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+A. Counterplan text: All countries except Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, and Brunei (hereafter referred to as ASEAN) will prohibit the production of Russian state owned nuclear power |
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+B. It competes—the CP doesn’t ban nuclear power for all Russian state owned nuclear power, just one’s in the aff’s harms. |
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+ENERGY DEMAND IS INCREASING IN ASEAN COUNTRIES AND NUCLEAR IS THE ONLY OPTION TO MEET DEMAND |
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+Nian 14, Victor (PhD, Energy Studies Institute, National University of Singapore), and S. K. Chou. "The state of nuclear power two years after Fukushima–The ASEAN perspective." Applied Energy 136 (2014): 838-848. |
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+According to 27, the primary energy demand by ASEAN countries reached 511 megaton |
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+AND |
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+electricity imbalances in ASEAN in the coming decades is nuclear power. |
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+These countries need nuclear power from Russia |
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+WNA 16 |
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+Emerging Nuclear Energy Countries(Updated 13 September 2016) |
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+http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/country-profiles/others/emerging-nuclear-energy-countries.aspx |
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+One major issue for many countries is the size of their grid system. Many nuclear power plants are larger than the relevant tables in the Nuclear Power in China and Nuclear Power in Russia information papers: |
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+NUCLEAR POWER CAN HELP THEIR NRG SECURITY, HELPS AVOID SHOCKS FROM FOSSIL FUEL PRICES—nuclear is the only alternative |
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+Nian 2, Victor (PhD, Energy Studies Institute, National University of Singapore), and S. K. Chou. "The state of nuclear power two years after Fukushima–The ASEAN perspective." Applied Energy 136 (2014): 838-848. |
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+The only way for a country to improve its energy security |
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+spike in crude oil prices automatically has deleterious consequences on a country’s energy budget. |
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+NUCLEAR NRG IS BETTER THAN THE ALTERNATIVES |
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+Nian 3, Victor (PhD, Energy Studies Institute, National University of Singapore), and S. K. Chou. "The state of nuclear power two years after Fukushima–The ASEAN perspective." Applied Energy 136 (2014): 838-848. |
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+For all fossil-fired power plants, a major portion of the |
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+technology in decarbonizing the electricity sector. |
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+ASEAN COUNTRIES ARE VULNERABLE TO CLIMATE CHANGE |
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+Nian 4, Victor (PhD, Energy Studies Institute, National University of Singapore), and S. K. Chou. "The state of nuclear power two years after Fukushima–The ASEAN perspective." Applied Energy 136 (2014): 838-848. |
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+According to Nian and others 40, climate change would severely affect the |
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+ weather events are also leading to more frequent and extensive damages to properties and human lives. |
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+NUCLEAR IS SAFER POST FUKUSHIMA |
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+Nian 5, Victor (PhD, Energy Studies Institute, National University of Singapore), and S. K. Chou. "The state of nuclear power two years after Fukushima–The ASEAN perspective." Applied Energy 136 (2014): 838-848. |
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+In addition to the International Experts’ Meetings, the IAEA revised a series of safety |
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+power output, the new reactor design is capable of adjusting power output at the rate of 5 nominal power per minute at constant temperature. |
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+Strong ASEAN key to prevent extinction through nuclear war |
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+RAJARATNAM 92 (Sinnathamby, former Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore, “ASEAN The Way Ahead,” Sep 1, http://www.asean.org/asean/about-asean/history/item/asean-the-way-ahead-by-s-rajaratnam) |
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+Should regionalism collapse, then ASEAN too will go the |
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+ historical development, will |
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+unleashed, would be the last war mankind will ever fight. |