Profit at Any Price. This could be the   motto of Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), the multinational that exploits   the nuclear power plants at Fukushima. The largest producer of   electricity in the world illustrates the excesses of an industrial   sector in which neo-liberalism has unfurled to the last extremities of   its destructive logic.
Poof. At the beginning of 2010, Tepco  announced net earnings  of 157.7 billion yen (1.19 billion euros) for  the period from April to  December 2009, as compared with a loss of  137.7 billion yen (1.04  billion euros) a year earlier. Miraculous  recovery, for a multinational  company whose annual turnover decreased,  at the same time, by 14%. In  order to restore profits, the officers of  the company affirm, Tepco had  to restrict its "current expenses", which  dropped by 22%. Officially,  this was due to a drop in the price of  petroleum needed for the  functioning of its thermal power plants. The  explanation is a bit thin,  for an industrial outfit that insisted, in a  financial document in  August 2003, on the necessity of "a  rationalization of the totality of  operations, including a reduction of  the costs of maintenance" in order  to render its profits "secure".
Has performance of maintenance, and thus the security  of equipment,  become a variable for adjustment? Tepco has not  hesitated to do this in  the past. Between September 2002 and April  2003, the multinational was  constrained to shut down its 17 nuclear  reactors. This was a consequence  of revelations concerning the  falsifications of some thirty inspection  reports on three nuclear power  plants in the group. It involved, among  other aspects, the  electro-nuclear giant’s act of disguising three  incidents that had  occurred in the nuclear facilities in Fukushima and  Kashiwazaki-Kariwa.
This scandal implicating Tepco is not an isolated  one. In March 2007,  to cite but one example, the company Hokoriku  Electric Power admitted  having knowingly hidden a nuclear incident that  occurred at the plant in  Shikamachi eight years earlier, the 18 June  1999.
But who cares about security, when the race for  profits takes  command? With 28 million clients in Tokyo and in the  region, Tepco  announced triumphantly last 30 July that it wished to  multiply by 5 its  projections of profit for 2010-2011. Between April  and December 2010,  the multinational banked a net profit of 139.8  billion yen (1.27 billion  euros). Surfing on the green wave, the group,  already in the lead with  its parks of wind turbines, planned to invest  heavily in renewable  energies. Ever so ready to threaten whole  countries, the stock and bond rating  company Standard and Poors granted  Tepco an AA- on its long term debt,  which is its fourth highest  rating.
At the Heart of the Catastrophe, Tepco Remained Obsessed by Financial Considerations
Even at the heart of the current catastrophe in  Fukushima, TEPCO  remained obsessed by financial considerations. "It  seems the the company  waited until the last possible moment to drown  the heart of the reactor  by pumping sea water. In fact, if you drown  the heart of the reactor,  it becomes no longer usable," observes the  Energy branch of the CGT [
1].   Clearly, public ownership is not an all-risk insurance policy in these   matters. But to what horrifying excesses can we be lead by the  shameful  acts of profit-taking. In 2005, in his essay 
From Tchernobyl to Tchernobyls [2],   the winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics, Georges Charpak put us on   our guard: "The problem of security in the nuclear power plants is too   crucial to be left only in the hands of financiers, those champions of   stock market optimization". Cruelly premonitory.
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