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Politics : International Consortiums -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (24)8/16/2005 1:31:58 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 49
 
Nein Lives
Germany says auf Wiedersehen to nuclear power, guten Tag to renewables
Michael Levitin, Grist Magazine
For a people as addicted to order as the Germans, this country is floundering in uncertainty. The economy has sputtered to a post-World War II record 5 million unemployed. Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's exhausted left-of-center coalition is close to coughing up the fall elections to conservatives. And soccer fans aren't even sure if their team can defend the country's pride when it hosts the World Cup next summer.

About the only thing most Germans are sure about right now is the dire need to abandon nuclear power, evidenced by the "Switch Off and Rethink" mantra stamped on billboards and in newspapers, buzzing from television sets, and crossing people's lips throughout the nation. And tough policies enacted by the red-green government have laid an incredible groundwork for that move -- not just for Europe's wealthiest nation to become nuclear-free in the next 15 years, but for renewable-energy suppliers to double their output to provide one-fifth of Germany's power within the same period. By mid-century, the country expects to derive more than half of its power from renewables.
(12 August 2005)

energybulletin.net



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (24)8/16/2005 10:59:07 AM
From: one_less  Respond to of 49
 
If there were an international consortium, the network of nuclear power stations could be strategically developed to the greatest global benefit. Lacking such a consortium development will always be a militaristic strategy to gain global dominance in one form or another.