Irish greens fight UK nuclear plan in court Irelands National - TopicsExpress



          

Irish greens fight UK nuclear plan in court Irelands National Trust challenges go-ahead to build £14bn Somerset power station One of Irelands leading environmental groups is taking legal action against the British government, claiming that it has failed to consult the Irish people on its next generation of nuclear power stations, which it says could have a big impact on Irish citizens lives if there are leaks or accidents. The government has given approval for the £14bn Hinkley Point C plant, to be built by the French energy company EDF, which operates eight of Britains existing nuclear power stations. The new plant will produce around 7% of the UKs electricity. An Taisce, Irelands equivalent of the National Trust, will go to the high court in London in December to seek a judicial review challenging the legality of the decision by Ed Davey, the energy secretary, to grant permission to build the plant, which will be 150 miles from the Irish coast. The group is questioning whether the development complies with both the EUs Environmental Impact Assessment directive and the UKs own regulations on trans-boundary impacts and consultation. A spokesman for An Taisce denied that the move was a PR stunt that had little chance of success, pointing out that, as a charity, it had a duty to think hard before taking legal action. Despite the nuclear power plant being nearer to the coast of Ireland than it is to Leeds, the UK decided not to consult with the Irish public about the decision before it granted consent in March, An Taisce said in a statement. The first time many Irish people learned about the nuclear power plant proposal was when the decision was announced. Greenpeace has launched a separate legal challenge on the grounds that the government has not said where it will deposit the plantsnuclear waste. In February, Cumbria county council withdrew from the process to find a long-term storage site for the UKs spent nuclear fuel, leaving the government without a location for the new waste. The United Nations is also taking a close interest in the plants development in response to concerns raised by green parties in several European countries which complain that the UK has failed to consult adequately. A UN committee will examine whether the plant poses environmental threats that fail to respect national borders. In addition, the European commission must decide whether the UK is allowed to offer nuclear power consortiums an agreed strike price for their electricity, which critics say equates to a subsidy and is anti-competitive. It is understood that the UK will buy electricity from Hinkley C at £93 per megawatt-hour – double the current wholesale price. Hinkley Point is seen as a test case that will set a precedent for other EU states, such as Poland and the Czech Republic, which are keen to expand their nuclear power programmes. After recent announcements on energy price rises, the government is desperate to press on with nuclear plant construction as it seeks to diversify the UKs power supplies. The chancellor, George Osborne, was in China last week wooing power companies to take stakes in the UKs new nuclear plants. Success in obtaining a judicial review could delay construction of Hinkley and scare off investors. The Department of Energy has said it is not expecting any delay to the project and insists that the plants construction has taken full account of applicable EU and other international law. Irish governments have in the past asked London to close the nuclear reprocessing plant at Sellafield in Cumbria over concerns about pollution of the Irish Sea and fears that an accident could harm Irelands environment severely. A request by Dublin at a UN tribunal for the plants closure was rejected. An Taisce admitted that it saw the judicial review as being about more than Hinkley Point C. The charity said the courts decision was important not only in respect of this nuclear power plant, but also [for] the manner in which other decisions will be treated, including the nuclear plant proposed for Anglesey, which is even closer to Ireland and in an area prone to earthquakes. News of potential legal action will add to concerns about costs and delays affecting the rollout of the UKs nuclear programme. Last week the National Audit Office published a rexport that found there had been significant delay and cost escalation to 12 of the 14 large projects at Sellafield. The schedules of seven projects in the planning phase had been put back 57 months and costs had risen by £601m since the projects had started, the NAO found.
Posted on: Tue, 22 Oct 2013 13:27:04 +0000

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