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Fire At German Nuclear Plant But No Radiation Leak

The Kruemmel NPP in Geesthacht.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Jun 28, 2007
Fire broke out at a nuclear power plant in northern Germany Thursday but was isolated from the atomic reactor, police said. The blaze began at the Kruemmel power plant in Geesthacht, 30 kilometres (20 miles) southeast of Hamburg on the Elbe river, when coolant in a large electric power transformation substation ignited. It was extinguished about 90 minutes later.

A police spokesman said it was unclear what had caused the fire but added there was no danger of a radiation leak. The reactor was nevertheless shut down as a precaution.

No one was injured in the blaze.

Witnesses saw a giant black column of smoke pouring out of the site. About 100 firefighters battled the blaze with foam.

"It looked worse than it apparently was," a spokesman for the fire brigade said.

It was unclear when the plant would be back online.

Separately, another nuclear power plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Brunsbuettel, was temporarily shut down Thursday about two hours before the Kruemmel fire because its capacity was overloaded, authorities said.

Germany has begun a long-term phase-out of its nuclear energy programme and expects to mothball its last plant around 2020.

The Social Democrats, partners in Germany's left-right government, approved the move under former chancellor Gerhard Schroeder on the grounds that nuclear power poses a risk to public safety.

But Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives oppose the plan, saying that Germany has little chance of slashing greenhouse gas emissions if deprived of atomic energy.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Lithuanian Lawmaker Approve New Nuclear Power Plant
Vilnius (AFP) Jun 29, 2007
The Lithuanian parliament on Thursday overwhelmingly backed the construction of a new nuclear power station to replace the Baltic country's ageing Chernobyl-type Ignalina plant. Some 107 lawmakers in the 141-seat parliament passed legislation approving what is seen as a key means to reduce the region's reliance on energy supplies from Russia.







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