Business Day

Koeberg found to be safe

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Lee Roethlisbe­rger, who was in Prague when the Chernobyl nuclear accident happened, need have no fears over Koeberg (“Threats posed by Koeberg are worrying”, January 10).

The Chernobyl event, by far the worst nuclear power accident yet and the only one to cost human lives, was caused primarily by a terrible reactor design and only secondaril­y by the violation of safety regulation­s by the operator.

Chernobyl used RBMK reactors, which would never be allowed in the West. But Russia also had VVER reactors, similar to Koeberg PWR reactors, and these have run with complete safety under the same brutal, incompeten­t, secretive communist regime as Chernobyl.

Nuclear has by far the best safety record of any energy technology. In the 55 years since Chernobyl, no-one has been killed in nuclear power accidents, but tens of thousands of people were killed in coal, gas, oil and hydro accidents.

In the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident, caused by the disgracefu­l failure of the Japanese regulator to protect against a 14m tsunami (easy to do), no-one was harmed by the radiation, though some people died in the evacuation.

Koeberg has run safely since it started up in 1984. There have been blunders and delays recently, but none affected safety. A Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safety study reported on recently found no concerns beyond routine maintenanc­e matters, such as refurbishi­ng of cabling. The threat of corrosion to the R-bars of the containmen­t building is being dealt with.

Koeberg is safe. I would love to live right next to it, but can’t afford to do so.

Andrew Kenny Sun Valley

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