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Protests
Against Nuclear
INFORSE-Europe proposes
a general phase-out of nuclear power, and is active in debates
about the development of new nuclear power plants. Read about
interventions in debates about the EU
energy policy .
# "Don't
Nuke the Climate" International Campaign
12 December, 2009
International Day of Action
INFORSE-Europe joined the Campaign.
Read
more at Campaign.
# Demonstration
"Shut Down Fessenheim!"
October 3-4, 2009, France
Conferences, concerts, films, theatre,
and demonstration
Demanding the closure of the Fessenheim plant as a first step in the
phasing out of atomic energy production in France.
Read more at Shut
Down
# Anti-Nuclear
Rally in Berlin - September 5, 2009
50,000
people marched from the Berlin train station to the Brandenburg
Gate
protesting
nuclear power and radioactive waste transport.
The marchers, backed by 400 tractors, demanded that Germany stick to
its commitment to close all nuclear plants by 2020 and also called for
the closure of a radioactive dump at Gorleben in eastern Germany.
Read
more at anti-atom-treck.de, sortirdunucleaire.fr
# New
Forum: Anti Nuclear European Forum (ANEF),
June 17, 2009 in Linz,
Austria
"Don't
Nuke the Climate"
Read more at ANEF and Antiatom
Szene
# Campaign
Workshop: "Nuclear
Bank - No Thanks"
March 30-31, 2009. Linz, Austria
Read
more at Antiatom
Szene, Austria
# "Don't
Nuke the Climate" NGO Actions at COP 14, 2008
On
December 10, 2008. Poznan, Poland. In front of the Conference
Building of UNFCCC COP14. Activists were
carrying banners and posters with lively slogans including “Don’t
Nuke the Climate,” “No
Nuclear Power in The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)” and “Nuclear
Power, No Thanks!” "Nuclear Power is a Mickey Mouse
Solution to Climate Change" Read more at: WECF
homepage. See
also images at Anitatom.ru.
300 NGOs (including INFORSE) signed
a public appeal to keep the nuclear power option out of the climate
talks. Read
more at List
of NGOs.
# "For
a Nuclear-free World"
European Demonstration,
Paris,
12 July 2008
Campaign Sending Postcards until December 2008
The
network "Sortir du nucléaire" (Phasing Out the Nuclear
Age) organises a march in Paris, on Saturday 12th of July 2008. The
aim is to
remind the French President Sarkozy that nuclear is neither a renewable
energy nor a solution to global warming. The background is that promoting
nuclear power is feared to be one of the objectives of the European
French Presidency (July-December 2008).
Find
more information and materials in French (e.g. postcards to send
to President Sarkozy) on www.sortirdunucleaire.fr
"Sortir du nucléaire" is a network of 820 association. The
French campaign "Nor Nuclear, Nor Climate Change" has several other
French
partners,
like
WWF, FOE-France, Greenpeace France and CAN-France.
# Record
Uranium Price: August,
2007
What is Behind and What are the Consequences
Article
in Sustainable Energy News, No. 57.
1 page (pdf file 350 kB)
links to more information is in the article.
"Unhappy
Birthday, Euratom"
Europeans Demand: Phase Out Nuclear Power
INFORSE-Europe Supporting the Petition:
1 Million Europeans Demand the Exit of Nuclear Power
Brussels, March 23 2007
- The Petition - boxes full of signatures - was handed over to
the EU Energy Commissioner as a "birthday present" of
the pro-nuclear Euratom Treaty's 50th birthday.
634.686 individuals and 780 organisations signed
the Petition
and have demanded abolition of Euratom and a phase-out of nuclear
power across Europe.
INFORSE-Europe was among the 48
organisations and movements from some 20 European countries, which
launched the European
Campaign for collecting 1 million signatures against nuclear power
by the Chernobyl Memorial Day April 26th, 2006.
The aim was to collect signatures and activate
more organisations to join the campaign in order to convince all European
countries to take the following measures without delay:
- To stop or prevent
the construction of new nuclear power plants and facilities in
the European Union,
- To launch a plan to abandon nuclear power within the European Union,
- To invest massively in energy saving and the development of renewable energies,
- To repeal the Euratom Treaty which massively supports nuclear power in Europe
by means of public funding
You
can read more about the petition at www.million-against-nuclear.net
# CherNObyl+20: April 26, 2006
20 years
ago on April 26, 1986, the explosion of Reactor No. 4 at the Chernobyl
nuclear
power plant in Ukraine marked a new era in
the mindset related to nuclear energy. Our remembrance of the catastrophe
is intended not only to highlight the very poor conditions in which
many affected people still have to live, but also to use it to make
the message heard:
“Nuclear power is not safe, not clean, and not cheap.”
This is of vital importance, especially nowadays, when some countries are considering
new and renewed nuclear power plants. Several events are planned for the anniversary.
International Conference, Kiev, Ukraine: “Remembrance
for the future”, April 23-25th in Kiev, Ukraine. More:
www.ch20.org
Photo-Documentary
Publication & Exhibition “Chernobyl
- 20 Years, 20 Lives” -
follows 20 people in their daily lives today and reflects on
how those lives were changed directly or indirectly by the Chernobyl
catastrophe.
More: www.20years20lives.info .
More
Events: World Information Service on Energy (WISE) and Nuclear Information
and Resource Service (NIRS) gather events related to the Chernobyl’s
disaster. WISE/NIRS can be contacted in Argentina, Austria, Czech
Republic, India, Japan, the Netherlands, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden,
Ukraine, South Africa, and USA.
More information: www.antenna.nl/wise,
and www.nirs.org .
Ph: +31 20 612 6368, Fax: +31 20 689 2179, E-mail: wiseamster@antenna.nl .
# EURATOM
INFORSE-Europe support the proposal that EURATOM should have changed
its mandate from promoting nuclear power to ensure the safety
of nuclear power and other nuclear facilities. Therefore INFORSE-Europe
also support the proposal that the EU countries should organise
an intergovernmental conference on the revision of the Euratom Treaty.
14 New Reactors in Central Europe?
An article on the possible expansion of nuclear power in the new EU
countries and beyond.
#
K2R4 Anti-Nuclear Campaign
The K2R4 anti nuclear
campaign is in
Ukraine, where two half-ready nuclear reactors at the Khmelnytski and
Rivne nuclear power plants were finished and got online in the summer
of 2004.
INFORSE-Europe
has protested against the plans to finish these reactor with loans from
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and EU Euratom.
The international
campaign against these projects are coordinated by the K2R4 campaign
www.bankwatch.org/k2r4/index.html
Read
here INFORSE-Europe's statement against the project
# Nuclear
Power in Finland
In May 2001, INFORSE-Europe joined an appeal
to the Government and Parliament of Finland. Read it.
In 2003, the Finnish government
approved a new Finnish nuclear reactor.
In December 2004, the European Renewable Energy Federation (www.eref-europe.org)
raised a court case against the state-aid involved in the financing
of
the new reactor.
#
Import of Nuclear Waste
to Russia
INFORSE-Europe
is following the NGO-activities to stop a new proposal for import of
nuclear waste to Russia. The Russian NGO's collected 2.5 million signatures
against
the plans in the fall of 2000, and have continued protests in 2001. In
spite of this, the Russian Duma supported legislation to allow the import
at voting in January and April 2001.
Read more about the problems, the latest
news, and the activities of Russian NGOs at: www.igc.org/gadfly,
www.bellona.no.
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