Dear Aysem

Thanks so much for this intervention. It is very helpful and very informative!

Anyone who knows my work knows that I stand hard and fast by the cross-party 
German decision to phase out nuclear energy and do not see nuclear as a 
sustainable option.That others used my intervention to interject their own 
views on nuclear is, of course, fine. But I strongly disagree with their 
opinions and arguments.

The only party against the decision to phase out nuclear in Germany's 
parliament is the far right AFD that is shunned by all of the other parties. 
And while Germany remains far too dependent on fossil fuels, Germany has done 
so much more than so many other countries to begin the process of shifting away 
from both nuclear and fossil fuels. Germany aims for climate neutrality by 2045 
and the new coalition government (Social Democrats, Greens, and Free Democrats) 
has moved up the phase-out date for coal to 2030. Germany has achieved about 
50% renewables in its electricity system (up from just 6% in 2000)  Now and 
especially after the events in the Ukraine, the will to push through on the 
energy transition is stronger than ever before.

Today there was an extraordinary parliamentary session because of the Ukraine 
crisis. One important aspect of the discussion was renewable energy. Germany 
has a cross-party consensus (except the AFD) on the need to phase out nuclear 
and speed up the transition to renewable energies. Today Germany announced it 
will move quickly on building two LNG terminals to diversify its gas imports. 
The switch to LNG fis to be temporary and will also be green hydrogen fuel 
ready. Contrary to what Aseem wrote in his Forbes commentary, Putin’s 
aggression is strengthening German and European resolve for a shift away from 
reliance on fossil fuels from Putin’s Russia and a rapid energy transition. 
Even the companies which own the nuclear power plants (there are only three 
left in operation) are uninterested in changing the phase out plan. It would be 
too conflictual and they have already made alternative investment plans. The 
plan to have 15 million electric cars on the road by 2030 and to speed up 
energy efficiency improvements in the building sector as well as in industrial 
sectors are other import aspects of the climate neutrality plan.  All signs are 
that climate action in Germany and Europe will remain a top political priority 
and one which will be used to drive for technological innovation, 
modernisation, and social well-being.  The speaker of the Free Democratic Party 
(a party that favours economic liberalism), Christian Lindner, to my surprise 
even called renewable energy the energy of peace today.

Not only was there a cross-party condemnation of Putin’s invasion, a major 
switch in German defense policy was announced, and parties that had in the past 
opposed weapons exports to countries at war (the Greens, a wing of the Social 
Democrats) agreed that when a war is unjustified and is a war which aims to 
attack principle European values of freedom and democracy, weapons exports will 
be permitted. Germany is also planning to beef up its defense forces 
recognising that if it does not, it will not be able to defend itself or its 
NATO allies against invasion or attack. The Left made an amazing announcement 
in the parliamentary session that they had been wrong on Putin.

On the scary side is that Putin has put his nuclear forces onto high alert and 
apparently a radioactive waste management site was hit although the last I read 
on this, there was no radioactive leakage. Radioactivity levels do appear to be 
higher around the Chernobyl nuclear site. The Russian war on the Ukraine  
strengthens the argument that nuclear energy comes with many security, 
environmental, and health concerns that are not given sufficient attention by 
nuclear supporters. In my eyes, it further supports the German decision to 
phase out nuclear (the last three plants will close at the end of 2022).

On the hopeful side  Ukrainian forces despite being totally out numbered by 
Russia are still holding on and defending their cities. There is growing 
support for them from free countries around the world. A major player is the 
very strong civil society which has developed there. They are brave souls.

Best, Miranda






Am 27.02.2022 um 11:42 schrieb Aysem Mert 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>:

Dear Miranda, dear all,

Apologies for the length of this email. I find the subject important.

The way nuclear energy is being introduced as a solution to climate change is 
painful to see for me. As a Chernobyl child, and as someone who has seen the 
effects of nuclear disasters in Japan (where I met Miranda for the first time 😀 
) and in other parts of the world, my interest in green politics has started 
with anti-nuclear activism in Turkey, where I am from. Nuclear energy has been 
proposed in Turkey as a solution to many concerns in the past, ranging from oil 
dependency to assumptions of ever-increasing demand. We have managed to debunk 
many of these arguments in the past. Only recently, and with explicit support 
from China and Russia, Erdogan has started the building of three nuclear 
reactors in Akkuyu, Mersin. (Financing is provided by Russian investors, with 
93% from a Rosatom<https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosatom> subsidiary, which 
will keep 51% of shares at all times.) Neither the site (earthquake zone), nor 
the choice of technology (GEN III+PWR) is sound. Critically, the uranium 
enrichment process will be super costly, Turkey has no uranium, and there is no 
waste management plan in place. It is not impossible to imagine that there are 
dreams of becoming a nuclear power in the back of some military minds. But 
speculation aside, nuclear energy is one of the most anti-democratic, 
centralised, expensive, top-down, and technocratic ways of producing energy.


