Joint letter – ICC reform and expansion risks diverting ETS Revenues from real climate action
In light of the European Commission’s ongoing considerations to amend the ETS State Aid Guidelines, revising the rules for Indirec...
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Publish date: January 29, 2009
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"There will be no new nuclear plants," Industry Minister Miguel Sebastian told journalists when asked to comment on Iberdrola’s joint venture with Scottish and Southern Energy to build nuclear power stations, Reuters reported.
Sebastian noted that Spanish energy consumption per head was 20 percent above the European average. "Saving 20 percent would be the equivalent of doubling the number of nuclear power plants. It seems easier and cheaper to me," he said. "Furthermore, it (saving) is immediate, whereas nuclear plants take 15 years. There is no controversy, no waste or security problems, nothing," he added. Spain’s government has said it may extend the working lives of the country’s eight ageing nuclear power plants, but has urged operators to invest more in safety after a controversial radioactive leak was discovered last year.
Operating permits for seven of the plants are up for renewal between this year and 2011, or well within the mandate of Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s Socialist government. Spain’s nuclear power plants supply about 7,300 megawatts when all are working normally, or enough to meet about 20 percent of demand for power. Today Spain operates 8 nuclear reactors.
In light of the European Commission’s ongoing considerations to amend the ETS State Aid Guidelines, revising the rules for Indirec...
On Wednesday 28 April 2026, Bellona Europa hosted a high-level webinar titled “From compensation to decarbonisation: rethinking I...
As discussions on the next framework begin, Bellona has joined civil society and industry partners in calling for a post-2030 framework that is ambit...
Bellona Europa, alongside the European Environmental Bureau (EEB), Carbon Market Watch, and ECOS, has submitted a joint statement to the EU Carbon Re...
The risks of a methodology that disregards its policy signals and fails to reward investments into clean technologies are too large to ignore. The EU cannot tell the market that continuing fossil-based steel will be rewarded.
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