Crise no fornecimento de combustível russo pode fazer Alemanha mudar sua política anti-atômica (em inglês)
2007-01-10
The continuing disruption of Russian oil supplies to Europe has prompted
Germany's Chancellor, Angela Merkel, to openly question her country's
commitment to stop using nuclear power by the early 2020s.
In a television interview yesterday, Mrs Merkel said the stoppages served as
a warning about becoming too dependent on single energy sources. Russia
supplies Germany with 20 per cent of its oil. "We have to save energy, we
have to develop sources of renewable energy," she said. "And of course we
have to consider what consequences there will be if we shut down nuclear
power stations."
It was the first time the conservative Chancellor has questioned Germany's
pledge to phase out the country's 17 nuclear power plants since she became
head of a coalition government of conservative Christian Democrats and
Social Democrats in 2005.
The anti-nuclear policy was agreed by former chancellor Gerhard Schröder's
coalition of Social Democrats and Greens in 2000 and has been a key element
in Germany's drive to develop alternative energy sources. The policy has
been dismissed by the nuclear lobby and conservatives as "pure ideology".
Yesterday Social Democrats tried to quash any notion that Germany plans to
end its anti-nuclear stance. Ulrich Kleiber, the SPD deputy parliamentary
leader, said: "Somebody who uses oil supply bottlenecks as an argument in
favour of nuclear energy isn't capable of grasping the issue."
(By Tony Paterson, The Independent, 10/01/2007)
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article2140262.ece