the poster - ANU China Institute

Transcription

the poster - ANU China Institute
26
Peter Van Ness
Thursday, 4:00pm - 5:30pm
S EMINAR R OOM A , CIW B UILDING
MAR
Australian Centre on China in the World,
Building 188, Fellows Lane
(between Law School and South Oval)
is a visiting fellow in the School of International, Political and Strategic Studies at
the ANU. He is a specialist on Chinese foreign policy and the international relations
of the Asia-Pacific region.
Why Nuclear Power as an Energy Option for Australia
and the Ten Member-countries of ASEAN Makes Absolutely No Sense ­­— yet China Already Has 22 Nuclear
Reactors in Operation and Is Building 26 New Ones
Focusing on the specifics of nuclear power
generation, this talk will consider a number of
major issues: the initial cost of construction; the
requirements of professional staff to operate and
maintain the nuclear reactors; the establishment
of an independent and transparent regulatory
authority; liability in the event of accident; the
cost and procedure of decommissioning; the
relationship between nuclear power generation
and weapons, nuclear waste disposal; the health
implications of radiation exposure; and nuclear
power and climate change.
Research School of Asia & the Pacific
26 March 2015, 4:oopm - 5:30pm ( T H U R S DAY )
S EMINAR R OOM A , CIW B UILDING
Australian Centre on China in the World, Building 188, Fellows Lane, ANU
http://chinainstitute.anu.edu.au/events/
Peter Van Ness
Why Nuclear Power as an Energy Option for Australia
and the Ten Member-countries of ASEAN Makes Absolutely No Sense — yet China Already Has 22 Nuclear
Reactors in Operation and Is Building 26 New Ones
Peter Van Ness was convenor of an international workshop in
August 2014 on ‘Nuclear Power in East Asia: The Costs and
Benefits.’ This is his report on that three-day meeting.
The ANU China Seminar Series is a fortnightly seminar
at which invited guests present their latest research on
China and the Sinophone world. It aims at a broad audience. Speakers come from across the full range of disciplines and include senior scholars from within and outside ANU, younger academics, post-doctoral research
fellows, and advanced graduate students. The seminar
series provides an arena in which to discuss China in its
widest sense, to acquaint people with a range of China-related research that might otherwise lie outside
their scope of contact, and to offer a social setting for
discussion of matters of mutual interest. Graduate and
Honours students are encouraged to attend in order to
familiarise themselves with advanced academic debate
and to meet the ANU’s academic community. Seminars
are generally held on alternate Thursdays during the semester, from 4:00 pm to 5:30 pm.
AFTER THE SEMINAR
To allow for informal discussion, the seminar will be followed by a dinner with the guest speaker at 6.15 pm. All
are welcome, though those who attend will need to pay
for their own food and drinks. As reservations must be
made, please RSVP by noon of the day before the seminar to [email protected].
The workshop investigated a number of major issues: the initial
cost of construction; the requirements of professional staff to
operate and maintain the nuclear reactors; the establishment
of an independent and transparent regulatory authority;
liability in the event of accident; the cost and procedure of
decommissioning (under normal circumstances and under crisis
circumstances, e.g., Chernobyl and Fukushima); the relationship
of nuclear power generation to nuclear weapons; nuclear waste
disposal; the health implications of exposure to radiation; and
nuclear power and climate change.
P E T E R VA N N E S S , PhD
(Berkeley), is a visiting fellow in the
School of International, Political and
Strategic Studies, in the College of
Asia and the Pacific, at the ANU. For
many years a member of the faculty of
the Graduate School of International
Studies at the University of Denver, he
is a specialist on Chinese foreign policy and the international
relations of the Asia-Pacific region.
The China Seminar Series is sponsored by the China
Institute, with the Australian Centre on China in the
World and the College of Asia & the Pacific.
Convenors: Mark Strange ([email protected])
and Elisa Nesossi ([email protected]).
For further details of the series:
http://chinainstitute.anu.edu.au
Research School of Asia & the Pacific