Despite all evidence, some might still find it agreeable to use nuclear energy 
to transition into a fossil-free economy in other countries, of course. It may 
be imagined that in other countries nuclear energy production involves less 
risks, or costs. But even then, a pro-nuclear stance necessarily means taking 
some environmental AND security risks, and opting for one of the less diffused, 
less citizen empowering, more resource and technology dependent energy 
transition models.

I am not writing this email to change the minds of those who think this way... 
But I am concerned with the amount of money and "volunteers" the nuclear lobby  
brought to the business side of COP26. There were a number of selective 
statistics and problematic assumptions in their glossy brochures. When you were 
passing by, the volunteers would approach you and ask of you wanted to take a 
selfie with their cute teddy bear mascot as they repeated these statistics. 
Nowadays I also see more pro-nuclear arguments on climate news. Conservative 
parties in Sweden are rejoicing with the possibility of building more reactors.

Whether one is pro or against or undecided, this is a political and ethical 
decision, which we each base on our life experience and ideology. It is a 
hegemonic struggle between those who find the risks associated with nuclear 
energy acceptable and those who do not. What matters is that we can discuss it, 
we can keep the deliberative public space open, accessible to all citizens, 
especially those who are exposed to various risks involved, including but not 
only the experts.

When I read Miranda's email, and the following thread, I was  worried that we 
might be losing this deliberative space: obviously, it was just a 
misunderstanding and nobody was intentionally trying to misrepresent her.  But 
her concerns were somehow equated to a pro-nuclear position at some point in 
that thread. (She has already clarified her position, and certainly does not 
need my help with that.) My goal is only to highlight that nuclear energy is a 
highly contentious issue. Please do not assume that because someone is 
concerned about climate change and argue for energy transitions they are also 
pro-nuclear. For me and some other colleagues, it is a red line and we find 
nuclear energy production unjustifiable from an ecological, democratic, or 
ethical viewpoint. But it is OK to disagree on this issue and keep discussing 
it. That discursive space is very important and valuable. Universalising a 
pro-nuclear position for climate activists or scholars would be hegemonising 
this deliberative space that we need for democracy.

Best wishes,

Ayşem


----------------------
Ayşem Mert

(she/her/hers, Dr./Mx. – why do pronouns matter?)


Associate Professor of Environmental Politics
Department of Political Science, Stockholm University
Universitetsvägen 10 F, 114 18, Stockholm, Sweden
www.statsvet.su.se/mert<http://www.statsvet.su.se/mert>

@ayshemm



Latest Publications



Mert A. and D. Hine (2021) On Being the Right Size: Scale, Democracy and the 
Anthropocene in G. Dürbeck and P. Hüpkes (eds) Narratives of Scale in the 
Anthropocene: Imagining Human Responsibility in an Age of Scalar Complexity, 
Routledge, pp. 161-176.

Mert A. (2021) Challenges to Democracy in the Anthropocene in D. Chandler, F. 
Müller and D. Rothe (eds) International Relations in the Anthropocene: New 
Agendas, New Agencies and New Approaches, Palgrave Macmillan, Cham., pp. 291-309

Chan, S., et al. (2021) Climate Ambition and Sustainable Development for a New 
Decade: A Catalytic Framework. Global Policy, 12(3): 245-259.

Behagel, J.H. and Mert, A., (2021) ”The political nature of fantasy and 
political fantasies of nature,” Journal of Language and Politics, 20(1):79-94.


-------- Original message --------
From: "Schreurs, Miranda" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: 26/02/2022 20:21 (GMT+01:00)
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [gep-ed] The Ukraine invasion democracy and energy transitions

Hi Aseem, Hello al,

Thanks for your commentary. It is informative. But I don’t agree with all of 
your assessments. Working as co-chair of a committee dealing with high level 
radioactive waste management, I can not agree with you that nuclear energy is 
the path forward. It also takes much too long to build. European experience 
shows that countries that heavily invest in nuclear, are slow to build out 
renewables. They are also at risk of big supply problems if they become too 
heavily dependent on nuclear.

