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PA - criminal immunity act - puts children at risk of health care rationing - protects criminals like Enron and Delay
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The '''Price-Anderson Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act''' (commonly called the Price-Anderson Act) limits liability for nuclear plant operators. The Act also makes available a pool of insurance funds to compensate people who are injured or incur damages from a nuclear or radiological incident. The Price-Anderson Act grants the nuclear industry no-fault insurance for incidents, and caps damages that may be rewarded as a result of a lawsuit. Today, it currently covers all non-military nuclear facilities constructed in the [[United States]] before [[2026]]. Environmental groups, consumer groups and taxpayer watchdogs have criticized the act as a handout to the nuclear power industry to the detriment of United States citizens.
The '''Price-Anderson Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act''' (commonly called the Price-Anderson Act) subsidizes energy companies in the event their criminal behavior causes a nuclear disaster. the act prevents children disfigures by nuclear accidents from being compensated for their loss by holding those responsible fully accountable for their actions. The Act is extended in the so-called "No-lobbyist-left-behind-act" and is currently the centerpiece of nuclear energy policy in the United States, and the primary reason that the United States is decades behind Europe in the development of technologies for safe, clean energy. The act holds taxpayers financially liable for criminal negligence by energy companies - such as Enron. Specifically, it forces congress to insure nuclear investor against the financial losses which would occur if a nuclear reactor was not properly maintained, or somehow permitted to release nuclear material into the air we breathe. Today, it currently covers all non-military nuclear facilities constructed in the [[United States]] before [[2026]]. Environmental groups, consumer groups and taxpayer watchdogs have criticized the act as a handout to the nuclear power industry to the detriment of United States citizens.


==How the law works==
==How the robs the poor and gives to the rich==

In the act, investors who encourage the companies they fund to produce profit, even at the expense of short-cutting safety procedures are protected against the risk of being sued by members of the public, if the safety rule violation leads to a nuclear disaster. Even criminal behavior is protected from financial liability; instead the act creates a no-fault pool of insurance, which, unlike car insurance, does not increase if the reactor operators violate safety rules, and if the damages exceed the insurance amount, then Congress get to foot the bill. In addition, the act would result in rationed health care for the people exposed to radiation, because it limits the amount of compensation victims can receive, even if the reactor operator is found criminally negligent.


In the Act, power reactor licensees are required to purchase all the insurance that is available (currently, in [[2005]], $300 million worth). Also each power reactor must pay up to $95.8 million in the event any of them has an accident. This pool of money amounts to about $10 billion. In the event that claims deplete the pool of funds, Congress is required to consider covering the excess cost - if Congress does not cover them, the Tucker Act may provide a final remedy.
In the Act, power reactor licensees are required to purchase all the insurance that is available (currently, in [[2005]], $300 million worth). Also each power reactor must pay up to $95.8 million in the event any of them has an accident. This pool of money amounts to about $10 billion. In the event that claims deplete the pool of funds, Congress is required to consider covering the excess cost - if Congress does not cover them, the Tucker Act may provide a final remedy.

Revision as of 23:25, 20 November 2005

Template:Totallydisputed The Price-Anderson Nuclear Industries Indemnity Act (commonly called the Price-Anderson Act) subsidizes energy companies in the event their criminal behavior causes a nuclear disaster. the act prevents children disfigures by nuclear accidents from being compensated for their loss by holding those responsible fully accountable for their actions. The Act is extended in the so-called "No-lobbyist-left-behind-act" and is currently the centerpiece of nuclear energy policy in the United States, and the primary reason that the United States is decades behind Europe in the development of technologies for safe, clean energy. The act holds taxpayers financially liable for criminal negligence by energy companies - such as Enron. Specifically, it forces congress to insure nuclear investor against the financial losses which would occur if a nuclear reactor was not properly maintained, or somehow permitted to release nuclear material into the air we breathe. Today, it currently covers all non-military nuclear facilities constructed in the United States before 2026. Environmental groups, consumer groups and taxpayer watchdogs have criticized the act as a handout to the nuclear power industry to the detriment of United States citizens.

