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<br /> tiuclcar Swset: Economic Costs of the Canediw Nuclear Industn~ http://H~~~,ccnr.org/sunsetl.hwl <br /> industry by about 40%....ey claim that there were about 3~,~~0 jobs in the <br /> nuclear industry at year-end 1992. A more realistic estimate is about 18,000. <br /> There are several possible reasons for AECL's overestimation of employment, <br /> including: double counting (for example, several references indicate that uranium <br /> industry employees were counted rivice); counting total employment levels at <br /> companies whose business is only partly nuclear, instead of just counting the <br /> nuclear-related jobs; overestimating the number of companies in the nuclear <br /> manufacturing private sector; and using biased assumptions for extrapolating <br /> employment levels at those companies that were not actually polled. <br /> The most significant overestimate is for employrent among "private sector <br /> suppliers". Ernst & Young estimate employment in that sector for 1992-93 at <br /> 8,500, whereas this study estimates that the actual 1992 figure was about 2,000. <br /> Nuclear Prospects <br /> Ontario Hydro has decided to shut down, rather than rebuild part of the Bruce <br /> "A" Nuclear Generating Station. It is possible that Ontario Hydro's other nuclear <br /> stations will also be phased out early in order to avoid costly retubing or other <br /> major rehabilitation work. Staffing levels can be expected to decline <br /> proportionally. <br /> It is widely expected that Ontario Hydro's virtual monopoly on electricity <br /> generation in Ontario will be broken, makine any new nuclear construction <br /> virtually unthinkable. A competitive market will inevitably lean towards more <br /> efficient supply alternatives with shorter construction lead-times such as natural <br /> gas-fired cogeneration and combined cycle plants. The prospects for new nuclear <br /> construction in any province outside of Ontario are almost as slim. <br /> Canada is the world's largest producer and exporter of uranium, and Cameco (the <br /> privatized former crown corporation in uranium mining and refming) has seen a <br /> recent increase in stock price. However, even this sector of the industry is facing <br /> a serious challenge over the medium- to long-term. Huge military stockpiles of <br /> uranium in the USA and Russia, as well as fuel recovered from nuclear weapons <br /> will likely make serious inroads on the market share of the Canadian uranium <br /> mining and refming industry. <br /> The AECL Isotope Business <br /> Long thought to be the one "profitable" division of AECL, the former <br /> Radiochemical Company of AECL was privatized in l 991 as "Nordion <br /> International Inc.", when it was sold to MDS Health Group. To secure the sale, <br /> of 76 04/08/97 2208:30 <br /> <br />