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In focus with Sir Bernard Ingham
Up to our ears in debt but value for money still has no appeal
Well, now we know how much Chancellor George Osborne is committed to value for money in energy policy. Not much. True, in his autumn statement he halved subsidies for solar panels but only because their cost has come down substantially. He also brought in £250m energy cost relief for intensive energy users who are supposed to be a prime target for reducing carbon emissions, thereby complicating energy policy still further while usefully helping to retain heavy industry in the UK.
Italy and the US have signed two agreements which the US said could lead to construction of new nuclear power plants and improved cooperation on advanced nuclear energy systems and fuel cycle technologies in both countries.
Nuclear energy safety is one of the top issues this year for non-governmental organisations (NGOs) campaigning around the world, SIGWatch, a consulting group based in Germany has said.
Japan’s new governing party, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), is no longer against nuclear energy and wants the industry to grow and become a successful exporter, a member of parliament has said.
Russia’s prime minister Vladimir Putin has approved the construction of a new twin-unit nuclear power plant in the Kaliningrad region, a Russian exclave that lies between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic Sea.
The outgoing head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) told the UN Security Council today that his agency’s infrastructure was “dilapidated” and lacked state of the art technology to ensure nuclear verification and security.
The European uranium enrichment company, Urenco, said today that it had received formal approval from the European Investment Bank (EIB) for a 350 million euro (EUR) (about 514 million US dollars) debt facility.
The US-Russia ‘megatons to megawatts’ programme is now 75 percent complete after the equivalent of 15,000 nuclear warheads were eliminated, the US enrichment corporation USEC said yesterday.
India’s prime minister today urged the world to think more about how international cooperation can “multiply the benefits of nuclear energy” for mankind.