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December 21, 2005
European Commission in Nuclear Disarray
Research proposal for nuclear waste management could be scrapped because officials favour investment in nuclear fusion technology. Is the European Commission really more concerned with chasing a pipe dream than cleaning up today's hazardous waste?
Disagreement in the European Commission over the future of nuclear power has pushed a package of proposals off its December timetable, according to the European Voice newspaper.
The nuclear package was intended to contain three proposals: on nuclear research, decommissioning funds (money for the safe closure of nuclear installations) and non-proliferation (preventing countries from acquiring nuclear weapons). But sources close to the talks said there was considerable doubt as to whether the research proposal would ever see the light of day, thanks to disagreement within the Commission over how the money should be spent.
The research department is reported to think the money would be better spent on advancing nuclear fusion - a process which is still decades from becoming a workable option.
Two 2003 directives on nuclear safety and waste met with such stiff opposition from governments that they had to be withdrawn. They were then re-issued with most of the tougher clauses removed. The EU executive had to back off from telling member states how to manage decommissioning funds, requiring instead proof only that enough money was available to shut down reactors safely at the end of their life.
A recommendation in the new package could go some way to plugging the gap, setting out non-binding Commission advice on the best way to fund nuclear decommissioning. The proposal will probably recommend securely ring-fencing separate nuclear decommissioning cash, a system used already by a majority of EU countries. Some member states however currently have no restrictions on how this money can be spent. Nuclear power operators in France and Germany have used decommissioning funds for overseas investments, a system environmentalists say has led to bankruptcies in the past.
Posted by peter at December 21, 2005 04:31 PM