france
Last edited 2 April 2009 at 10:45am
London HQ seeks assurances that UK office not bugged by French nuclear group
Top staff at nuclear
energy giant Electricite de France (EDF) have been charged on suspicion of spying on
Greenpeace.
Two security chiefs at
the French government-owned company are accused of conspiring to hack into
Greenpeace computer systems in France. Three others have also been
charged, including a computer expert and the head of a private investigation
firm. The computer expert has already admitted the
charge.
Posted by jamie — 6 March 2009 at 1:14pm
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Mention Cherbourg and what springs to mind? Brigit Bardot skipping through the rain with a song on her lips, twirling one of those famous umbrellas? Sadly, that was all a long time ago and the quaint port of Jacques Demy's masterpiece is now a major link in the fuel chain for Japan's nuclear power stations.
Yesterday, a shipment of plutonium mixed oxide (Mox) fuel left France bound for Japan. It's the first shipment of Mox fuel to Japan in eight years, and the largest shipment of plutonium the world has ever seen - 1.8 tonnes of it in fact, enough to make 225 nuclear weapons.
Posted by jossc — 6 October 2008 at 4:59pm
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Hartlepool nuclear plant - completely out of action
Should you happen to find yourself debating with a passionate supporter of nuclear power about how to supply our country's future energy needs, the odds are that pretty early in the debate they'll play their trump card - namely that only nuclear can supply the 'base load' necessary to ensure that the lights stay on throughout the long, dark British winter. Hang the dangers of radioactivity, forget the ruinous expense, they'll say - we can't do without nuclear power.
Last edited 1 January 1970 at 1:00am
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Last edited 27 May 2008 at 4:02pm
The French
nuclear safety agency, ASN, has ordered
construction to be suspended on the new nuclear reactor being built in
France - the same model that
would most likely be built in the UK. (1)
Flamanville's construction
in northern France has run
into the same kinds of problems plaguing the ongoing construction of
the only other European Pressurised Reactor (EPR), Olkiluoto 3,
in Finland.
Posted by jamie — 15 January 2008 at 4:28pm
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Sacre
bleu. At the end of last week, French president Nicolas Sarkozy took a stand against biotech giant Monsanto and banned a strain of GM maize which has previously been grown by French farmers.
Their MON
810 variety - according to AFP, the only type of GM maize currently being grown
in France - has been withdrawn after a committee of scientists, farmers and
politicians raised doubts over its continued use. Advocating the precautionary
principle, Sarkozy invoked an EU clause to stop Monsanto's maize being grown.
Posted by bex — 30 October 2007 at 11:49am
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A tad belated but I just couldn't let this one pass. Last week, these words emerged from France's environmental policymaking forum:
"From now on, every major public project, every public decision will be judged on its effect on climate, and on its carbon cost. Each public decision will be judged on how it affects bio-diversity. The onus won't be on ecological decisions to prove their merit, but on non-ecological projects to prove they can't be done any other way. Non-ecological decisions must be taken as a last resort. It's a total revolution in the way we govern our country."
Posted by jamie — 5 September 2007 at 5:30pm
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How's this for a creative and exciting example of direct action - it's a blockade but with a difference. Earlier this morning in Romania, Greenpeace volunteers quarantined a whole island where GM soya crops are being grown, which is illegal under EU law. Vehicles leaving Braila island were hosed down by people wearing white biohazard suits to prevent genetic contamination spreading to the mainland. Even a donkey and cart were washed and made GM-free!
Posted by jamie — 6 July 2007 at 3:16pm
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Right now, a group of Greenpeace climbers are perched on top of a set of cranes in the port of La Rochelle on the French Atlantic coast. They've been there since Wednesday night and as well as admiring a no-doubt magnificent view, they're also preventing a ship unloading its cargo of timber which has come from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Last edited 30 April 2007 at 11:18am
Nuclear companies across Europe warned to expect similar disruption