Parliament Pass Law To Allow Nuclear Waste In Local
Communities
by Sean Adl-Tabatabai
Parliament rushed through a new law that allows nuclear
waste to be dumped within local communities.
This means that Britain’s stockpile of 50 years’ of
radioactive waste can now be dumped without going through previous local
planning regulations.
The Guardian reports:
Since last week,
the sites are now officially considered “nationally significant infrastructure
projects” and so will be chosen by the secretary of state for energy. He or she
would get advice from the planning inspectorate, but would not be bound by the
recommendation. Local councils and communities can object to details of the
development but cannot stop it altogether.
The move went
barely noticed as it was passed late on the day before parliament was prorogued
for the general election, but has alarmed local objectors and anti-nuclear
campaigners.
Friends of the
Earth’s planning advisor, Naomi Luhde-Thompson, said: “Communities will be
rightly concerned about any attempts to foist a radioactive waste dump on them.
We urgently need a long-term management plan for the radioactive waste we’ve
already created, but decisions mustn’t be taken away from local people who have
to live with the impacts.”
Objectors worry
that ministers are desperate to find a solution to the current radioactive
waste problem to win public support to build a new generation of nuclear power
stations.
Zac Goldsmith, one
of the few government MPs who broke ranks to vote against the move, criticised
the lack of public debate about such a “big” change. “Effectively it strips
local authorities of the ability to stop waste being dumped in their
communities,” he said.
“If there had been
a debate, there could have been a different outcome: most of the MPs who voted
probably didn’t know what they were voting for.”
Labour abstained
in the vote, indicating that a future government will not want to reverse the
change of rules. However, the shadow energy minister, Julie Elliott, has warned
that the project is expected to take 27 years to build even after a preferred
site was identified and would cost £4bn-5.6bn a year to build, plus the cost of
running it for 40 years.
Since the Royal
Commission on Environmental Pollution found in 1976 that it was “morally wrong”
to keep generating nuclear waste without a demonstrably safe way of storing the
waste, there have been at least four attempts to find the right site, all of
them shelved after strong protest.
There are now 4.5m
cubic metres of accumulated radioactive waste kept in secure containers at
sites across Britain, though only 1,100m3 of this is the most controversial
high-level waste, and 290,000m3 is intermediate-level waste. It costs £3bn a
year to manage the nuclear waste mountain, of which £2bn comes from taxpayers.
The most recent
proposal for a more permanent solution was to ask local authorities to
volunteer to examine whether they could host the development. Initially, a
coalition of Cumbria county council and Copeland and Allerdale borough councils
put their names forward, but the policy stalled in 2013 when the county council
pulled out.
Last year, the
Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC) published a white paper which
said ministers would prefer to work with public support, but reserved the right
to take more aggressive action on planning if “at some point in the future such
an approach does not look likely to work”.
The day before
parliament rose, MPs voted in an unusual paper ballot to implement a two-page
statutory instrument which adds nuclear waste storage to the list of nationally
significant infrastructure projects in England, via the 2008 Planning Act.
Officials have
said approval depends on a “test of public support” and any site would undergo
extensive geological safety tests.
Copeland borough
council, one of the two areas most affected by any such development at
Sellafield, said it was pleased with the government’s change to planning rules.
Radiation-Free
Lakeland – set up to block the Sellafield proposal because they claim there is
no evidence deep storage is safe or that the geology of Cumbria is suitable –
claimed, however, “the test of public support is a fig leaf: the government
hast’t said what the public support will be”.
The only existing
high-level radioactive underground waste storage, in New Mexico, USA, has been
closed since last year following two accidents.
Germany has put
similar plans for burying high-level waste on hold and four other countries,
including France and Japan, are examining the idea.
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