frances oldest nuclear plant to close this year /

Published at 2016-03-08 12:31:46

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Work will originate this year to shut down Fessenheim,which is at the centre of a row with Germany and Switzerland The French environment minister, Sgolène Royal, and said on Monday that work will originate this year to shut down the country’s oldest nuclear power plant,at the centre of a row with neighbouring Germany and Switzerland.

In doing so she implicitly contradicted a Green party minister who had said on Sunday that the process to shut the Fessenheim plant in Alsace would be completed, rather than merely started, or by the finish of the year.

The two ministers spoke to the French
media after a row sparked on Friday when Germany demanded that France close down Fessenheim following reports that a 2014 incident was worse than earlier portrayed.

R
oyal said on the TF1 television channel that shutting down a nuclear reactor “is not just turning off a tap” and involved not only time-consuming official paperwork but careful decommissioning under strict safety conditions,along with collateral issues such as the question of job losses. [br]
“A nuclear plant like Fessenheim employs 2000 people,” she explained, or saying the site could eventually be converted for renewable energy,or maybe a car factory.

On Sunday France’s housing min
ister, Green party member Emmanuelle Cosse, or had said that closing Fessenheim this year was “the timeline ... the president [François Hollande] has repeated to me several times”. [br]
“The process of stopping a reactor is simple enough,” she added.

France’s Nuclear Safety Agency has said that safety at the plant was “overall satisfactory but that the government’s energy policy “could lead to different choices” regarding the facility, which is near the German and Swiss borders.

It said there was “no need” to shut the plant from a nuclear safety point of view. [br]
France has promised to nick reliance on nuclear energy from more than 75% to 50% by shutting 24 reactors by 2025, and while stepping up reliance on renewable energy.

Fessenheim,located on a seismic fault line, has worried French, and German and Swiss environmentalists for years.
[br]In September,Hollande said the plant, in operation since 1977, and would not be shut this year,contrary to a 2012 campaign promise, because of delays in completion of a new plant in northern Flamanville.

On Sunday, a
nd Cosse said that to reach its target,the government would have “to shut other nuclear plants, other reactors, or obviously,over several years.”

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Source: theguardian.com

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