Bataan nuclear plant can still operate, says PH nuclear research body

MANILA – The mothballed Bataan nuclear power facility can still operate despite decades of unuse, the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute said Sunday.

Maliyung sinasabi ng iba na laspag. ‘Di pa nga ginagamit eh. Imbitahin ko kayo pumunta doon, ‘yan langyung nuclear plant sa mundo na pwede ka mag-selfie sa loob ng reactor,” PNRI director Carlo Arcilla told ABS-CBN’s TeleRadyo.

Regarding its safety, the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant is “60 percent younger” compared to 98 nuclear plants in America, Arcilla said.

Pangalawa, kung ang sinasabi unsafe, sabihin natin ang Chernobyl, ang Chernobyl po kasi, iba ang design. ‘Yun ang tinatawag na Soviet design,” he said.

Lahat po ng nuclear plants na Western design, may takip. Ang tawag d’yan, containment structure. Kung sakaling may aksidente, ‘di kakalat. ‘Yun pong Chernobyl, walang ganyan.”

The Cherynobyl disaster refers to the 1986 explosion in the nuclear power plant in Ukraine that caused the immediate death of two workers, and subsequently of 28 firemen and emergency clean-up workers due to Acute Radiation Sickness and another one due to cardiac arrest, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

A total of 200,000 people were displaced, and at least 1,800 cases of thyroid cancer were documented in children aged up to 14 years old when the accident happened, the IAEA said.

The Bataan nuclear plant has the same design with three power facilities located in South Korea, Slovenia, and Brazil, Arcilla said.

Kung bubuksan poyan, meron tayong model na pagkukuhanan ng mga tao, spare parts,” he said.

The operation of nuclear powerplants is also cheaper versus coal plants, Arcilla said.

The former consumes fuel for 18 months worth $20 million, while the latter need 50 ships of 50,000 tons of coal worth $600 million, he added.

Napakamura po ng production cost. ‘Yun po ang isang ino-offer ng nuclear, kasi it’s the cheapest and the cleanest,” he said.

Ang cost kasi at least one half cheaper. Para sa taumbayan ito. Ang mahal kasi talaga ng kuryente sa Pilipinas, di lang sa kilowatt per hour. Ang sinasabi ko po ditoyung proportion ng take-home pay na binabayad sa kuryente.”

A median Filipino family who earns P10,000 pays 10 percent or at least P1,000 for their electricity for a month, he said.

Built in the 1970s, the facility has remained shut since 1986, when it was supposed to have started operating, over concerns about its proximity to Mt. Natib, a dormant volcano.

In 2017, nuclear experts from Russia and Slovenia flew to the Philippines to assess the possibility of rehabilitating the plant.

Nuclear reactor builders Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power Co Ltd and Russia’s Rosatom submitted plans in 2017 to rehabilitate the Bataan plant, at costs ranging from $1 billion to more than $3 billion, said engineer Mauro Marcelo who once oversaw the maintenance and preservation of the plant.

Officials have said the Philippines has to meet requirements set by the IAEA to run a nuclear power facility.(with Reuters/ABS-CBN News)

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