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The Radioactive Energy Plan

Germans were once dead set against nuclear energy. But high energy costs are forcing them to rethink.

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Target of Debate: One of the many German plants that could be rescued from a shutdown
 

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The latest casualty of the rising cost of energy is one of Europe's most persistent political taboos: Germany's striking aversion to nuclear power. Nowhere else did the opposition to atomic energy become as deeply embedded in the cultural and political DNA of a nation. Many citizens now in their 40s and 50s came of age protesting nuclear power in the 1970s and '80s. A generation of Green and Social Democrat (SPD) politicians built careers out of their total opposition to nukes—the Green party was antinuclear even before it became environmentalist. The movement reached its climax in 2001, when Parliament passed an "atomic-exit law" to shut down the country's then 19 reactors by approximately 2021. Two have already been decommissioned. As countries around the world began reinvesting in nuclear energy, thanks to growing worries over energy security and climate change, Germans held fast to the atomic-exit law and their quasi-religious belief in the evils of nukes.

But the energy business has changed dramatically since the Germans passed their law, and German attitudes are finally catching up. The world is now more worried about climate change than a repeat of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident. Growing fuel imports from an assertive Russia and an unstable Middle East have turned energy into a security issue. But what really got Germans to rethink was their pocketbooks. When the Bundestag passed the exit law, oil cost less than $20 a barrel—one sixth its cost in early August. Now that Germans are pinching euros to pay their surging electricity bills, more of them have decided it makes no sense to shut off the source of 25 percent of their power—the relic of a nuclear building boom launched after the first oil shock in 1973, amid energy worries strikingly similar to today's. In a recent poll, an unprecedented 54 percent of Germans say they want to keep the reactors up and running, up from 40 percent as recently as December. As a result, what had long seemed unlikely has started to happen: a fresh public debate over nukes.

In June, parliamentarians in Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic party published a proposal to drop the exit law and build more plants, promising to make cheap nuclear energy an issue for next year's national election. Even in the SPD, dissident voices are getting louder. Prominent figures like ex-chancellor Helmut Schmidt and former Economics minister Wolfgang Clement have called on their party to rethink their energy policy. "It's enormous," says Dieter Marx, director of Atomforum, Germany's nuclear operators association. "We've been completely surprised by the shift in opinion." At this year's annual meeting in Hamburg, he says, only 15 protesters showed up.

In addition to high energy prices, part of the reassessment can be traced to pressure from Germany's neighbors. Germany's virtually unilateral veto of carbon-free nukes was getting ever tougher to square with the country's self-styled role as a global environmental leader. At the G8 talks on energy security in Tokyo earlier this summer, Merkel was the odd person out, opposing a call on countries to use nuclear energy as one way of cutting emissions. France, which generates 80 percent of its electricity from nukes and has one of the lowest per capita emission rates of any developed country, has just announced construction of its 61st reactor—and doesn't see why it should be obliged to shift to expensive wind and solar power like Germany. In July, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called for the construction of eight new reactors in the United Kingdom over the next 15 years to help build what he calls "the post-oil economy."

Italy's Silvio Berlusconi has promised to reverse a phaseout similar to Germany's, just as Sweden suspended its phaseout in 2005. In line with a rapid change in Swedish public opinion, the government reasoned that avoiding emissions that cause climate change must come ahead of nuclear decommissioning. Even the International Energy Agency, of which Germany is a member, has called for a triple-pronged strategy to fight climate change: efficiency improvements, a switch to renewable energy and the construction of 1,300 new nuclear power plants worldwide.

If Germany—Europe's biggest consumer of energy—joins the shift toward nukes, it would make it far likelier that the EU can slow down, or even reverse, its growing dependence on Russia. But what makes the change in Germany so delicate to navigate is its own complex, internal, consensus-driven politics. The SPD, the junior partner in Merkel's coalition government, has steadfastly blocked any attempt to loosen the ban on new plants enacted when it was in power. Its veto power over any change to the phaseout law means it remains in place, though the power companies have used temporary shutdowns to extend the life of their oldest reactors until after the 2009 election—when they hope Merkel will head a more nuke-friendly coalition.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Carl Erik Magnusson @ 08/15/2008 12:14:06 PM

    In In Eurpoe, especially the northern Germanic world that missed part of the enlightenment of the scientific revolution, there prevails a non rational feature of romantic world view that can be almost religious. Recently, it was caracterized as "doomsday folklore" by the important German paper der Spiegel. One method used is to manipulate the language like in the famous book "1984": It is said that nuclear energy is an old technique. However, compared to combustion which is really an atomic energy technique breaking bonds between atoms, nuclear energy is modern. Looking at risks, it is realized by the European Union that particles from combustion cost some 300000 Europeans deaths every year. This is not a risk; it really happes every year. I don´t know the figure for the US, but could imagine it is of the same order.
    I recommend a look at "loss of life expectancy" to evaluate risks in life.
    We should minimize fossile fuels. We are smarter than hundreds of years ago!

  • Posted By: pinkpanther87413 @ 08/14/2008 11:19:54 PM

    Nuclear Germany, like Iran, one ,could get you killed, by those with hundreds, even if the world agrees, as with Iran, that they are entitled to have it! Don't ask what is true green, but anything with waste, some in the world would use as a weapon, or profit for dumping in the oceans, is not close to green.
    We don't WANT 50 more Nuke Plants Mr McCain, it's not green, except by the AGENCIES, you pay,, to put our lives into, just not to scientest. I hope Germany is still open to other tech for energy, than just nukes, or nukes at all. We need to become independent of oil, then Nuclear energy.
    There is an answer why you ask?
    We are smarter than we were 40 years ago
    We have far better tech than we did 40 years ago
    So why is everything the same, and done the same way?
    Economicaly,Spritualy,and Emotionaly?
    It's for you to answer in your owen heads and hearts.

  • Posted By: VARGEN-Rydebaeck @ 08/13/2008 3:13:46 PM

    Reading Your article gives me some hope that also the Swedish Coalition parties will reconsidder their thoughts. We cannot increase truckloads on our roads just to satisfy their GREEN attitudes of burning up our Swedish forrests in order to produce "biomasses for energiproduction" or truckfuel. The Centerparty in our country consists mainly of farmers and forrest owners, but no biomass is produced without electricity.
    The GREEN wave is heading in the wrong direction, thus our government will be forced by their voters to reconsidder the future improvment of nuclear energy in the same way as our GERMAN neighbors.
    Wolfgang Hennig - Rydebaeck - SWEDEN

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