日本福島核電廠在311的巨災後,核能電廠的安全再次受到全球矚目.在國內也有不少的討論.然而在這一周之內,歐洲有兩個先進國家宣布即將全面放棄核能發電.
瑞士的計畫是繼續沿用現有的核能發電設備,年限到期除役後不再興建.同時也不會提前讓現在正在運轉的核電廠提前除役.
而周一發布廢核的是德國,預定在 2022 年將所有核能設備除役.
30.05.2011
German government plans total nuclear shutdown by 2022
As public opposition to nuclear power remains high, the German government has announced new plans to phase it out completely in the next 11 years. And the proposal may have a chance at support from the center-left.
Röttgen (right) said the proposed legislation would have 'no clause for revision'The German government on Monday announced plans to completely phase out nuclear energy by 2022, a 14-year acceleration of its previous plans.
Environment Minister Norbert Röttgen announced the proposal in the early hours of Monday, after a 12-hour marathon meeting between Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) and the junior coalition partners, the Free Democrats (FDP).
"It's definite: the latest end of the last three nuclear power plants is 2022," Röttgen told reporters. "There will be no clause for revision."
Last October, the German parliament voted in favor of a much slower nuclear shutdown, lasting until 2036. The government said that it was necessary to ensure the supply of Germany's energy needs.
After the nuclear disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan, public opposition to nuclear energy sharply increased. In March, Merkel announced a temporary shutdown of seven older nuclear plants.
The new timeline would keep those seven plants offline permanently. Six more would be shut down in 2021, and three would stay on until 2022 to ensure no disruption to power supply.
Ethics commission findings
The government's announcement came just before an ethics commission on nuclear energy presented its findings in Berlin on Monday.
The commission's chair, former environment minister and CDU politician Klaus Töpfer, said he found "not recommendable" a specific provision to keep one of the older plants on stand-by as a "cold reserve" until 2013 to help protect against blackouts.
He also said the shutdown could feasibly happen sooner, but that if the government's plans are successful, along with further development of renewable energies, then "they could be a big opportunity for the future capabilities of the German economy."
Opposition withholds support
The opposition Social Democrats and Greens remained skeptical of the plans, while not explicitly condemning or embracing them.
Green party chief Claudia Roth told the morning television show Morgenmagazin that there were "still many questions that are very, very open." She also said the government had not yet resolved the issue of a permanent storage facility for nuclear waste.
SPD leader Sigmar Gabriel specifically criticized the plans to keep an older reactor on stand-by, saying the idea had "little to do with technical feasibility."
Merkel's plans are similar to legislation passed in 2001 by the center-left government of Gerhard Schröder, which would have turned off the last nuclear power plant by 2022.
The last of Germany's nuclear power plants would be turned off in 2022
Public pressure remains high
In a statement released on Monday, environmental group Greenpeace called for a nuclear shutdown by 2015 and said Merkel's plans would expose "millions of people's lives to another 11 years of unnecessary danger."
Public pressure to get rid of nuclear power has risen
Greenpeace activists on Sunday unfurled a banner atop Berlin's Brandenburg Gate reading, "Every day of nuclear power is one too many." More than 100,000 people also held demonstrations across Germany on Saturday, calling for a quick end to nuclear energy.
Shares of the nuclear power companies E.On and RWE fell 2.2 and 2.4 percent respectively at the opening of trading on Monday.
Author: Andrew Bowen
Editor: Nicole Goebel
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,15117148,00.html
25 May 2011Last updated at 15:00 GMT The Swiss government has decided to phase out nuclear power, amid growing public hostility to the industry.
The government announced it would not replace the country's five ageing plants after they reached the end of their lifetimes between 2019 and 2034.
However, the authorities also said they would not decommission any prematurely.
Swiss activists rallied against nuclear power at the weekend. April's disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan has sparked debate in several countries.
"Existing nuclear power plants will be closed at the end of their operative life and not replaced by new nuclear power plants," the government said in a statement on Thursday.
Switzerland currently gets about 40% of its energy from nuclear power.
The Beznau 1 pressurised water reactor is the oldest in the world still in operation. It came on stream more than 40 years ago, in 1969.
The other four Swiss reactors all date from 1984 or earlier.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13549985
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