German nuclear companies halt environmental payments Berlin (AFP) April 9, 2011 Four energy companies that run German nuclear plants said Saturday they have stopped payments to an environment fund after the government went back on its decision to keep the plants open for longer. EON, RWE and Vattenfall told AFP they stopped payment, starting this month, to the fund created in January as compensation for the government's decision last year to prolong the life of 17 nuclear plants by more than a decade, until the mid-2030s. According to Der Spiegel, energy firm EnBW has also stopped payment. The government reversed its decision after the Japan nuclear accident last month, imposing a three-month moratorium on the extension plans, and closing the seven oldest nuclear plants. "We have decided to stop paying," at least for the duration of the government moratorium, EON spokesman Josef Nelles told AFP. The four companies together were supposed to contribute 300 million euros (about $430 million dollars) to the fund in 2011, he said. "We will stop paying; this will start with the April contribution," added a spokeswoman for Vattenfall Europe, a subsidiary of the Swedish group by the same name. "The very existence (of the fund) was conditioned on the prolongation of the life of the plants. As this prolongation was suspended, we are also suspending our payments. We will not pay until this issue has been clarified." According to RWE spokesman Martin Pack, it was "contradictory" to expect the companies to continue making payments to a fund whose existence was preconditioned on extending the life of the nuclear plants. RWE has filed a legal challenge to the government's order to shut its plants. The government communications service said it took note of the companies' decision. "The government is currently examining the financial consequences of the moratorium," a spokeswoman said, adding that once clarity has been obtained, it "may lead to a modification of the accord with the energy groups."
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Toshiba 'could decommission Japan reactors in 10 years' Tokyo (AFP) April 9, 2011 Reactor maker Toshiba has told the government it could decommission four stricken units at Japan's crippled nuclear plant in around 10 years, a report said. The time frame is around two-thirds of that needed to dismantle the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in the United States after a 1979 incident in which part of a reactor core melted. The company, one of two that makes reactors in Jap ... read more |
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