Nuclear Power Goes Green

Many thanks to Hellequin GB for translating this article from the German-language service of RT:

France first: Ten EU countries are calling for nuclear power to be classified as green energy

A group of ten EU countries, led by France, has asked the European Commission to recognize nuclear energy as a low-carbon energy source. The technology is intended to contribute to the EU’s transition to climate neutrality, which has been planned for decades.

In view of the ongoing energy crisis in Europe, ten EU countries wrote to Brussels in favor of nuclear energy as an “important affordable, stable and independent energy source” that could protect EU consumers from “being exposed to price fluctuations”. The document, initiated by France, was sent to the EU Commission with the signature of nine other EU countries, most of which already include nuclear energy in their national energy mix: Bulgaria, Finland, Croatia, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, the Czech Republic and Hungary.

Nuclear power plants generate over 26 percent of the electricity produced in the European Union. “The rise in energy prices has also shown the importance of reducing our energy dependence on third countries as quickly as possible,” the letter reads. Over 90 percent of the natural gas in the EU is imported from abroad, with Russia being the main producer. For the signatories of the letter, this appears to be one of the main factors behind the rise in energy prices. They write:

“Supply outages will occur more and more frequently, and we have no choice but to diversify our supply. We should be careful not to increase our dependence on energy imports from outside Europe.”

The signatories call on the Commission to include nuclear energy in the EU’s green taxonomy. This is a technical guide to help governments and investors determine which projects comply with the Paris Agreement and which violate its climate targets. Activities that fall under the taxonomy must make a “substantial contribution” to at least one environmental objective of EU climate policy and at the same time avoid significant damage to one of the other objectives. In addition, projects that fall under the taxonomy must meet a minimum level of social guarantees.

France versus Germany

The Commission has already included an extensive catalog of sectors such as solar, geothermal, hydrogen, wind, hydropower and bioenergy in the guide. When Brussels presented the taxonomy in April, however, one sector was missing: nuclear energy. Despite the self-set goal of tackling climate change, member states are still unable to reach consensus on whether nuclear energy is a green or a dirty source of energy. The Commission has postponed the important decision to allow the countries to close the debate.

On the one hand, Germany, which plans to shut down all of its reactors by 2022, is leading the anti-nuclear movement along with Austria, Denmark, Luxembourg and Spain. “We are concerned that the inclusion of nuclear energy in the taxonomy would permanently damage its integrity, credibility and thus its usefulness,” wrote the federal states under the leadership of Germany in July .

On the other hand, France, which gets over 70 percent of its electricity from nuclear power plants, is fighting for nuclear power to be classified as sustainable under the taxonomy. As the new letter shows, Paris has the support of several eastern states that have already allocated millions to nuclear projects. “While renewable energy sources play a key role in our energy transition, they cannot produce enough low-carbon electricity to meet our needs in a sufficient and constant manner,” says the letter, in which nuclear energy is considered a “safer and more innovative” sector that has the potential to retain one million highly skilled jobs “in the near future”.

French President Emmanuel Macron’s energy policy is what he calls an “both-and” strategy. He wants to build new, small nuclear power plants (SMR), but at the same time renewable energies are to be expanded. However, the mini-reactors are not yet ready for production. A single model is currently running in Russia. In addition, French industry shows little interest in the small reactors, as they produce relatively little electricity and cannot replace conventional nuclear power plants.

Showdown in negotiations on “Fit for 55”?

A report by the Commission’s research department released earlier this year suggests that Brussels might eventually side with nuclear proponents. The paper states that greenhouse gas emissions from nuclear power plants are “comparable” to those from hydro and wind turbines — an assessment shared by the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the United States Department of Energy .

There are no indications that the debate will be resolved anytime soon. According to the Commission, a decision on nuclear power is expected before the end of the year, although, given the profound differences of opinion, it could drag on into next year. France will take over the rotating presidency in January, giving Paris a privileged position to influence the Brussels agenda.

In the meantime, the EU institutions have started negotiations on “Fit for 55”, a comprehensive legislative package designed to reduce emissions in the EU by at least 55 percent by the end of the decade. “Fit for 55” is considered to be one of the most radical and far-reaching proposals in the history of the EU.

Together, the ten signatories of the letter could form a blocking minority in the Council by preventing their fellow campaigners from reaching the required threshold of 65 percent of the total population of the EU.

Afterword from the translator:

In one of the Corona Ausschuss sessions some months back, there was a German engineer who invented a new nuclear power plant that is double cooled through lead and is a closed unit, so that another Chernobyl can’t happen. Also, his system uses up ALL the uranium cores, not just 1%, and the rest goes into underground storage. He even stated that over the next few-hundred years you can use up all that is now stored underground. He also said that in 1996 Merkel during her term as Minister for the Environment — or something like that — destroyed ALL geological surveys about where it is safe to build nuclear power plants. His father’s company did all the surveying for that, and apparently today there’s NOBODY around anymore that can do that specific work.

7 thoughts on “Nuclear Power Goes Green

  1. Oh sure: Nuclear energy’s gonna save us. Tell it to the Japs who are now despairing of even stabilizing Fukushima by 2050. Take your improved reactor and shove it. We’ve heard that story before.

    • Just FYI, you misspelled your nic. Gastel Etzwane (no “n” after the initial “e”) was the protagonist in The Durdane Trilogy by Jack Vance.

    • Fukushima knew they have problem with backup generators location in case of tsunami but didn’t dare to fix it because of people like you. If they fixed it then you will cry “NUCLEAR IS NOT SAFE”.
      If aviation was built on principles we imposed on nuclear we will be still travel by Queen Mary over Atlantic.

  2. For years (decades, even), certain large eco-activist organisations have been campaigning against nuclear power.

    Someone I know who was in one such organisation told me, that a large part of their funding came from Russia.

    Russia has a stranglehold on supplies of natural gas to Europe.

    So, it should be easy to join the dots…

    For once, I can say “Vive la France!”

  3. The Germans are being hypocritical; they import nuclear-derived electicity from France (as we do in the UK).

  4. Solar is Nuclear and Nuclear can be Solar. Has the sun caused more death through skin cancer than terrestrial nuclear reactors? If so abolish the sun and global warming will take care of itself and nobody will worry about these problems anymore.

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