nuclear power

'Creative accounting' will worsen radioactive waste crisis and pave the way for dangerous new nuclear power stations

Last edited 4 July 2002 at 8:00am
4 July, 2002

Government plans announced today, to deal with the rapidly increasing radioactive waste mountain could make the problem much worse Greenpeace warned. The creation of a new authority to bail out the nuclear industry from the £8 billion bill for cleaning up waste and decommissioning old power stations, will free the bankrupt British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL) to expand its nuclear business and create more deadly radioactive waste.

Government creative accountacy to subsidise radioactive waste industry?

Posted by bex — 4 July 2002 at 8:00am - Comments
On 4th July 2002 the Government published its White Paper Managing the Nuclear Legacy which contained plans for dealing with our worsening radioactive waste crisis that has accumulated over 50 years.

The UK's most "challenging" radioactive wastes - the official documentation

Last edited 1 July 2002 at 8:00am
Publication date: 
21 March, 2007

Publication date: 1 July 2002

Summary

Almost 90 per cent of Britain's hazardous nuclear waste stockpile is so badly stored it could explode or leak with devastating results at any time, reported The Observer newspaper on Sunday 30th June 2002.

Download the report:

Nuclear accidents

Last edited 26 June 2002 at 8:00am
Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant

Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant

Revealed - new facilities for building new nuclear warheads

Last edited 16 June 2002 at 8:00am
Publication date: 
21 March, 2007

Publication date: June 2002

Summary

Download the report:

Nuclear near-miss could have been a catastrophe

Last edited 11 June 2002 at 8:00am

Nuclear near-miss could have been a catastrophe

Last edited 11 June 2002 at 8:00am
11 June, 2002

The collision between a heavy goods lorry and a train carrying nuclear flasks on its way to collect used nuclear fuel from Dungeness nuclear plant could have been a catastrophe causing many thousands of cancer cases and leaving parts of Kent uninhabitable, warned Greenpeace today

Renewables revolution clouded by nuclear "fall out"

Last edited 21 March 2002 at 9:00am
21 March, 2002

stop nuclear choose wind

Today's visionary declaration by North Sea Ministers to promote renewable energy in the North Sea was clouded by fall out from the on-going argument on radioactive discharges from Sellafield. 

North Sea Ministers including UK Environment Minister Michael Meacher agreed to "welcome the development of renewable energy, inter alia offshore wind energyThey agree to take action to exploit this potential fully and safely." However, Greenpeace warned that this historic commitment would be undermined by the continued support of the UK and France to the polluting nuclear industry.

The North Sea has huge potential to harness wind power and develop renewable energy. Just 1% of the resource could power more than 6 million homes. In contrast to the billions of euros of state support for the nuclear industry, renewables still receive insufficient funding.

Greenpeace political advisor Simon Reddy said,
"The UK and France have to understand that the policies they articulated in Bergen represent a fundamental contradiction. What use is it signing up to clean renewable energy if you simultaneously continue to support a failing industry that is polluting our environment? It's a policy that's about as stable as the ice shelf that's just broken off from Antarctica."

During the 5th North Sea Ministers meeting in Bergen, the UK Environment Minister Michael Meacher stated publicly: "The twentieth century was the century of oil, the twenty-first must be the century of renewable energy."

The conference saw Ministers from nine countries and the EU recognise that climate change brought on by the use of fossil fuels poses a potent threat to the ecosystem and coastal regions of the North Sea. They also acknowledged the need to develop renewable alternatives to fossil fuels like oil and gas.

The commitment by the ministers to take action to exploit the wind potential of the North Sea was welcomed by Greenpeace. However, the agreement will only be worthwhile if it leads to massive financial investment in the offshore wind industry. Greenpeace emphasised that only through a commitment to renewable energy technologies will governments be able to make a substantial and sustainable contribution to their Kyoto Protocol commitments.

North Sea Ministers Conference

Last edited 18 March 2002 at 9:00am
18 March, 2002

Wave power

The North Sea Ministers Conference this year will focus on a number of key environmental issues including the development and use of renewable energy, radioactive waste transports, radioactive discharges and the release of hazardous substances into the environment. 

Greenpeace will be attending the conference to encourage ministers to commit to action to reverse the ongoing damage to the climate through the use of fossil fuels and to protect the environment and economy of the North Sea area from radioactive and chemical pollution.

Chief scientist 'playing politics' say Greenpeace

Last edited 7 March 2002 at 9:00am
7 March, 2002

Solution: wind turbines at work

Greenpeace response to Chief Scientist claim today that new nuclear power stations are needed to protect the environment