Wisconsin’s law prevents new nuclear reactors
Raging grannies highlight nuclear issues RootsWire December 2, 2009 by Uppity Wisconsin Repeal of Wisconsin’s restrictions on new nuclear power reactors is “a gift to the dying nuclear industry that Wisconsin residents can’t afford,” a Carbon Free Nuclear Free coalition of 13 environmental, public interest and consumer groups — with an assist from the Raging Grannies — said Tuesday.
At a holiday-themed State Capitol news conference, members of the coalition asked state lawmakers to “be nice, not naughty” by defeating the repeal, Assembly Bill 516, and supporting a state energy policy that would replace coal and nuclear power with renewable energy sources by 2050. The Raging Grannies, a group of women activists old enough to be grandmothers, did some caroling with their own environmental lyrics to well-known tunes and helped draw three TV cameras to the Rotunda. (WKOW-TV story and video here.)
The coalition says that cost, safety, radioactive waste and environmental issues make nuclear power too expensive and too dangerous when renewable energy alternatives are now technically feasible and available. “Clean renewables and energy efficiency are the gifts that really keep on giving — clean air, clean water, affordable electricity and reduced carbon emissions,” said Jennifer Nordstrom, national coordinator of the Carbon Free Nuclear Free campaign.
Wisconsin’s nuclear plant law is one of the most sensible laws on the books,” Charlie Higley, executive director of the Citizens Utility Board, said. The law requires that, before any new nuclear power plant is built in Wisconsin, a federally-licensed nuclear waste disposal site be operating, and that the cost of building, operating, and decommissioning the nuclear plant and disposing of the nuclear waste is economically advantageous to ratepayers. “Cost is a major concern,” Higley said, “and removing this protection would be a mistake.” Dr. Jeffrey Patterson, national president of Physicians for Social Responsibility, said that health, safety and the potential for nuclear weapons proliferation all make nuclear power a bad idea. “With safer alternatives now readily available, this is not the time to try to revive the nuclear industry,” he said. ….http://rootswire.org/content/raging-grannies-highlight-nuclear-issues
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