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Germans slowly warm to nuclear energy
Nuclear News ^ | 7/11/08 | Madeline Chambers

Posted on 08/01/2008 6:38:13 AM PDT by kidd

BERLIN - Soaring oil prices combined with fears about energy security and climate change are softening Germans' hostility towards nuclear energy, a new survey showed on Wednesday. The results provide fodder for members of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) who have in the last few weeks have renewed their calls for a rethink of the planned phase out of Germany's 17 nuclear reactors by 2021.

The Forsa poll for Stern weekly magazine showed that voters in Germany, Europe's biggest power market, were now evenly divided on the question of whether some of the plants should be allowed to operate for longer than planned.

Some 46 percent said they favor extending the lives of the reactors -- exactly the same number as those who want all plants to close as planned.

That compares with a poll in February 2007 showing 38 percent who wanted to abandon the phase-out plans and 56 percent wanted to stick to them.

"We are really seeing a shift in public opinion here as people are more and more worried about high fuel prices and supply problems," Forsa chief Manfred Guellner told Reuters.

The 1986 Chernobyl disaster, the world's biggest nuclear accident, turned Germans against atomic energy for years as they panicked about safety and the environment, fears the Green lobby capitalized on to strengthen their influence.

The previous German coalition of Social Democrats (SPD) and Greens agreed the phase-out and Merkel's CDU, which supports the nuclear industry, was forced to agree to stick to the closure deal in order to clinch a coalition pact with the SPD in 2005

However, the recent surge in the price of oil, combined with worries about climate change linked to fossil fuels, has raised questions about the plans.

Several prominent members of Merkel's CDU, whose coalition with the SPD is getting increasingly difficult, have recently called for the phase-out to be abandoned.

Climate change has also been high on the agenda of the annual summit of Group of Eight industrialized nations this week in Japan, and Merkel has come under some pressure for Germany's stance on nuclear energy.

However, no change seems likely any time soon. It would be politically extremely difficult for the SPD to change course on such an emotive issue and SPD leader Kurt Beck has rejected any calls to abandon the planned exit.

"This is a real dilemma for the SPD," said Guellner, who noted that his poll showed 34 percent of SPD supporters also said they wanted an extension of the life of some reactors compared to just 26 percent previously.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Germany
KEYWORDS: cdu; energy; germany; merkel; nuclear; nuclearpower; spd
See also http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3486869,00.html
1 posted on 08/01/2008 6:38:14 AM PDT by kidd
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To: kidd

I used to be a nuke skeptic myself....back in the 1970s my power company had a nuke that got cracked rods and had to be shut down....this made my electric bill go way up....I started changing my mind when I saw how reliable the Navy’s nuke ships have become....I’m more open to nuke power now.....BUT....in the long run I still like hydro-electric best....it’s renewable, we know how to do it and we get beautiful lakes to boot.


2 posted on 08/01/2008 6:51:47 AM PDT by STONEWALLS
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To: STONEWALLS
Personally I agree with you.. but all the environmentalist up here in the Pacific Northwest where we have alot of dams complain about killing the fish.

Hydro, Nuclear power, Solar Power, Wind power.. all are needed and welcomed to me

3 posted on 08/01/2008 6:54:36 AM PDT by Kitanis (Kitanis,)
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To: Kitanis

Who is capable of building a Nuclear Power plant in the USA? Most of the facilities have been closed.


4 posted on 08/01/2008 7:48:17 AM PDT by chas1776
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To: chas1776

same outfit that build Navy PWRs..Westinghouse.
GE used to have a nuclear power reactor division - I used to work there. Don’t know if it survived ‘Neutron Jack’ though...


5 posted on 08/01/2008 8:07:43 AM PDT by rahbert
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To: rahbert
GE Nuclear is headquartered in Wilmington NC. Westinghouse Nucleur is now owned by a Japanese company.
6 posted on 08/01/2008 10:55:57 AM PDT by sleepwalker
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To: chas1776

Westinghouse, or some other outfit can build it.. but.. the regulations, environmentalists and other factors will keep the plants from being built..

Under the Clinton Administration.. he shut down a process that was going to be GIVEN to any company in the nuclear buisness who wanted it a technology that can recycle 90% of the nuclear waste from a reactor to a usable fuel... but he shut it down.

But if a national policy to increase building of reactors came about.. Some corporation will try to get in on it..


7 posted on 08/03/2008 12:46:41 AM PDT by Kitanis (Kitanis,)
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