Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

German official: Nuclear reactors do little to fix gas issue

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BERLIN – Germany’s vice chancellor on Tuesday defended the government’s commitment to ending the use of nuclear power at the end of this year, arguing that keeping its few remaining reactors running would be complex and do little to address the problems caused by a possible natural gas shortfall.

Germany’s main opposition party has called repeatedly for the country’s last three nuclear reactors to be kept online after the end of December amid fears that Russia may halt natural gas supplies entirely.

There’s some sympathy for that position in the ranks of the pro-business Free Democrats, the smallest party in Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s governing coalition.

But government officials argue that natural gas isn’t so much a factor in generating electricit­y as in fueling industrial processes and providing heating.

“Nuclear power doesn’t help us there at all,” Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck, who is also the economy and climate minister and is responsibl­e for energy, said at a news conference in Vienna. “We have a heating problem or an industry problem, but not an electricit­y problem – at least not generally throughout the country.”

Germany shut down three nuclear reactors in December and the remaining three are due to cease production at the end of this year as part of a long-running plan to phase out convention­al power plants in favor of renewable energy.

In this year’s first quarter, nuclear energy accounted for 6% of Germany’s electricit­y generation and natural gas for 13%, both significantly lower than a year earlier. Germany has been getting about 35% of its gas from Russia.

Habeck said the legal certification for the remaining reactors expires at the end of the year and they would have to be treated thereafter as effectively new nuclear plants, complete with safety considerat­ions, and the likely “very small advantage” in terms of saving gas wouldn’t outweigh the complicati­ons.

Fuel for the reactors also would have to be procured, and Scholz has said that the fuel rods are generally imported from Russia.

Opposition politician­s have argued that Habeck’s environmen­talist Green party, which has long strongly supported the nuclear phaseout, is opposing keeping reactors online for ideologica­l reasons.

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