Blair Looking At 'All Options' Amidst British Nuclear Debate
London (AFP) Nov 21, 2005 Prime Minister Tony Blair is looking at "all the options" for Britain's energy future, his spokesman said Monday amid reports that he favours the development of nuclear power. The Times newspaper said Blair is convinced that a new generation of nuclear reactors is the only way forward for Britain to secure its energy needs and cut greenhouse gas emissions that result in global warming. He reportedly set his mind on the nuclear path after his government's chief scientific adviser, Sir David King, "gave the green light" to build more nuclear power stations despite opposition from environmentalists. Briefing reporters Monday, Blair's spokesman said: "The prime minister's view is that we need to look at all the options and everybody knows that's what we are going to do." "The important thing is we look at this both in terms of the energy security of this country and in terms of climate change." Blair, who had promised a decision on new power stations by the end of 2006, is expected to set up a government review of Britain's energy options within the next two weeks. Michael Meacher, a former environment secretary under Blair and still a member of the prime minister's Labour Party, told BBC radio that the review must be "balanced, independent, impartial and it has got to carry credibility". "We need nuclear like a hole in the head," he said, citing the costs involved and the unresolved problem of what to do with nuclear waste. "The fact is the 21st century, in the end, is going to be powered by solar." Nuclear power has met almost a quarter of Britain's energy needs in recent years, but King said over the weekend that that will fall to just four percent by 2010 if reactors are not replaced.
related report The activists said the train with 12 containers carrying more than 170 tonnes of treated nuclear power plant waste was stopped in the city of Goettingen for about 30 minutes and then later in the village of Bienenbuettel en route to the Gorleben site. Eighteen demonstrators were briefly detained in Goettingen. In the town of Harlingen, police removed 150 activists staging a sit-in on the tracks and detained 23. Demonstrators later set fire to bales of hay placed next to the tracks and police had to move in with water cannon. Thick plumes of smoke were still rising when the train rolled by at a snail's pace. Police also cleared a blockade of 160 tractors near the town of Klein Gusborn late Sunday, on the last leg of the 600-kilometer (370-mile) trip, where more than 600 people joined the protest following demonstrations throughout the weekend. Authorities had to forcibly clear the blockade, with more than 70 of the tractors seized and taken to a nearby field. Some 15,000 officers have been mobilized on the German side to secure the passage of the train. The coalition of activists argues that the shipments are dangerous and that their lengthy storage could allow radioactive material to seep into the water supply in the region. "The radioactivity of these 12 containers is two and a half times higher than that of Chernobyl," said Thomas Breuer, a nuclear expert with environmental watchdog Greenpeace. The demonstrators are also trying to put pressure on Angela Merkel's incoming left-right government to maintain the previous administration's two-decade timetable for phasing out all the country's nuclear power plants and find another permanent dump for the nuclear waste. The train left the La Hague treatment center in western France Saturday and arrived around midday in the town of Dannenberg, traditionally a hotbed of anti-nuclear protests. The waste containers will be loaded onto trucks there and finish the final 20-kilometer (12-mile) stretch of the journey. The shipment, the ninth since 1996, is due Tuesday morning in Gorleben, where there are already 56 containers of radioactive waste stored. The transports were interrupted in 1998 following a scandal over radioactive contamination on the surface of the containers. They resumed in 2001. During the last such shipment to Germany in November 2004, a French anti-nuclear activist was killed when he was run over by a train in the eastern French city of Nancy. The nuclear waste is produced in power plants in Germany, but sent to France because the country has no waste re-processing plants. France insists that the waste then be returned to the countries that produced it. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links SpaceDaily Search SpaceDaily Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express Civil Nuclear Energy Science, Technology and News Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com
Blair Urged To Approve New Generation Of Nuclear Reactors London (AFP) Nov 20, 2005 British Prime Minister Tony Blair's chief scientific advisor urged the government on Sunday to "give the green light" to a new generation of nuclear reactors. |
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