Brussels / Prague, 22 May 2008 - Friends of the Earth Europe and Greenpeace, the only environmental
organisations represented in the European Nuclear Energy Forum, have sent a
letter [1] to European Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs to express their
concern about the industry biased Forum. The two organisations have asked the
Commissioner to call for the withdrawal of the working group reports on 'Risks'
and 'Opportunities', which they deem unsatisfactory, and to counteract the
Forum's industry bias by insisting on balanced civil society participation.
Patricia
Lorenz, nuclear campaigner for Friends of the Earth Europe said: "The two
environmental organisations convey the concerns about nuclear energy that are
shared by the majority of European citizens [2] [3]. I made our opinion clear at the meetings. However,
the final report does not reflect the actual discussion we had in our working
group. Therefore we asked Commissioner Piebalgs to significantly alter the
process and content of the Forum to respect its mandate or otherwise to
dismantle it."
Mrs Lorenz represents Friends of the Earth
Europe as a member of the working group on "the Risks of Nuclear
Energy", where the harmonisation of safety standards in the EU is
discussed. Although the application of "best available technology" is
the only responsible way forward, the working group report is calling for the
implementation of "WENRA reactor safety levels 2008" [4]. In addition
to this, the difficulty in finding real solutions for nuclear waste is being
downplayed and called "a political more than a technical problem".
"The EU
needs an honest and balanced discussion on nuclear safety levels, waste and
non-proliferation. However, these crucial issues were not properly addressed in
the working group. Instead, the nuclear industry and Commission representatives
recycle their old mantra that these issues are mainly about influencing public
opinion," added Mrs Lorenz.
The European Nuclear Energy Forum (ENEF) was
founded in November 2007 by the European Council and Commission with a mandate
to be an 'open and structured discussion among all key actors' about the
opportunities and risks of nuclear power. The European Commission has indicated
that it has high expectations of the outcomes of the ENEF discussions, and that
it will seriously consider ENEF recommendations for future European nuclear
policy.
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For more information, please contact:
Patricia Lorenz, Friends of the Earth Europe,
+43 676 446 4254, patricia.lorenz@foeeurope.org
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