No Nuclear in Africa!

Activists protest as government joins secretive talks

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Feature story - May 28, 2012
Greenpeace activists protested this morning outside a pro-nuclear conference in Sandton where South Africa’s Deputy President and the Minister of Energy were due to talk.

08:00: Greenpeace activists blockaded the entrance to the conference venue with hundreds of black nuclear bags and yellow nuclear drums. Five activists also chained themselves to entrance gates in an attempt to stop the exclusive pro-nuclear talks from going ahead.

10:30: Shortly after chaining themselves to the gates, agressive security guards beat the locks to break them and forecfully dragged activists off into their security office. They have since been released. Meanwhile as different activists offloaded nuclear bags to further block the entrance, security guards began flinging bags around, and started using them for a pillow fight with journalists and photographers. (Video below)

Shortly after it was announced inside the conference venue that the Minister of Energy would no longer be attending the conference, and her speech was read by a representative.
(Story continues below)

  • Photo gallery from the action this morning: click here.

 

Greenpeace is protesting because, although nuclear power is still being hotly debated and is far from being approved in South Africa, here our leaders are proceeding as if nuclear was a done deal. Rather than embracing a safe and sustainable future of abundant employment and reliable renewable energy, they are focusing on prohibitively expensive nuclear power, and jeopardising our future in the process.

Nuclear energy is very expensive and prone to construction delays, which mean even more costs for tax payers. In Finland, for example, project delays have resulted in costs ballooning by almost 100%, from EUR3.2billion to EUR6billion. Even France, one of the strongest proponents of nuclear energy, is no stranger to ballooning costs and long delays. A new reactor in Flamanville has been constantly plagued by construction issues and budget over-runs since the project began.

“Energy Minister Peters’ support to expand nuclear power in Africa is extremely irresponsible given the socio-economic challenges prevalent on the continent” said Greenpeace Africa climate and energy campaigner Ferrial Adam.

“As a continent we should be learning from what history has shown about nuclear power: it is a dirty and dangerous source of energy, and one that will always be vulnerable to the deadly combination of human errors, design failures, and natural disasters,” added Adam.

In South Africa, the nuclear process to date has been far from transparent. Key questions around the design, cost and safety of the proposed nuclear build are stilll unanswered. “The government’s dream of becoming a nuclear power will end up being a nuclear nightmare and should be stopped now before it’s too late” warned Adam.

“How can anyone decide to build new reactors while there is no strategy to deal with the radioactive waste they produce, the National Nuclear Regulator’s budget has been cut and NECSA is retrenching 200 skilled workers?”

In place of conferences seeking to promote outdated nuclear technology in Africa, we should be seeing talks focusing on how renewable energy can create energy security, empower local communities, and combat climate change.

What’s the Alternative to nuclear power?

Greenpeace’s Energy [R]evolution is a practical blueprint for how South Africa can meet its energy demands entirely by investing in reliable renewable energy and by increasing energy efficiency -- nuclear power is completely unnecessary. Going this route would avoid nuclear hazards and allow us to meet our greenhouse gas reduction targets. It would also improve our energy security, keep energy costs down, and generate hundreds of thousands of sustainable, quality jobs.

Twitter feed from protest

 

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