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Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni Alamy Stock Photo

Italy's hard-right government to build country's first new nuclear power stations in decades

In June 2011, after the Fukushima disaster in Japan, 94% of Italians voted against a return to nuclear energy.

THE ITALIAN GOVERNMENT has announced plans for the country’s first nuclear power stations in almost 40 years.

Italy turned away from nuclear after the Chernobyl tragedy and in 2011 the vast majority of Italians voted against returning to the energy source but Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s hard right government has decided to install new nuclear stations.

“By the end of the year we will create the legislative framework to ensure that new third and fourth generation nuclear power plants can be installed in Italy,” enterprise minister Aldolfo Urso said.

“We do not want to import nuclear reactors from other countries. We want to build them in Italy using Italian technology and science, to export them to other countries,” he said on the sidelines of a business conference in Milan.

He said he intended to present an “industrial entity” that could build such reactors.

Italy abandoned nuclear power in November 1987 following a referendum called in the wake of the Chernobyl nuclear accident.

In June 2011, three months after the Fukushima disaster in Japan, 94% of Italians voted against a return to nuclear energy during another referendum organised by Silvio Berlusconi’s government.

But energy security has become a major issue since the war in Ukraine, as Italy was forced to wean itself off Russian gas.

Meloni’s government also wants to use nuclear energy to achieve the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050.

Urso said the use of nuclear power could help lower the cost of energy in Italy, which is, he said, “too expensive compared to European competitors”.

“Nuclear energy, which was invented in this country, must once again become the pride of the ‘Made in Italy’ brand,” he said.

He was referring to the Italian-American physicist Enrico Fermi, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1938 and famous for having created the first nuclear reactor.

© AFP 2024

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