Six Greenpeace activists continue their two-day occupation of a 100-meter-high construction crane at the heart of the reactor Olkiluoto 3 construction site in Finland. The activists have positioned themselves 80 meter up in the crane. The occupation is a protest against the 1500 safety problems that have been revealed during construction of the plant.
Olkiluoto, Finland —
On Monday, activists blockaded the entrance to the Olkiluoto nuclear plant construction site - briefly shutting down a project already massively over budget and plagued by more than one thousand reported breaches of safety standards.
Update (31 May):
The EU Energy Commissioner is prepared to meet with Greenpeace during
his visit to the nuclear reactor Olkiluoto 3 construction site tomorrow.
Update (1 June):
We met with the EU Energy Commission today, and he agreed there should
be more transparency and openness. The last three activists have
come down and are safe. (read more)
Police
arrested the activists in the blockade, but six others went into the
site and climbed 80 metres up the highest construction crane. They
stayed there over night, through the next day and through a second
chilly night with temperatures dropping into the low teens (Centigrade).
Today,
three of the activist (2 from the UK, 1 from France) made the long
climb down, leaving their supplies for the three Finnish activists
remaining on the crane. These last activists will try to hold out at
least until Friday when the EU Energy Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs, is
scheduled to visit.
“Safety rules are being bent to save time
and money, said Lauri Myllyvirta”, one of the activists occupying the
crane. “This is completely unacceptable for a nuclear power project. An
evaluation is urgently needed so that the myth of cheap and safe
nuclear energy is dispersed. Nuclear is not and cannot be a solution to
the threat of climate change”, he continued.
Police are keeping
journalists out of what is supposedly a "secure" area - preventing them
from taking photos of the activists on the crane. But two other
activists walked in and wandered around the construction site for
hours.
What's wrong at Olkiluto
It's massively behind schedule. Construction that was supposed to take four years will now take at least six.
It's
massively over budget. The original cost estimate was 2.5 billion
euros. Now it's expected to top 4 billion euros.
The
project was supposed to require no public subsidies. In reality it is
reliant on an export guarantee financed by French taxpayers and a
dirt-cheap loan from public banks.
The original
quality requirements weren't being met - so they were relaxed.
The consequences of a faulty reactor being put into service could be
disastrous.
And besides all that, nuclear power is a
nightmare of problems in general. There's no proven solution to
the piles of waste, encouraging more countries to use nuclear power
leads to nuclear weapons proliferation, the plants are ready made
terrorist targets... Nuclear is a costly and dangerous distraction from
real solutions to climate change like saving energy and renewable
energy. In Finland, for example, energy consumption by new
buildings can be cut by more than 70 percent.
That's why
construction should stop now - before any more money and time is
wasted. The responsible company, Teollisuuden Voima Oy, should
also publish all 1,000+ quality problems, and repay the state aid it
has received for the reactors.