Germany’s Greens protest re-opening of nuclear waste dump
Environmentalists and member of the Green party responded with sharp criticism to reports that the German Environment Ministry would reopen talks on the future of the Gorleben nuclear waste dump.
Greenpeace activists projected the phrase “Gorleben: unsuitable for nuclear waste, Mr. Roettgen” onto a tower at the disused salt mine in the early hours of Sunday. Green party leaders sharply crtiticized the decision to resume talks to make the Gorleben salt mines a permanent nuclear waste dump.
A ministry spokeswoman declined to comment on the report and said Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen would be holding a press conference on the topic of Gorleben on Monday.
Discussion on using the underground salt mines in Gorleben in Lower Saxony have been on hold since 2000. According to a report in news magazine Spiegel, exploration of the salt dome could take eight to ten years. During the exploration, the old mining law would apply – not the nuclear law, which requires a broader civic participation in the decision-making process.
Sharp criticism
The Green Party was outraged at the decision and accused the environment minister of having the interests of the nuclear industry closer to his heart than the safety and health of people.
“He’s following in the tradition of the previous administration, attempting to trick the people of Gorleben with tricks and targeted manipulation,” said Renate Kuenast, the leader of the Greens in the German parliament.
In the European Parliament, Green leader Rebecca Harms, a native of the Gorleben region, pledged to fight the minister’s decision. “We will use all our powers to block this cowardly decision,” said Harms.
Hot topic
Storage of nuclear waste is a controversial topic in Germany, where there is no definitive agreement on what constitutes a suitable disposal site. Convoys transporting waste to interim storage sites are regularly the targets of protesters.
Gorleben has been used as temporary repository for nuclear waste since 1983. The site became even more controversial after it was revealed that the German government under former Chancellor Helmut Kohl had suppressed scientific evidence against using the underground salt cavern for permanent nuclear waste storage.
Nuclear plant closure
Germany covers about a quarter of its energy consumption with nuclear power.
A phase-out of nuclear power has been planned for 2021, and eight of the country’s 17 reactors are currently due to cease output in 2018. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right government has said it wants to extend the lives of national nuclear plants, but rifts inside her cabinet over the merit of rival renewable energies have delayed steps to prevent the closure.
(Source: smh/AFP/AP/dpa)
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