide properties are assumed, and consequent releases to the atmosphere are calculated for 15 radionuclides comprising an estimated 94.8 to 98.1 percent of the projected health detriment for three exposure pathways (cloudshine, inhalation exposure and groundshine). Ingestion and resuspension pathways are ignored under the assumption of early evacuation and decontamination.
Calculated downwind air concentrations of the radionuclides following a four hour propulsion reactor accident, as well as ground deposition, exceed the aforementioned federal U.S. NRC limits by hundreds to thousands of times. Prompt casualties are possible close to the accident but have not been considered here.
•Total latent cancer fatalities incurred during the accident range from 2 to 422 , depending on assumptions, and are concentrated in the first 5 kilometers from the accident site.
•An equal number of additional fatalities from severe genetic defects would be anticipated.
•Additional casualties incurred from 1 week of habitation of contaminated urban regions would range from 69 to 636 latent cancer fatalities, with an equal number of casualties from severe genetic defects, highlighting the need for immediate evacuation.
•Additional casualties incurred from 1 year of further habitation range from 254 to 1,562 latent cancer fatalities and an equal number of casualties from severe genetic defects.
•Additional casualties in each subsequent year would approximate
250 to 1,500 latent
cancer fatalities initially, declining to half within approximately
30 years.
The high annual casualties from continued long-term habitation of the city indicate the need for decontamination prior to rehabitation.
Although SHORT-TERM casualties under the generally conservative assumptions
of this analysis are relatively low, both accidents modeled would cause
from hundreds to thousands of LONG-TERM casualties unless the contaminated
urban areas were both evacuated and decontaminated. Rapid evacuation would
appear impossible in the absence of effective emergency response plans
(see below). The most significant impact, however, could be economic. U.S.
Government studies indicate that decontamination could cost tens of billions
of U.S. dollars and take months to complete, during which time the local
economy would be largely terminated. These cost estimates omit the on-site
costs of clean-up, and they omit "indirect" losses from the termination
of local economies and
ripple effects on provincial and national economies. The ecological
and economic impacts of such an accident on surrounding salt water bodies
have not been considered here but could also be significant.
The risk to the Canadian public from these accidents is the product
of the CONSEQUENCES and PROBABILITY of the accident. Although the consequences
can be estimated under idealized accident conditions as assumed above,
the probability of each accident requires information that is not within
the public domain. Such information includes the number of nuclear warheads
aboard ships in port, the frequency and intensity of shipboard fires, the
fire resistance of nuclear warheads, and the accident history and operating
characteristics of naval propulsion reactors, In the absence of this is
information, the probability of the accidents modeled cannot be calculated,
and hence the risk
associated with port visits or stationing of nuclear powered submarines
cannot be assessed accurately.
Emergency preparedness for a nuclear accident in Canadian ports is inadequate
to cope with the scale of possible accidents analyzed here. Civilian regulatory
bodies exercise no licensing nor oversight authority over the technical
aspects of U.S. military reactors and weapons. Port visits by U.S. nuclear-powered
or nuclear-capable vessels are conducted under the U.S. General Statement
of Assurances (Appendix I). This document does not mention emergency preparedness,
is ambiguous on the issues of liability/compensation in the event of an
accident, and omits any consideration of nuclear weapons accidents, even
though such accidents have occurred and are featured in U.S. military emergency
preparedness plans. Emergency preparedness for nuclear accidents is allocated
to Canadian authorities, who have assigned such responsibility to the Department
of National Defence (DND). DND emergency preparedness plans are not, however,
in the public domain. Without public knowledge of emergency preparedness
plans, it is therefore not
clear how public participation in a time of actual emergency could
be implemented. U.S. studies indicate that emergency preparedness is effective
only when specific plans
adequate to real emergencies are designed, publicized and exercised
periodically.
Publicly-available information on DND emergency procedures suggest:
1.evacuation zones extend only to 609 meters from the accident site;
2.Nuclear Emergency Response Teams (NERTs) are responsible for seeking information about the type of hazard and containing any radioactive material released; and
3.responding to nuclear weapons accidents is not a part of NERT planning.
These emergency procedures are ineffectual in that:
1.contamination and casualty zones could extend to several kilometers from the accident site, as demonstrated in the present analysis, rendering a 609 meter evacuation zone meaningless;
2.the U.S. General Statement of Assurances explicitly prohibits the boarding of U.S. military vessels for the purpose of obtaining technical information, and
3.U.S. Department of Defence directive 5230.16 permits concealing nuclear weapons accidents when they occur.
It is not clear, therefore, how NERTs could identify, let alone contain, nuclear materials released in an accident. Indeed NERTs are not alerted by visits of nuclear-capable vessels, and are not situated in several ports visited by such vessels.
The findings of this report provide a technical basis for seven policy recommendations.
The principle recommendation is:
1) Prospective costs and benefits of port visits by nuclear capable and nuclear propelled warships, as well as those associated with the acquisition of nuclear powered submarines, deserve careful weighing, incorporating quantitative assessments of possible costs of accident scenarios such as those reported here.
If the Canadian public and government decide nonetheless to proceed
with port visits and/or acquisition of nuclear powered submarines, a number
of additional recommendations follow.
These are:
2) Emergency evacuation ought to be extended to at least 5 kilometers from the accident site for densely populated urban areas such as Esquimalt/Victoria;
3) Evacuation plans should be established, coordinated and rehearsed periodically;
4) Decontamination plans in the event of an accident should likewise be formulated;
5) The data needed to ascertain empirically the probability of nuclear accidents should be obtained from the U.S. military so that risk to the Canadian public can be estimated as closely as possible;
6) Detailed liability and indemnity regimes in the event of an accident should be negotiated in advance;
7) Existing emergency response institutions, procedures and documents should be evaluated in light of accident analyses such as the present one.
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