In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
[quote]... and further suggests that the dump site for nuclear waste could be anywhere.[/quote]
Priceless!:yes:
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
the new government is just progressing what the previous government had already started and so there is not much news in that... it is a question that arrives because of international agreements over levels of pollution and agreements made to deduce the amount of waste Italy pours into the air.... they either have to go this way in a sense or else ban motor cars completely...or shut down power stations ...
as energy costs rise the italian population is getting more favourable to the idea and with problems more from eastern european old and not well maintained sites in the north east of italy they have permanent monitoring stations posted to check for anything coming their way.... if there is a threat its more likely to be an accident off of that side that the french side...
heres a link to a poll
[url=http://espresso.repubblica.it/sondaggio-risultati?idpoll=2027536]L'espresso | Nucleare, rischio o opportunità?[/url]
its obvious that italians are still nervous about progressing a nuclear programme... however with the majority voting no in this poll you also have to bear in mind that there is a very active well organised anti lobby ... so votes against are always likely to be more at this stage...
what most people do not seem to realise is that it could well be better for Italy if its nuclear programme had continued... one of the major problems in suddenly deciding to shut it all down is that you then have to spend money cleaning up the sites...
so twenty years ago the clean started and virtually nothing has been done... and whats worse is that the places leak like sieves locally contaminating rather than air born widespread contamination...had they get their program going plants would have been maintained and older ones shut as they came to the end of their useful life,,, the decommissioning being paid for by earnings off of newer plants
[url=http://espresso.repubblica.it/dettaglio/Sommersi-dai-veleni-radioattivi/1585227//0]Sommersi dai veleni radioattivi | L'espresso[/url]
now people living near this place may well look at naples and have a bit of a mutter about the uncivilized locals but do a bit of research on this place and you will find that it is ... Casaccia
[url=http://www.geocities.com/energia_nucleare/nucleare/deposito_casaccia.htm]ENERGIA NUCLEARE - Centro Deposito della Casaccia[/url]
its worth taking a brief look at the link above because if you scroll to the bottom it lists all the nuclear sites in italy... which obviouly if looking for a place to buy or even have a holiday might well help in your choice
heres a follow through link about current nuclear production in piedmonte
[url=http://www.zonanucleare.com/questione_scorie_italia/inventario_rifiuti_radioattivi/indice_deposito_fn_bosco_marengo.htm]Zona Nucleare - L' impianto ex-ENEA FN-Fabbricazioni Nucleari di Bosco Marengo (Alessandria)[/url]
... or people quite happy living near monte cassino...historically famous for its battle might find it surprising to learn that italy does have nuclear power stations...its just they are decomposing not producing....
[url=http://www.geocities.com/energia_nucleare/nucleare/centrale_garigliano.htm]ENERGIA NUCLEARE -[/url]
for those with less italian than others its quite hard to find articles in english... well i tend to look at italian ones anyway... i read the one above at my dentists waiting room a fair while back now however if you click on some of the town names ...which i did you get a few bits in english in the wikipedia
[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_power_in_Italy]Nuclear power in Italy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/url]
this shows a map of some of the old sites and proposed new sites...and i am sure there is more to be found out...
so forget about italys new nuclear programme... suggest you worry more about its old abandoned stuff ... thirty year old technology ...at least these new ones should be a lot cleaner , a lot safer and nowadays controlled a lot more by outside agencies...making sure that its done properly
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
sorry to appear like I'm hogging this thread...well as replies go at the moment it does seem that i am...
here's an interesting article translated into English which i think gets to the route of the problem as regards Italy and its energy problems...and why it needs to do something... for those paying energy bills here already it will confirm most of what you know about the costs...
anyway... i think its an interesting read and worth mentioning
[url=http://www.corriere.it/english/articoli/2008/04_Aprile/30/italy_energy.shtml]Corriere.it[/url]
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
I'm definitely taking your advice to "forget about italys new nuclear programme". What I don't think about can't hurt me, right?:smile:
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Excellent article.
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Very interesting article, but one that leaves me feeling exasperated and depressed.
As much as I get a grim sort of amusement from watching sanctimonious Green types say "No" to every possible form of energy generation on grounds that range from the reasonably sensible to the totally whacko (wind turbines "hacking birds to death", indeed), I do find it nice to have the lights come on when I flick a switch.
I was vaguely aware that Italy’s electricity system was – as they say in Scotland – hanging on a shoogly nail, but the figures in that article mean the situation is more alarming than I believed. Astonishing that things have been allowed to drift into this state.
It really is time for me to actually get the photovoltaic system I’ve been thinking about for almost two years now. It won’t do much to solve Italy’s problem, but at least we could be sure that our fridge will continue to run when the network next collapses for any one of a number of possible reasons.
Al
I thought that Italy did actually implement a nuclear power programme, before abolishing it - I once met an engineer involved in de-commissioning the plants.
The reality today is that a large part of Italy's electricity is bought from French nuclear power plants and any fallout caused by an accident there would certainly not respect borders. I still don't approve of it though!