Western Mail

Outlaw nuclear power to prevent looming disaster

Jill Evans, chair of CND Cymru, argues why a nuclear-free future is more important than ever amid Vladimir Putin’s apocalypti­c threats

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ONE year ago, just after Russia invaded Ukraine, a majority of Senedd Members voted to support the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons.

This was a significan­t step for the parliament of one of the small nations which has never threatened or invaded anyone.

It is often said, but it is true, that Wales has a tradition of peace.

As we celebrate the centenary of the remarkable peace petition from the women of Wales to the women of the United States, we are reminded of Wales’ unique and considerab­le contributi­on to world peace.

The treaty prohibits states from developing, testing, producing, using or threatenin­g to use nuclear weapons or allowing another state’s nuclear weapons to be stationed or deployed on their territory.

It bans states from assisting or encouragin­g anyone else to do so.

More than 500 organisati­ons, including CND Cymru, came together to campaign for this treaty.

People from all parts of the world working together, with hope in their hearts, to move towards a brighter and safer future.

Though 130 countries voted for it in the United Nations in 2017, the UK and the other nuclear states refused to sign it.

As chairman of CND Cymru, I said at the time of the treaty’s ratificati­on in 2020 that: “This is the most significan­t developmen­t in nuclear disarmamen­t since the Comprehens­ive Test Ban Treaty of 1996.”

Now more than ever I am convinced that remains true.

An open letter in support of the treaty at the time, signed by several world leaders as well as the former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, stated: “The risk of a nuclear weapon detonation today – whether by accident, miscalcula­tion or design – appears to be increasing, with the recent deployment of new types of nuclear weapons, the abandonmen­t of longstandi­ng arms control agreements, and the very real danger of cyber-attacks on nuclear infrastruc­ture. Let us heed the warnings of scientists, doctors and other experts. We must not sleepwalk into a crisis of even greater proportion­s than the one we have experience­d this year.”

This statement was made during the Covid-19 epidemic and prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

It is so much more relevant in the light of the war and the vulnerabil­ity of nuclear power stations in war zones, coupled with Russian threats to use nuclear weapons and the decision to withdraw from the 2010 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START).

This treaty caps the number of strategic nuclear warheads that the US and Russia can deploy at 1,550.

In January 2023, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moved the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock to an unpreceden­ted 90 seconds to midnight.

We have never been closer to nuclear catastroph­e.

The Ukraine invasion has brought us closer to nuclear war than at any time since the 1980s.

Putin has repeatedly broken the nuclear taboo.

He is willing to threaten the use of nuclear weapons at every turn. We can only hope that he is not serious, though that hope is faint indeed.

The purpose of the Doomsday Clock is not to create despair but to inspire action.

World leaders for far too long have been complacent.

With the climate crisis fast approachin­g, we should be focusing on working on viable, renewable solutions that do not condemn future generation­s to pick up the tab of our nuclear waste.

We must work in harmony with nature, not in opposition to it. The extractive industries upon which the nuclear system relies moves the hand ever closer to midnight.

The twilight is fast approachin­g, and we must stand against it.

The people of Wales have shown tremendous solidarity with the people of Ukraine.

We have condemned the invasion and defended the right of Ukraine to decide its own future.

We have watched with horror as nuclear power stations came close to disaster.

This is on our doorstep. Every nuclear power station is a target – a potential nuclear bomb.

This does not even have to arise via violence. It can easily arise as a mistake – a single cog in the system malfunctio­ning.

As one delegate to the ICAN (Internatio­nal Civil Society Action Network) forum in Vienna in 2022 stated, change is certain. It may be unpredicta­ble – we may not know what form it will take, but we know that change will happen.

Across the world, people are clamouring for a change for the better.

CND Cymru are proud to be a part of the coalition arguing, and campaignin­g, for that change.

For a world powered by wind, wave, and sun.

For a world where we do not have the power to destroy the planet or the people on it with the flick of a switch. For a world of peace. Change is in our hands.

The Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons has the potential to change everything forever.

I am proud that Wales is part of that change.

■ Jill Evans was Plaid Cymru MEP for Wales from 1999 until 2020 and currently chairs CND Cymru

 ?? UKRINFORM/NURPHOTO/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? > Six VVER-1000 pressurise­d light water nuclear reactors, each generating 950 MWe, make the Zaporizhia Nuclear Power Station, Ukraine, the largest NPP in Europe and among the top 10 largest in the world
UKRINFORM/NURPHOTO/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK > Six VVER-1000 pressurise­d light water nuclear reactors, each generating 950 MWe, make the Zaporizhia Nuclear Power Station, Ukraine, the largest NPP in Europe and among the top 10 largest in the world
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