Chile and Uruguay and another fifteen countries have officially presented plans to the International Atomic Energy Agency for the construction of nuclear plants, revealed AIEA following a four-day meeting on the issue in Vienna.
A hundred delegates from over fifty countries participated in the seminar which shows “the growing acceptance in many countries of nuclear energy as a stable and clean source of energy”, said AIEA Friday at the end of the seminar.
The agency adds that the nuclear energy resource “can contribute to tone down the impact of climate change” triggered by the CO2 emissions from other energy sources.
Other countries in the list of applicants mostly developing include Poland, Kuwait, Jordan, Morocco, Tunis, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Thailand and Vietnam.
During the seminar participants discussed issues related to selecting nuclear plants’ sites, legal framework, security measures and staff training.
According to AIEA the forum signalled a change in direction following forty years of resistance when not hostility to everything nuclear particularly from western countries and environmentalists.
Both Chile and Uruguay have experienced serious power shortages in recent years since the backbone of their generation is hydroelectric and climate change or exhaustion of such an option, have had a negative impact.
Furthermore Chile in the nineties became natural gas dependent from Argentina and in spite of existing contracts Buenos Aires privileged domestic demand.
Both countries have experimental reactors for scientific research.
In the mid eighties Canada offered Uruguay know-how, training and funds to develop nuclear energy but the initiative did not have sufficient support in Parliament, voted down by the current ruling coalition then in the opposition, but now sponsors of such an energy option.
Canada wanted to have stable Uruguay as a regional showcase for its Cantu natural uranium fuelled reactors.
In the Mercosur group Argentina and Brazil have nuclear plants which generate between 8% and 2% of their domestic power. Both have ambitious plans to expand such capacity.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesgood for chile and uruguay. In Argentina we only have two plants, a third one is expected to start woking in three months. Government may also build a two more
Feb 12th, 2011 - 12:48 am 0Government may also build a two more haha pobre tipo! Government should give people food so they can't die of malnutrition! Solamente un cobarde puede apoyar al gobierno de Cristina de Kirchner.
Feb 12th, 2011 - 12:53 am 0And just what is the plan for dealing with the deadly waste produced from these facilities? I guess that can is being kicked down the road for some other generation to solve. Very short sighted thinking.
Feb 12th, 2011 - 05:20 pm 0Commenting for this story is now closed.
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