CHERNOBYL ANNIVERSARY: FRENCH NUCLEAR PLANT
CONSTRUCTION SITE SHUT DOWN

Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2007

 

26 April 2007 - Flamanville, France — On this day 21 years ago a nuclear reactor near the Ukraine city of Chernobyl suffered a steam explosion and a nuclear meltdown. Winds spread the radioactive fallout over thousands of square kilometres. Now, risky new nuclear reactors are under construction in Europe, but not on this day. Not if we can help it. Activists are occupying cranes and using trucks to block the entrance at the construction site of a dangerous new type of reactor in France.

"The proposed construction of such new reactors, which are likely to be the most dangerous in the world, is an insult to the memory of those who died in the immediate aftermath of Chernobyl, and the hundreds of thousands of people whose lives continue to be blighted by the disaster," said Frederic Marillier of Greenpeace France.

"We're occupying the construction site to highlight the risk to all of Europe," said Marillier, "and we call upon the two candidates for France's presidential election to cancel the EPR project at Flamanville."

Not safe, not sensible

Both the Flamanville reactor under construction in France and the Olkiluto reactor being built in Finland are European Pressurized Water Reactor (EPR) types. A recent independent study, produced by John Large Associates for Greenpeace, shows that the new generation of EPR reactors have an inherently higher risk of serious radioactive contamination in the event of any accident.

The study, found that for the Flamanville reactor the number of people affected and requiring evacuation following the 'most likely' of nuclear incidents would be about 660,000. In a worst-case scenario, the number of people requiring evacuation would increase to more than 3 million. 135,000 people were evacuated following the Chernobyl disaster.

A nuclear industry document leaked last year also raised concerns that EPR plants are vulnerable to terrorist attack.

Chernobyl's legacy

Not only a part of history, Chernobyl continues to be a nightmare for many. There is controversy surrounding how many have died, and how many will die, from its nuclear fallout. Attempts have even been made to whitewash over the true cost in lives.

A report we released last year used new data, based on Belarus national cancer statistics, to predict approximately 270,000 cancers and 93,000 fatal cancer cases due to the disaster. The report also concluded that on the basis of demographic data, during the last 15 years, 60,000 people have additionally died in Russia because of the Chernobyl accident, and estimates of the total death toll for the Ukraine and Belarus could reach another 140,000.

But statistics never tell the full human story. For that, we need to remember the victims as individuals.
Nuclear not the answer

There are solutions to climate change, but nuclear power is not one of them. We have published an energy revolution blueprint showing how the world can have economic growth while reducing our dependence on fossil fuels - all without nuclear power.

"Every euro spent on futile and dangerous nuclear technology in a misguided attempt to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is taking us a step away from the real solution to climate change," concluded Marillier.

+ More

South Pacific fisheries - getting hot in Chile

27 April 2007 - International — When it comes to stopping the strip-mining of the sea, it's time for governments to walk the walk so deep-sea critters can swim the swim.

Commitments were made at the UN General Assembly in 2006 to protect the bio-diversity of the deep-sea from bottom trawling. Next week in Chile we'll see if the politicians can actually deliver what they promised.

Will the South Pacific fisheries agreement deliver protection for the high seas?

We certainly hope so. The governments of the South Pacific, plus those of countries wanting to take advantage of one of the last high seas fisheries frontiers, are meeting to form a new fisheries management organization.

Given the perilous state of global fish stocks, this agreement has special significance. It can't be solely about dividing up the ocean wealth: it needs to protect the ocean's health.

Populations of top predators, a key indicator of an ecosystem's stability, are disappearing at a frightening rate, and 90 percent of the large fish that many of us love to eat, such as tuna, swordfish, marlin, cod, halibut, skate, and flounder - have been fished out since large scale industrial fishing began in the 1950s.

The depletion of these top predator species can cause a shift in entire oceans ecosystems where commercially valuable fish are replaced by smaller, plankton-feeding fish. This century may even see bumper crops of jellyfish replacing the fish consumed by humans.

Politicians and officials agree that they need to do better to ensure not only the protection of the fish stocks but also the diverse marine ecosystem on which they depend.

Time for action
For three years Greenpeace has worked with the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition and its 60 member organizations to get a global moratorium on the destructive fishing practice of bottom trawling in the high seas. Rather than agreeing to the moratorium, in October 2006 all governments agreed to a United Nations General Assembly resolution.

It is clear from current scientific information that we don't know enough about deep-sea ecosystems to protect them. It is estimated that between half a million and five million deep-sea species are as yet undiscovered. We know more about Mars than we do our own deep-sea environment.

The only genuinely precautionary approach is to close areas where these vulnerable ecosystems are occur, or are likely to occur, until adequate scientific assessments have been carried out, and effective conservation and management measures implemented.

For fisheries agreements under development - like the one in the South Pacific - the deadline to implement these measures to protect deep sea ecosystems is December 2007. Here and now is the time for these Governments to put in place the commitments they made in December 2006.

This meeting must not just be about countries carving up the pie, each making sure they get a big enough slice. The agreement must include measures that will ensure not only the sustainability of the fish stocks, but also protection of our deep sea marine environment.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International (http://www.greenpeace.org)
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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