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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Greenpeace slams 'alarming gaps' in EU nuclear stress tests
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Oct 28, 2011


Greenpeace on Friday slammed "alarming gaps" in EU-wide safety checks on nuclear plants, notably for failing to address "the unthinkable" after Fukushima.

Seeking to ease public concerns following the March earthquake and tsunami that triggered Japan's nuclear crisis, the European Commission and national atomic operators struck a deal to launch stress tests on the European Union's 143 reactors in June.

But environmental watchdog Greenpeace said in a statement that early analysis of reports issued so far "reveals alarming gaps in results."

"Multiple-reactor failure that struck at Fukushima was supposed to be examined, but is missing in results. The threat of airplane crashes were also a promised part of tests, but are largely ignored."

In countries where it said national regulators were more independent from operators, such as in France, "tests were more thorough".

But it said Britain, the Czech Republic and Sweden "have failed to publish substantial information", comparing a seven-page Czech report on its six reactors to Slovenia's 177 pages on its single reactor.

In a response, the EU executive retorted that Greenpeace's assesment was based on provisional results that national nuclear operators had been asked to provide by August 15.

"It is by 31 October that nuclear operators have to complete all their investigations and send the final results of the stress tests to the regulators," EU energy commissioner Guenther Oettinger said in a statement.

"We are still in the process of doing the stress tests. By the end of the year, the regulatory authorities have to submit their final reports," he added.

"If these final reports contain deficiencies then I will not hesitate to intervene and ask for improvements."

Greenpeace nuclear policy advisor Jan Havercamp said reports seen by the group ignored town and city evacuation plans and failed to consider reactor age, as well as glossing over the risk of airplane crashes or multiple reactor collapse.

"Fukushima taught us to think the unthinkable," he said.

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German artist to buy defunct power plant
Berlin (AFP) Oct 30, 2011 - German contemporary artist Anselm Kiefer said Sunday he planned to snap up a mothballed atomic power plant in the belief that Germany's nuclear history should be preserved for future generations.

In an interview with news weekly Der Spiegel, Kiefer said he was buying "at least the cooling tower" at the Muelheim-Kaerlich facility near the French border.

He enthused: "This nuclear power plant is so fantastic. Wonderful. It's my Pantheon. I am fascinated by nuclear plants."

Kiefer did not mention how much he would pay and was also mum on his plans for his new purchase. "Everything is still open. Germans dispose of their history too easily and too quickly," he said.

The same was true of other aspects of German history, including the Berlin Wall, the artist said.

If he had his way, Communist East Germany would have been preserved as a museum, he quipped.

"I think we should do something with these nuclear plants ... they have something mythical about them," he added.

He said he had visited the site, mothballed in 1988 after just 13 months in operation, with the head of energy company RWE.

"Then I wrote to him. He understood immediately and I am now certain to get at least the cooling tower. That's not radioactive," said Kiefer.

"Now I am considering what to do with it. But whatever happens, I'm not going to paint cows and clouds on it," the artist promised.

In the wake of the nuclear catastrophe in Fukushima, Japan, the German government has decided to shut down all of its reactors by the end of 2022.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
TEPCO asks for $13bn aid for Fukushima: report
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 28, 2011
Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) on Friday asked Japan's government for a reported $13 billion to help pay compensation for the Fukushima nuclear disaster. "Today, we, Tokyo Electric Power Company, applied to the Nuclear Damage Compensation Facilitation Corporation for financial support," TEPCO said in a statement. The company did not reveal the amount of cash it asked for and said t ... read more


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