Germany agrees to extend nuclear plant life span
Monday, Sep 06, 2010
Germany's coalition government has decided to extend the life span of the country's nuclear power plants by an average of 12 years, officials say.
Under the agreement, some plants will now remain in production until the 2030s, instead of being phased out by 2021 as the previous government wanted.
There will also be new fees on utility companies to fund renewable energy.
Chancellor Angela Merkel argued that renewable sources are not developed enough to abandon nuclear power.
She acknowledged that there were widespread concerns about nuclear energy, but said it was needed as a "bridge technology" until renewables were more viable.
German power generation, she said, would become "the most efficient and most environmentally friendly in the world".
Ministers met until late on Sunday to discuss the plan, emerging to announce that the older of Germany's 17 nuclear plants will remain in production for eight more years beyond 2021 while more recent ones will stay online for an additional 14 years.
Source: BBC
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