TIME FOR GERMANY’S NUCLEAR REACTORS TO RETIRE


Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2010


Blogpost by jmckeati - September 7, 2010 at 14:05 PM So, German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced at the weekend that her government will seek extension to the country’s nuclear reactors’ lifetimes of between 8 and 14 years.

Germany’s reactors are the nuclear old men of Europe, more than ready for retirement. All nuclear reactors are dangerous and the older they are the more dangerous they become. Frau Merkel is making a grave mistake by seeking to extend the operating life of Germany´s nuclear reactors.

It’s contrary to the will of the majority of German people and is economic and ecological madness. Just how throwing a lifeline to this 60 year-old, tried and failed technology can be called a ‘revolution’ is anyone’s guess.

Since Germany decided in 2001 to steadily phase out its nuclear reactors, it has become a world leader in clean modern renewable energy supply. So why take a step backwards? The decision to stick with old risky reactors would wipe out Germany’s leading position in green energy which has already created a quarter of a million new jobs.

It’s also a blow to the wide political and public consensus negotiated ten years ago. Numerous studies show that Germany can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and provide secure affordable energy supplies without nuclear reactors. In fact, because of their inflexibility, obsolete reactors have already become a major roadblock to further renewable energy growth. Germany’s sustainable and renewable future is now under threat. The right step forward would be to speed up the nuclear phase out.

Nearly two thirds of German citizens oppose nuclear power, and 150,000 people participated in the recent big demonstration against it. It remains to be seen whether the government has the power or the mandate to force through its wishes.

There are already several court cases running that challenge the plan for extended operation of old, unsafe nuclear reactors. If the government agrees to the proposal and the parliament approves it, Greenpeace is ready to take this challenge all the way to the Constitutional Court.

+ More

What happened at Russia’s Kursk nuclear power plant?

Earlier this week Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said in a speech that ‘the only "real and powerful alternative" to oil and gas is nuclear energy. He rejected other approaches as "claptrap."’

We wonder if he’d have used those words if things had gone differently at Russia’s Kursk nuclear power plant earlier this year. Probably not, as he might have been touring hospitals visiting victims of radiation exposure instead. On July 22, it appears that one of the reactors at the plant may have come close a Chernobyl-style disaster.

We say ‘appears’ and ‘may’ because official details from the authorities are few and sketchy. The story that is slowly leaking out however, via Bellona, is one of a highly dangerous mix of incompetence, arrogance, cover-up and propaganda.

The reactor is a RBMK-1000, the same design to the one that caused the Chernobyl disaster in 1986. There is evidence to suggest that the changes made to the Kursk reactor to solve the problem that caused the Chernobyl explosion may have introduced a new fault into the reactor’s design that can lead to equally serious accidents.

It you want a case study into how not to manage public concerns in a time when suspicion of nuclear power is at its height then Kursk is it. Beyond a few bland online statements from the plant’s operator Rosenergoatom there are few official details as to what really happened July 22. What we’re left with is unanswered questions and informed speculation. Is that any way to run a nuclear industry?

You can see why the Russian authorities might want to cover-up any accident and leak (Russian Prosecutor General Yury Chaika has so far not responded to Greenpeace’s questions about any possible leak of radiation from Kursk). Russia sees itself as one of the dominant players in the global nuclear industry. From uranium to nuclear fuel to reactor design, building and operation, Russia wants a big slice of the nuclear ‘renaissance ’. Talk of nuclear accidents at reactors with incompetent management and under-trained staff doesn’t look good to potential investors.

When the Russian authorities (and Russia isn’t alone in this) are operating nuclear reactors without honesty and transparency, while it is dumping nuclear waste in the open air, and embracing a technology that has solved none of its dangerous problems in its 60-year history, it is Prime Minister Putin that is talking ‘claptrap’.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
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