Germany OKs Law to Shut Nuclear Plants

 
By Associated Press

December 14, 2001, 2:41 PM EST


BERLIN -- The parliament approved a plan Friday to shut down Germany's
19 nuclear power plants within 20 years, the final hurdle for a pledge
by Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder to the environmentalist Greens party. 

The law, signed by Schroeder in June, was passed by the lower house of
parliament with votes from the coalition government of Schroeder's
Social Democrats and the Greens. It does not need approval in the upper
house. 

The leading opposition party, the conservative Christian Democrats, had
argued that eliminating nuclear energy would force Germany to use
dirtier power sources. 

Germany is the world's largest industrialized nation to forgo the
technology willingly. 

Eliminating nuclear power has been a pet cause of the Greens, which for
years backed protests focused on halting nuclear waste transports. The
new legislation will end those transports by mid-2005. 

Social Democratic lawmaker Horst Kubatschka called the passage a "great
reform" by the governing coalition. 

Under the new legislation, the first of the plants will be closed in
2003 and the last in 2021; nuclear waste will be permitted to be stored
in the plants for up to 40 years. 

The measure includes a ban on the building of new nuclear power plants
and regular safety checks until the current ones are taken off-line. 

The plants currently provide nearly a third of Germany's electricity. 
Copyright C 2001, The Associated Press 

THE END

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