• SPACE: Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket (Graphic)
  • POLITICS: Trump inaugural flags (Graphic DUE Jan 16, 13:00GMT)
  • POLITICS: Executive Orders by U.S. presidents (Graphic DUE Jan 16, 16:00GMT)
  • POLITICS: Trump invokes manifest destiny (Graphic DUE Jan 17, 12:00GMT)
  • SOCCER: UEFA Champions League Day 7, Tuesday Jan 21 (Graphic DUE Jan 17, 17:00GMT)
  • SOCCER: UEFA Champions League Day 7, Wednesday Jan 22 (Graphic DUE Jan 17, 17:00GMT)
  • For full details of graphics available/in preparation, see Menu -> Planners
 Duitsland heroverweegt kernenergie infographic
Graphic shows German poll results concerning the future of nuclear power.
GN43101NL

ENERGIECRISIS

Duits publiek wil nu meer kernenergie, niet minder

By Ninian Carter

August 15, 2022 - Germany’s plan to phase out all nuclear power by the end of 2022, instigated after the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan, is coming under pressure in the wake of reduced gas supplies from Russia.

Following the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan in March 2011, the German government of then Chancellor Angela Merkel decided to phase out all nuclear power by the end of 2022.

At the time, around a quarter of Germany’s electricity was supplied by 17 nuclear power plants.

Almost immediately, Germany shut down eight nuclear power stations, with further closers over the ensuing years. As of summer 2022, Germany has just three working nuclear power plants left, suppling 6% of the country’s electricity – all due for closure by the end of the year.

But since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, leading to a sharp drop in supply to Germany of Russian natural gas and an ensuing energy crisis, public opinion has swung sharply in favour of nuclear power.

In a recent poll for Der Spiegel, 78% of respondents were in favour of keeping the last three plants operational until the summer of 2023. 67% were in favour of keeping them running for another five years, and 41% said new nuclear power plants should be built.

German chancellor Olaf Scholz now says an extension to the lifespan of their nuclear plants could “make sense”.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 15/08/2022; STORY: Graphic News; PICTURES: Getty Images
Advertisement