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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan PM meets anti-nuclear demonstrators
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 22, 2012


Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda met anti-nuclear demonstrators face-to-face on Wednesday for the first time since weekly rallies outside his office began five months ago.

About a dozen representatives of the movement asked Noda to reverse his decision to restart two reactors and urged him to abandon nuclear power altogether.

Thousands of people regularly turn up in central Tokyo's government district to demand an end to atomic power, with distrust of the technology running high after the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

"People keep coming to our weekly rally," Misao Redwolf told the premier. "That's because anger is ballooning as you restarted nuclear reactors despite the fact that the Fukushima disaster has not been resolved yet."

Another demonstrator pointed out that Japan is surviving its oppressively hot summer with just two reactors online, proof that the resource-poor country can do without nuclear power.

"We will never, never, never, never give up until nuclear reactors are stopped. And on top of that, we will never forget the Fukushima disaster and its victims," said another demonstrator.

Noda told the protesters his government was considering its energy policy with a view to "phasing out nuclear power in the mid to long term."

He said the decision would be made taking people's views and the need for a stable supply of energy into account.

Demonstrators have been asking for a meeting with Noda for some time, while the government has struggled to develop a united position on the prickly issue.

Weekly protests began in March with organisers claiming tens or even hundreds of thousands of people at each event, although police estimates of the turnout are usually considerably lower.

Opinion polls show a majority of voters would like to see a phasing out of Japan's reliance on nuclear power, which provided almost a third of the country's electricity until the tsunami-sparked meltdowns at Fukushima.

The government is expected to draw up plans for Japan's future energy mix as early as this month.

Options under discussion range from nuclear providing around 30 percent of the country's needs to there being no atomic power at all.

Under a zero-nuclear scenario, government experts have forecast Japan's economic growth could be hampered.

But industry minister Yukio Edano said earlier this month that Japan could phase out nuclear power by 2030 without damaging the world's third-largest economy.

Senior members of Noda's Democratic Party of Japan are leaning towards a zero-reliance option as they struggle to earn public support ahead of a seemingly inevitable autumn election.

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France sends student to prison for nuclear line protest
Coutances, France (AFP) Aug 21, 2012 - A student demonstrator against a new high-voltage electricity line in northern France was handed a three-month jail term Wednesday, in what campaigners decried as a politically charged judgement.

Michael Garabello, 24, was convicted of using violence against two gendarmes who were slightly hurt during a June 24 confrontation between demonstrators and police.

At a preliminary hearing in the case earlier this month, prosecutors had conceded that the student's responsibility for the injuries suffered by the officers had not been established.

Yanic Soubien, the Green vice-president of the local regional council, described the sentence as "scandalous."

He added: "It makes you question the independence of the judiciary in relation to the industrial lobby."

The high-voltage line, which is scheduled to be finished next year, is due to carry electricity from a new reactor at the Flamanville nuclear power plant on France's Channel coast.

The 163-kilometres (102-mile) line has been bitterly opposed by residents who fear it could raise the incidence of some cancers, notably childhood leukaemia, and affect the health of cattle in a prime dairy farming area.

Defence advocate Gervais Marie-Doutressoulle said her client had been "made a scapegoat in a country where being anti-nuclear is by definition suspect.

"Twenty five to 30 injuries, three of them serious, among the protesters -- that's peanuts compared to gendarmes twisting their fingers?"

The court also fined local farmers leader Michel Houssin, 51, for having unscrewed several bolts on a pylon being built for the contested line.

Houssin was given a 1,000 euros fine and ordered to pay 3,300 euros in damages and the legal costs of electricity company EDF.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Uranium from seawater said attainable goal
Philadelphia (UPI) Aug 21, 2012
U.S. scientists say they're making progress towards a 40-year-old dream of extracting uranium for nuclear power from seawater. "Estimates indicate that the oceans are a mother lode of uranium, with far more uranium dissolved in seawater than in all the known terrestrial deposits that can be mined," researcher Robin D. Rogers of the University of Alabama told a meeting of the American Ch ... read more


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