Western Mail

Rock star’s battle to stop dumping of mud from nuclear plant

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ENERGY company EDF has confirmed it has started to dump mud from the Hinkley Point nuclear power station in the Severn Estuary off Cardiff.

The news came on the same day that rock musician and anti-nuclear campaigner Cian Ciaran lodged papers at the High Court seeking an injunction to stop the dumping.

The papers name NNB Generation Company (HPC) Ltd as the respondent in the action. The firm is a whollyowne­d subsidiary of the French energy company EDF, which obtained a licence to carry out the dumping.

More than 100,000 people have signed petitions against the dumping plans, which campaigner­s say could pose health risks.

Both EDF and Natural Resources Wales (NRW), which granted the licence, insist the dumping is safe, but campaigner­s argue that the licence should not have been granted because NRW failed to carry out an environmen­tal impact assessment. They also say more tests for radioactiv­ity should have been carried out.

Cian Ciaran, the keyboard player for Super Furry Animals, said: “I moved to Cardiff 25 years ago and now live in South Docks and raise my two children here. Cardiff is my home, Wales is my family and once again we’re under threat. I can’t just sit back and watch this unfold unchalleng­ed.

“I have one simple argument – absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence, therefore the precaution­ary principle should dictate a rethink. I’m tired of the excuses and lack of accountabi­lity – we should all call for a better future. The nuclear establishm­ent cannot be trusted.”

Independen­t AM Neil McEvoy said: “The Welsh public couldn’t be any more clear on not wanting this mud. Thousands have signed petitions. They’ve forced a debate in the Assembly. They’ve protested and donated thousands of pounds to a legal fund. But the Welsh Government and NRW just won’t listen. I hope the courts will be decisive in keeping this nuclear mud out of Wales. It is shocking that the dumping has begun. We asked the judge at Cardiff High Court for an immediate injunction but we were only offered a hearing next Monday.”

Max Wallis, of Friends of the Earth Barry & Penarth said: “As NRW has refused to suspend the licence due to the critical errors in their assessment, the campaign against Hinkley mud dumping had no option but to seek an interim injunction from court to stop the breach in law as well as irreversib­le harm to people and our Severnside environmen­t.”

An EDF Energy spokesman confirmed that the dumping of 300,000 tonnes of mud from Hinkley Point off Cardiff started yesterday. The company, which has not yet been served with papers by the High Court and plans to resist the applicatio­n if and when there is a hearing, takes the view that the dumping is lawful.

 ?? Matt Cardy ?? > Hinkley Point nuclear power station
Matt Cardy > Hinkley Point nuclear power station
 ??  ?? > Cian Ciaran
> Cian Ciaran

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