Energy News  
CIVIL NUCLEAR
Britain sinks tidal scheme, names eight future nuclear sites

by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Oct 18, 2010
The British government confirmed on Monday it will drop plans for a multi-billion-pound tidal energy project, as it identified eight sites suitable for building new nuclear power stations.

An official study said the proposed 10-mile (16-kilometre) barrage stretching across the Severn river, which was to generate energy using tidal power, could cost more than 34 billion pounds (54 billion dollars, 38.9 billion euros).

It described the project as "high risk in comparison to other ways of generating low-carbon electricity", although it said the proposal could be reconsidered in the future.

"Other low carbon options represent a better deal for taxpayers and consumers," said the energy minister, Chris Huhne.

The barrage would have stretched between Weston-Super-Mare in southwest England and the Welsh capital Cardiff.

But the report said the barrage was unlikely to attract adequate investment from the private sector and would rely heavily on public investment.

The project has been scrapped as Britain's finance minister George Osborne prepares to announce billions of pounds in public spending cuts on Wednesday in order to reduce the country's huge deficit.

The decision to scrap the project was welcomed by environmental campaigners. Martin Harper of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds said the barrage would have "trashed" local wildlife sites.

It would have destroyed "huge areas of estuary marsh and mudflats used by 69,000 birds each winter and block the migration routes of countless fish," Harper added.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government also cleared the way for new nuclear power plants to be built at eight sites in England and Wales -- three fewer than the 11 proposed by the previous Labour government.

The coalition had already said it would give the go-ahead to companies that want to build new nuclear plants, provided no public subsidy is required, despite Liberal Democrat opposition to new nuclear power stations before the party was in power.

But environmental campaigners Friends of the Earth slammed the announcement, describing it as a "reckless" disregard for the need to tackle climate change.

"Nuclear power is not the solution to tackling climate change -- it would leave us saddled with toxic waste for centuries to come," said campaigner Simon Bullock.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


CIVIL NUCLEAR
Russian Arctic's 'nuclear dump' gets a facelift
Murmansk, Russia (AFP) Oct 17, 2010
An electronic sign along a busy street posts the outside temperature, the wind strength - and the radioactivity level. Welcome to Russia's Kola Peninsula, a region that still bears the scars of its dubious past as the Soviet Union's "nuclear dump". When the USSR imploded, the northwestern Russian peninsula was left with ageing nuclear submarines and spent nuclear fuel abandoned in not a ... read more







CIVIL NUCLEAR
NASA Partnership Sends Earth Science Data To Africa

SMOS Water Mission Winning Battle With Interference

NASA Loosens GRIP On Atlantic Hurricane Season

'A-Train' Satellites Search For 770 Million Tons Of Dust In The Air

CIVIL NUCLEAR
NKorea Jamming Device A New Security Threat

KORE Telematics Introduces Location-Based Service Offering

Trimble Releases Next Gen Of TerraSync GPS Data Collection Software

EU's Galileo satnav system over budget, late: report

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Brazil mulls land auction to beat logging

Footage shows land clearing threatens Indonesia tigers: WWF

Litter collected, trees planted for global climate campaign

Deforestation examined in U.N. report

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Supporting The Advancement Of DoD's Net Zero Energy Initiative

Sunoco To Supply NASCAR With Ethanol-Blended Race Fuel

Rentech's Synthetic RenDiesel Fuels Audi A3 TDI

Farm And Food Industry Groups Oppose EPA Decision On Corn-Based Ethanol

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Carmanah And Trojan Battery Enter Into Strategic Partnership

GM To Install Solar-Powered EV Charging Stations

DuPont Introduces New Kapton Films For Flexible And Thin Film PV Apps

OPEL Solar Launches New Mk-IX High Concentration PV Solar Panel Technology

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Wind power to grow massively until 2030

China's wind power capacity to increase five-fold by 2020

Google in major bid for Eastern US wind power

Findings About Wind Farms Could Expand Their Use

CIVIL NUCLEAR
China mine death toll hits 31 as anger rises over rescue

Hope fades for trapped miners in China after 26 killed

China mine death toll hits 31 as anger rises over rescue

At least 30 Chinese coal miners trapped: state media

CIVIL NUCLEAR
China VP promoted as party pledges political reform

Xinhua: Nobel committee blind to state of China human rights

Chinese Nobel laureate's wife slams 'illegal house arrest'

Former Chinese communist officials in blunt reform call


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement