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Tuesday 8 May 2007

Info Post
From Der Spiegel:
The fact that the German government renounced nuclear energy in 2000 and pledged to take its last plant off the grid by 2020 might lead you to think that it would scale back its nuclear research programs. What, after all, is the point in spending money on developing a technology which is on its way out? However, the current administration seems reluctant to give up nuclear quite yet -- at least not totally.

German Research Minister Annette Schavan raised eyebrows this week with her announcement to DER SPIEGEL that she would increase research spending between 2008 and 2011 by up to €40 million. Most of the money has been earmarked for young researchers working on nuclear waste storage and nuclear security issues.

[...]

Meanwhile, over at the Green Party -- which governed together with the Chancellor Gerhard Schröder when parliament approved the phaseout -- party boss Reinhard Bütikofer said he viewed the plan as an open provocation. "Each euro which is spent on dead-end nuclear technologies is an irresponsible waste of money," he said, arguing that research into renewable energies should be expanded instead.
German Prime Minister Angela Merkel has been playing an interesting game on nuclear energy ever since her party came to power. She's an open supporter of nuclear energy, but doesn't have a lot of wiggle room because she's stuck in a coalition government with Socialists who are committed to maintaining the scheduled nuclear phase-out.

But while she doesn't have a lot of wiggle room, she does have some, and prudent spending like the program outlined above is just one example. As we've noted before, the second the coalition dissolves and Merkel's party is able to take power in its own right, the nuclear phase-out will be history.

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