(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Vol. XXXIV
No.
25
June
20,
2010
Bhopal
and the Nuclear Liability Bill
Prakash Karat
THE verdict on the Bhopal gas
accident has led to an outpouring
of protests at the travesty of justice. There is justified outrage at
the
protection accorded to the Union Carbide and the manner in which its
chairman
Warren Anderson was allowed to leave the country.
The whole sorry episode which
has dragged on for 26
years has starkly brought out some class truths. The first is that the
central
government of the day and successive governments have served the
interests of
big capitalists and corporates of America
and India.
The
second linked class truth is that the 20,000 people who diedand the tens of thousands who were physically
affected were poor people belonging to the bastis of Bhopal
who were, as
far as the ruling classes and their political representatives were
concerned,
expendable. The judiciary also reflected this class bias.The third aspect is that there is no change
in this class outlook of the central government and the ruling party,
as can be
seen in the Civil Nuclear Liability Bill.
The Bhopal
verdict has a direct relevance to the Nuclear Liability Bill introduced
in
parliament.Just two days after the
court verdict, the first sitting of the Standing Committee of
Parliament to
examine the Nuclear Liability Bill took place. This is a Bill which was
denounced by the CPI(M) when it was in the stage of being drafted
within the
government. This is a legislation being brought to fulfill a commitment
made by
the UPA government when it enter into the Indo-US nuclear deal. The
Polit
Bureau of the CPI(M) had, in a statement on October 2, 2008 asking the
government not to sign the 123 agreement, said: “India
is committingto buy a minimum of 10,000
MW from the dying US
nuclear industry, which has not received any new order for the last 30
years.It is going to indemnify
suppliers from all consequences of a nuclear accident.”This commitment was made in writing by the then
foreign secretary in a letter to the US under secretary, William
Burns.
The Nuclear Liability Bill
introduced in parliament is
meant to safeguard the interests of the US
companies who will supply reactors to India.In the event of a nuclear accident, they are
to be exempted from any liability to pay compensation for the damages
caused.What Westinghouse and General
Electric want is that even the limited liability which accrued to Union
Carbidein the case of Bhopal ($470
million as per the settlement approved by theSupreme Court) should not fall on them. The Congress-led
government has
obliged the United
States
by bringing this shocking piece of legislation which makes it near
impossible
to hold foreign suppliers of nuclear reactors to account in the case of
an
accident.
The government has tried to
obfuscate the issue by
arguing that a foreign supplier can be liable if such a clause is
included in
the contract between the operator and the supplier.What it does not say is that neither the
public sector Nuclear Power Corporation of India,
which is the Indian
operator, nor the American company, which will be the supplier, will
include
such a liability clause in the contract.If this law is passed, if there is a faulty design or a
manufacturing
defect in a reactor supplied by a US company, the operator or
the
victim of an accident has no right to claim damages from the supplier.The other clause cited by the government is
the one by which the operator has the right to recourse against the
supplier if
the nuclear accident has resulted due to a “willful act or gross
negligence” on
the part of the supplier.This makes it
extremely difficult to hold the supplier liable as proving that faulty
design
or other defects are due to willful action or gross negligence will be
well
nigh impossible.
The cap put on the liability of
the operator is Rs 500
crore while the overall financial liability for a nuclear accident is
capped at
around Rs 2140 crore. The reason why the liability of the operator is
limited
to Rs 500 crore is because the government wants to bring in private
operators in
the nuclear sector. The law will, therefore, limit the liability of
Indian or
foreign private companies who operate reactors to Rs 500 crore. Any
amount to
be paid above this cap will be footed by the government. In this
manner, the
government will subsidise private operators, including foreign
companies, in
the future.
The class outlook of the
government is evident.The people will
have to pay with their lives
or health in the case of a nuclear accident, but the profits of US
companies
and the corporate sector in India
should be protected by limiting their liability. In the case of Bhopal, the
compensation
paid by the Union Carbide amounted to Rs 713 crore ($470 million).A nuclear accident may involve casualties on
a much larger scale than Bhopal.
Under
the Nuclear Liability Bill, the maximum compensation to be paid will be
Rs 2140 crore, the bulk of which would be paid by the government.
The government has made much of
the fact that it wants
to accede to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear
Damage.By joining this international
convention, the government claims that it can access international
funds to
compensate victims of nuclear accidents. What the government does not
say is
that this is a Convention favoured by the United States as it
provides
complete protection to the suppliers of nuclear equipment. Only 13
countries
havejoined the Convention out of which
only four have ratified it. The government should answer why it does
not go by
the Vienna Convention on Civil Liability which does not cap nuclear
liability
but only puts a minimum floor. Further, it also allows countries to
operate
their independent liability regimes.
How eager the Manmohan Singhgovernment is tofulfill
its commitment to the United States
can be seen in the maneouvres it resortedto, to bring this legislation in parliament. After being thwartedin the first half of the budget session from
introducing the Bill in the Lok Sabha, when the entire Opposition
opposed
theintroduction of the Bill, the
government
had to strike deals with parties like the Samajwadi Party and the RJD
to get it
introduced in the fag end of the budget session.Normally,
such a Bill should go to the
Standing Committee on Energy.But
the
government decided to route it through the Standing Committee on
Science and
Technology where a Congress MP is the chairman. There was an effort by
the
government before the Standing Committee to delete the clause which
gives the
operator the limited right to recourse against thesupplier in the case of a willful action or
gross negligence. The nuclear industrial lobby of the United States
has expressed its unhappiness at even this weak clause and wants it
deleted.
The Civil Nuclear Liability Bill
bears the handiwork
of the US
nuclear industry lobby. The manner in which liability is fixed shows a
familiar
pattern. In the United
States, the powerful oil lobby had got
the
US Congress to put a cap on the liability of oil firms for damage done
by oil
spills at $75 million. Now with the havoc caused by the GulfCoast
spill from the BP’s drilling platform, efforts are on to raise the cap
to $10
billion or to leave the scope for unlimited liability.
The pressure on the Manmohan
Singh government to
fulfill its commitment is relentless.William Burns, the Under Secretary for Political Affairs, in a
speech to
the Council on Foreign Relations “India’s rise and the
promise of
US-Indian partnership” on June 1, 2010 referred to the need for the
nuclear
liability law.He said, “US companies are prepared to support
the
expansion of India’scivil nuclear infrastructure with two reactor
park sites already identified.As prime
minister Singh argued publicly last week, it is deeply in India’s
self-interest
for its parliament to enact liability legislation consistent with
international standards.”In the Indo-US
strategic dialogue which took place immediately thereafter, the Indian
side led
by foreignminister, S M Krishna,
assured the United
States
that theLiability Bill would be passed
into law.
No more Bhopals and Warren
Andersons should recur. For
this, Dow Chemical which took over Union Carbide should be made to pay
all the
costs for cleaning up the Bhopal
factory site and the environment. Ironically, the Group of Ministers
set-up by
the government includes ministers who wanted to absolve Dow of all such
responsibility. This will be an acid test of the government’s
intentions.
If there are lessons to be
learnt from the tragic
episode of Bhopal,
it
is that there should be strict laws which will assign civil liability
and
ensure that criminal liability is also pinned down.There can be no compromisewith the
lives and safety of the Indian
people in order to appease the commercialinterests and profits of foreign and Indianbig business.
The first step towards ensuring
this will be to scrap
the Civil Nuclear Liability Bill.