France Invests €1B in Nuclear,
Saying Moratorium ‘Makes No Sense’
Posted 27 June 2011, by Staff, Yale Environment 360, e360.yale.edu
Despite recent safety concerns in the wake of the Fukushima crisis, French President Nicolas Sarkozy pledged to invest 1 billion euros in the next generation of nuclear power generation. Saying that a moratorium on nuclear production “makes no sense,” Sarkozy said France will focus investment on “fourth-generation” technology, as well as research into nuclear safety. France, which generates about 74 percent of its electricity from its 58 nuclear reactors, is also the world’s biggest net exporter of electricity from nuclear sources. “There is no alternative to nuclear energy today,” Sarkozy told reporters. The commitment comes as neighboring Germany moves to phase out all of its nuclear reactors by 2022. Sarkozy also pledged investment of another 1.3 billion euros in renewable energy production. Other nations are also lining up to build nuclear reactors despite the Fukushima crisis, including the United Arab Emirates, which recently signed a deal to build four reactors; Saudi Arabia, which announced it will build 16 reactors by 2030; and Turkey, which is building two new nuclear plants.
Germany’s Unlikely Champion Of a Radical Green Energy Path
The Fukushima disaster convinced Angela Merkel that nuclear power would never again be a viable option for her country, Christian Schwägerl reports. Now Merkel has embarked on an ambitious plan to power an industrial economy on renewable sources of energy. READ THE e360 REPORT