Annex XI -
50-Year Vision Study - Press Release

(April 4, 1996)
NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY - A VISION
OF HOPE FOR HUMANITY
Based on
information from the World Energy Council and
other international organizations, the
International Nuclear Societies Council
(INSC) has just issued a 3-years study titled
"A Vision for the Second Fifty Years of
Nuclear Energy", which concludes that
nuclear science and technology will become
commonly accepted in the next century. Not
only will nuclear technology be essential in
providing energy, its use will continue to
grow rapidly in health care, in the food
industry and in the manufacturing industries.
The
International Nuclear Societies Council is a
world-wide organization representing 50,000
professional members from 37 nuclear
societies. The study was completed by an
international committee of the INSC made up
of experts from Nuclear Societies of Europe,
North America, the Far East and Latin
America.
In fifty
years, there will be twice as many people on
the planet, with most of the growth in the
developing countries. As all nations will
strive to provide its citizens a quality of
life closer to that of those who live in the
industrialized countries, the world will need
substantially more energy. Global energy
demand will more than double over the next 50
years. Fossil fuels, which today make up 80%
of the world's energy supply, will likely be
constrained by environmental concerns over
global warming. Nevertheless, the large
growth in the use of fossil fuels and in the
emission of carbon dioxide is likely to
continue. Even with major expansions in the
use of hydroelectric power and other
renewable energies, there will still be a
shortfall, and the only other energy option
available to fill the gap is nuclear energy.
With technology available today, there will
be ample uranium and thorium for nuclear
energy to fill such energy demand.
The use of
nuclear science and technology in the health
care field will continue to grow as society
demands more efficient diagnosis and
treatment, at lower costs. Nuclear science
will be used more and more in imaging to
determine the source and extent of medical
problems. Radiation sterilization of medical
supplies will become universal.
Much of the
world's malnutrition can be attributed to
loss of existing food by insect infestation,
bacterial decay and spoilage. Irradiation is
a proven method of solving these problems. In
fifty years, irradiation of many foods will
likely be considered as necessary and
desirable to the consumer as is
pasteurization of milk today.
Of all these
applications of nuclear technology, the
supply of energy is central, and will require
the largest investments in financial and
human resources. The INSC study therefore
examines the strategies that will be needed
to achieve the vision. It describes the
evolution underway in the design,
construction and operation of current types
of nuclear power plants. Continuing cost
reductions will ensure that nuclear power
remains competitive with the fossil fuels,
particularly coal and low-cost pipeline
natural gas. A Henry Ford type of approach to
the supply of new nuclear power plants will
be needed to bring the costs down
substantially.
By the middle
of the next century, the demand for energy,
combined with concerns over global warming,
may make recycling an economically attractive
option. Fast reactors offer the promise of
breeding - recycling nuclear fuel to convert
essentially all of the available uranium into
energy. This is the strategic importance of
the fast reactor. Ultimately, the full
recycle of uranium with plutonium in fast
reactors can offer the assurance of
sustainable and economic nuclear fuel supply
for centuries to come.
The study
makes clear that nuclear science and
technology can and will make significant
contributions to the sustainable development
and well-being of all humankind.
The INSC
Committee which prepared the study was
chaired by Masao Hori of the Atomic Energy
Society of Japan. The study was edited by
Stanley R. Hatcher of the Canadian Nuclear
Society, and published by the American
Nuclear Society.
For further
information, contact:
INSC
Mr.
Jorge Spitalnik
Secretary INSC
c/o Latin American Section of ANS
Rua da Candelária 65 16th Floor
Rio de Janeiro 20091-020
BRAZIL
Phone: (55) 21 588 7105
Fax: (55) 21 588-7219
E-mail:
jspitalnik@ax.ibase.org.br
Mr.
Yuzo Endo
INSC Secretariat
c/o Atomic Energy of Japan
1-1-13 Shimbashi, Minato-ku
Tokyo 105
JAPAN
Phone: (81) 3 3508 1261
Fax: (81) 3 3581 6128
E-mail: EVH80637@pcvan.or.jp
Publisher
Publication
Department
American Nuclear Society
555 North Kensington Avenue
La Grange Park, IL 60525-5592 USA
Phone: (1) 708 579-8200
Fax: (1) 708 579-8295
e-mail: mgardner@ans.org
Member
Societies of INSC
American
Nuclear Society (ANS)
Asociación
Argentina de Tecnologia Nuclear
(AATN)
Associação
Brasileira de Energia Nuclear
(ABEN)
Atomic
Energy Society of Japan (AESJ)
Australian
Nuclear Association (ANA)
Canadian
Nuclear Society (CNS)
Egyptian
Society of Nuclear Sciences and
Applications (ESNSA)
European
Nuclear Society (ENS)
Austrian Nuclear Society, Belgian
Nuclear Society, British Nuclear
Energy Society, Bulgarian Nuclear
Society, Croatian Nuclear
Society, Czech Nuclear Society,
Danish Nuclear Society, Finnish
Nuclear Society, French Nuclear
Society, German Nuclear Society,
Hungarian Nuclear Society, The
Institution of Nuclear Engineers,
Italian Nuclear Society, Italian
Local Section of ANS, Netherlands
Nuclear Society, Nuclear Society
of Russia, Nuclear Society of
Slovenia, Polish Nuclear Society,
Romanian Nuclear Energy
Professional Organization, Slovak
Nuclear Society, Spanish Nuclear
Society, Swedish Nuclear Society,
Swiss Nuclear Society, Ukrainian
Nuclear Society, Yugoslav Nuclear
Society.
Israel
Nuclear Society (INS)
Korean
Nuclear Society (KNS)
Latin
American Section (LAS)
Nuclear
Energy Society, China, Taipei
(NEST)
Pakistan
Nuclear Society (PNS)
Sociedad
Nuclear Mexicana (SNM)