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Italy's nuclear move triggers chain reaction



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Published Date: 25 May 2008
ITALY, which last week decided to embrace nuclear power two decades after a public referendum banned nuclear power and deactivated all its reactors, could be just the first of several European countries to reverse its stance on nuclear power, a leading industry group has said.
Ian Hore-Lacey, spokesman for the London-based World Nuclear Association, said: "Italy has had the most dramatic, the most public turnaround, but the sentiments against nuclear are reversing very quickly all across Europe."

When asked which natio
ns were likely to join Britain and France as major producers of nuclear power, he replied: "Holland, Belgium, Sweden, Germany and more."

With oil now at record high prices, countries throughout the developed world are now looking at the nuclear option.

The developing world is also looking at nuclear power, with Iran the most high-profile proponent. However, with many other countries crippled by energy costs and needing a short-term fix, the nuclear option is increasingly attractive. Despite having the perfect conditions to harness wind and solar power, South Africa, which is suffering from acute electricity shortages, has just asked American and French companies to tender to build a second nuclear plant.

Yet it is in Europe that nuclear power is being most urgently considered. The continent turned its back on nuclear power in the 1980s in the wake of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, but political and economic conditions are markedly different now. Oil was under $50 a barrel then, global warming was a fringe science and climate change had not been linked to manmade emissions.

Although economic considerations and global warming are driving the debate, energy security is also an issue never far from the surface. Few European countries have their own energy reserves and are completely reliant on imports. As well as escalating prices for oil and gas, plus the political upheaval in the Middle East, Europe watched in horror in 2006 as Russia's President Vladimir Putin cut off the natural gas supply to Ukraine in a price dispute, leaving it in darkness.

Although Europe is committed to harnessing wind and solar energy, so far the problems to doing so have proved insurmountable. Solar power is problematic in northern Europe, while dense populations in many parts of the continent make it difficult to find suitable sites for wind farms.

Even biofuel, once touted as a possible panacea, has gone out of fashion as its unsustainable impact on the environment and food prices has become apparent.

Once the most-scorned form of energy, the rehabilitation of nuclear power was underscored in January when John Hutton, Labour's Minister for Business, grouped it with "other low-carbon sources of energy" like biofuels. It was barely mentioned in the Government action plan on energy three years earlier.

There is now a determination to tackle the issue head on throughout the continent. With nuclear plants taking up to 20 years from conception to becoming operational, European nations are now having to answer some very difficult questions. The dilemma of Italy, as the biggest importer of oil and gas, are the most pressing: there is no chance of reactivating sites or building new ones within the next five years.

"By the end of this legislature, we will put down the foundation stone for the construction in our country of a group of new-generation nuclear plants," said Claudio Scajola, Italy's minister of economic development. "An action plan to go back to nuclear power cannot be delayed anymore. Only nuclear plants safely produce energy on a vast scale with competitive costs, respecting the environment."

Environmental groups in Italy attacked any plan to bring back nuclear power. Giuseppe Onufrio, a director of Greenpeace Italy, called the announcement "a declaration of war", and pointed out that there are still 235 tonnes of contaminated nuclear waste stored at the decommissioned plants, and no sites for new waste to be stored.

Emma Bonino, an opposition politician and vice-president of the Italian Senate, said building nuclear plants made no economic sense because they would not be ready for at least 20 years.

Enel, Italy's leading energy provider, announced this year that it would close its oil-fired power plants because the fuel had become too costly. Italians pay the highest energy prices in Europe. Enel has been building coal plants to fill the void left by oil. Coal plants are cheaper but create relatively high levels of carbon emissions.

Enel, which operates power plants in several European countries, already has at least one nuclear plant, in Bulgaria, and has been researching so-called fourth-generation nuclear reactors, which are intended to be safer and to minimise waste and the use of natural resources.



The full article contains 783 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 May 2008 9:09 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Nuclear energy
 
1

KampungHighlander,

Jakarta 25/05/2008 05:53:56
They can't even manage Naples garbage, how are they ever going to be able to handle nuclear waste in a responsible manner.
2

Guga II,

Rockall 25/05/2008 07:46:12
#1. They'll bury at the bottom of the Naples garbage mountain, and put the Mafia in charge.
3

danielrober,

25/05/2008 08:15:57
Plenty of work then for a new generation of Scots/UK/EU engineers and scientists.
4

Unimpressed one,

25/05/2008 09:09:22
'Environmental groups in Italy attacked any plan to bring back nuclear power. Giuseppe Onufrio, a director of Greenpeace Italy, called the announcement "a declaration of war"'

Good to see the loony eco-nuts are not confined to these shores alone.
5

ddmc,

25/05/2008 10:54:37
there is a biofuel that they all conviently forget.

Hemp oil & ethanol was used in a concept car built by Henry Ford in the late 1920's, it has much lower emmisions than oil based fuel.

6

JoeMcT,

BlairsFantasyIsland 25/05/2008 14:28:05
Better than that.....Google Paul Pantone and read about his amazing GEET engine.
7

Kirsty Boyd-Williamson,

New Town 25/05/2008 18:53:14
Italian chaps are excellent at flapping their arms about but of little use for anything else.
8

Matt there,

somewhere 25/05/2008 23:26:28
To be built by Mafia-controlled construction firms, with money for safety measures syphoned off for corrupt politicians.

Let's NOT holiday in Italy!
9

Colin, Glasgow,

26/05/2008 22:29:52
This is pretty significant news for nuclear. Quite a few countries said they would phase it out after Chernobyl, but Italy is the only one that actually did it and shut down their power stations. Now they want it back.
10

John (Again),

Bury St Edmunds 26/05/2008 23:06:10
Uranium production from mines is falling fast, especially in Canada and Australia from which most of the Western supplies come. It fell 19% in Canada in two years and in Australia after falling 20% in 2006 it rallied in 2007, is still 10% below what it was in 2005. Only Kazakhstan production is rising, but this is spoken for in Russia, China, Japan and Korea. Meanwhile the Megatons to Megawatts US-Russian agreement for diluting ex-weapons highly enriched uranium ends in 2013 and with it half of the US reactors will lose their fuel supply. This will put the French, which are over-reliant on nuclear generation (77% in 2007) for their electricity into a fuel shortage as they will be in competition with the US for dwindling Canadian and Australian supplies. The next mine in Canada, Cigar Lake is flooded and will be delayed until 2011 and may never recover. In Australia the Olympic Dam expansion is dogged with rising diesel prices for the excavation of the initial hole which will take 4 years to reach the first ores 350 m down. Then the owners want to export just copper concentrate from the combined ore, leaving the foreign smelter to separate part of the uranium, with the rest going into the tailings dam. So little chance of fuelling the so-called "renaissance", which has entered the realms of fantasy. There is no possibility that all the countries wanting nuclear power can be provided with fuel. The Scottish Government is quite "canny" to reject a revival of nuclear power in Scotland, but in any case with rising construction and component costs it has little chance of finding its finance without massive subsidy. Paradoxically, the rising crude oil price has put paid to any nuclear substitution for petrol and diesel with hydrogen from electrolysis as the capital costs for new build will soar.
11

Angus McIonnach,

Embra 27/05/2008 20:36:17
So enviro-mentalists are reduced to making up stories about 'peak uranium' now. Sheesh.

 

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