How the robs the poor and gives to the rich

In the act, investors who encourage the companies they fund to produce profit, even at the expense of short-cutting safety procedures are protected against the risk of being sued by members of the public, if the safety rule violation leads to a nuclear disaster. Even criminal behavior is protected from financial liability; instead the act creates a no-fault pool of insurance, which, unlike car insurance, does not increase if the reactor operators violate safety rules, and if the damages exceed the insurance amount, then Congress get to foot the bill. In addition, the act would result in rationed health care for the people exposed to radiation, because it limits the amount of compensation victims can receive, even if the reactor operator is found criminally negligent.

In the Act, power reactor licensees are required to purchase all the insurance that is available (currently, in 2005, $300 million worth). Also each power reactor must pay up to $95.8 million in the event any of them has an accident. This pool of money amounts to about $10 billion. In the event that claims deplete the pool of funds, Congress is required to consider covering the excess cost - if Congress does not cover them, the Tucker Act may provide a final remedy.

Price-Anderson also covers DOE facilities and contractors such as the USEC uranium enrichment plants, national laboratories and the Yucca Mountain disposal site.

Nuclear insurance pools have paid $151 million ($70 million of which was related to the 1979 Three Mile Island meltdown) and the DOE $65 million since Price-Anderson was enacted.

Background

The Atomic Energy Act, enacted in 1954, three years before Price-Anderson, was intended to spur the development of America's private nuclear power industry by allowing private industry to use atomic power for peaceful purposes, such as generating electricity. Prior to that act, the government had held a monopoly on the use of nuclear power.

Private industry responded to the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 with the development of an experimental power plant constructed under the auspices of a consortium of interested companies. It soon became apparent that profits from the private exploitation of atomic energy were uncertain and the accompanying risks substantial. Although the AEC offered incentives to encourage investment, there remained in the path of the private nuclear power industry various problems - the risk of potentially vast liability in the event of a nuclear accident of a sizable magnitude being the major obstacle. Notwithstanding comprehensive testing and study, the uniqueness of this form of energy production made it impossible totally to rule out the risk of a major nuclear accident resulting in extensive damage. Private industry and the AEC were confident that such a disaster would not occur, but the very uniqueness of nuclear power meant that the possibility remained, and the potential liability dwarfed the ability of the industry and private insurance companies to absorb the risk. Thus, while repeatedly stressing that the risk of a major nuclear accident was extremely remote, spokesmen for the private sector informed Congress that they would be forced to withdraw from the field if their liability were not limited by appropriate legislation. [1]

The constitutionality of the Price-Anderson Act was challenged in 1975 (Duke Power vs. Carolina Environmental Study Group, Inc.) and upheld by the Supreme Court in June, 1978. The suit had challenged the act on two grounds — first, that it violated the Fifth Amendment because it did not ensure adequate compensation for victims of accidents, and that it violated the Fourteenth Amendment because it treats nuclear accidents differently to other accidents. The court found that the act did not violate the United States Constitution's equal protection provisions because the risk of harm must be balanced against the importance of nuclear power.

Criticisms

The law is not without its detractors, including the libertarian thinktank Cato Institute, Greenpeace International, Public Citizen, Taxpayers for Common Sense and other interest groups, who charge that Price-Anderson has amounted to a giveaway to private industry at the American taxpayers' expense. Public Citizen has been particularly critical of Price-Anderson, arguing that it understates the risks inherent in atomic power and does not require reactors to carry enough insurance — as a result taxpayers would have to foot most of the bill for a catastrophic accident.[2]

The law has also been criticized by environmental groups such as Green Scissors, who assert that Price-Anderson distorts the energy market by providing companies and their financiers a financial incentive to remain invested in nuclear energy but not to explore other sustainable energy technologies. [3] According to the United States Public Interest Research Group the subsidy to the nuclear industry has been estimated at between $366 million and $3.5 billion annually, or $3.5 million to $33 million per reactor per year [4]

Price-Anderson has been criticized by many of these groups for a portion of the law that indemnifies Department of Energy and private contractors from nuclear incidents even in cases of gross negligence and willful misconduct (although criminal penalties would still apply). "No other government agency provides this level of taxpayer indemnification to non-government personnel", Public Citizen. The Energy Department counters those critics by saying that the distinction is irrelevant, since the damage to the public would be the same. [5]

The law provides no fault liability for reactor operators, and injured victims are precluded from directly suing vendors or manufacturers responsible for an accident. Its critics argue that it poses legal hurdles to victims seeking compensation by removing state jurisdiction and restricts plaintiffs ability to utilize any state laws which might go above and beyond federal protections.

See also

External links

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