Germany will most certainly be expanding its renewable energy push. It is 
currently getting about 50% of its electricity from renewables (up from 6% in 
2000: actually in the first two months of 2022 it has been getting well over 
50%). With the Ukraine crisis, the expansion of renewables will be putting into 
fast speed. There are still many ways to enhance energy efficiency and energy 
savings. Plans are to be climate neutral by 2045 with 65% renewables by 2030.  
I think we might now get there as early as 2025 or 2027.

In response to a request from Peace Boat in Japan, I wrote the attached memo 
this morning. It is in response to the following statement from five former 
Japanese prime ministers criticising the EU’s sustainability taxonomy which 
lists both natural gas and nuclear as sustainable 
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vXNi2gLjxm). I agree with their critique.




My response is attached.

Best, Miranda




Am 26.02.2022 um 20:02 schrieb Aseem Prakash 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>:

Hi Miranda (and GEP community):

Thanks for your thoughtful comments on the Ukraine crisis. Here is a commentary 
that Nives and I published in Forbes.com<http://forbes.com/>: "Ukraine Crisis 
is Terrible News for Climate Policy."

Abstract:
Effective decarbonization cannot be separated from energy security. Rising gas 
prices mean that fracked shale gas is back. About two dozen U.S. gas tankers 
are headed to Europe and an additional 33 might follow. Moreover, renewable 
energy will not create energy self-sufficiency as long as China controls the 
renewable energy supply chain, especially the critical minerals. Western 
democracies should invest in domestic mining while taking into account the 
concerns of local communities. The climate movement needs to reconsider its 
opposition to nuclear energy and carbon capture because the Ukraine crisis may 
have revied the fortunes of the fossil fuel industry, at least in the short 
term.

Here is the commentary:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/prakashdolsak/2022/02/23/ukraine-crisis-is-terrible-news-for-climate-policy/?sh=2fa73d7d5041

​If you cannot access it, please email me and I will send you a PDF.

Best,

Aseem


____________________________________________________________

ASEEM PRAKASH
Professor, Department of Political Science
Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental 
Politics<http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/>
University of Washington, Seattle
aseemprakash.net<http://aseemprakash.net/>



________________________________
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> on behalf of 
Schreurs, Miranda 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2022 10:44 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [gep-ed] The Ukraine invasion democracy and energy transitions

Dear GEP-EDers

I am totally distracted and disgusted by what is going on in the Ukraine.  
Putin’s march into the Ukraine is frightening. It reminds me of what happened 
in Poland, Czechoslovakia, central and Eastern Europe.  I grew up in a 
neighbourhood of Europeans who fled the Soviet Union’s invasions of the past 
(Prague Spring). The potential for a break out of a larger war is real and a 
Cold War is certainly back. Putin has taken Europe and to some extent the US on 
a ride — and the west fell into his net.  He pursued the game of economic 
cooperation and interdependence, with major European and especially German 
companies become heavily dependent on Russian resources. Germany is about 50 
percent dependent on Russia for its gas supplies and is also highly dependent 
on its oil and coal.

Europe did not imagine what is now unfolding. Over the years, NATO forces have 
been weakened.  And despite what happened with the annexation of Crimea (in the 
Ukraine) and parts of Georgia, the West did little to deter what is now coming 
to light as a long planned strategy on Putin’s part to rebuild at least parts 
of the Soviet empire. NATO is now scrambling to strengthen border defences and 
alliances.  Hopefully the sanctions which have been introduced will have some 
impact. I understand that more are in planning. For the Ukraine, we have to 
hope that the aid and the sanctions are not much too little, much too late.

On top of the populists and authoritarian leaders who have sprung up in so many 
countries, this invasion really calls for us all to do more to speak up for 
freedom and democracy. It is also a call to speed up our energy transitions. We 
need greater energy efficiency, energy savings and renewable energies to break 
the dependency on authoritarian regimes. Especially Europe but also the US, 
Japan, and S Korea  have paid into the coffers of Russia (and other dictatorial 
regimes) with our large appetites for fossil fuels.

So, in response, I turned down my heat even further (it was already off in most 
rooms), wrote an article, and have participated in panels talking about what is 
going on with Russia and why democracy is in serious danger if we are not 
prepared to ourselves pay a price to protect it.  One way of doing this in the 
medium- to long-term is an energy transition. This will be important for 
climate change but also for the fight against authoritarianism.

This is obviously an over simplification of a very complex situation, and I 
know that you all know this, but I somehow felt the need to say something….

Wishing for the best for the Ukraine….

Miranda Schreurs
Professor for Environment and Climate Policy
Technical University of Munich


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