EPR

Nuclear Action at Construction Site of Proposed Water Reactor

Nuclear Action at Construction Site of Proposed Water Reactor
Author Credit:  Pierre Gleizes/Greenpeace
Date Taken:  20 February, 2012

Greenpeace protesters at EDF Evolutionary Power Reactor in France

Greenpeace protesters at  EDF Evolutionary Power Reactor in France
Author Credit:  Pierre Gleizes/Greenpeace
Date Taken:  25 January, 2012

Nuclear companies in cash crisis?

Posted by jossc - 17 June 2009 at 11:43am - 0 Comments

A new report out today casts doubt on the ability of the nuclear industry to deliver its promised new reactors.

French companies EDF and Areva, who are at the forefront of the new worldwide reactor design and building programme, have been making serious investments in foreign markets where they hope to build new reactors, including here in the UK. As a consequence they are heavily in debt.

New Finnish reactor lacks 'a proper design that meets the basic principles of nuclear safety'

Posted by jossc - 14 May 2009 at 11:16am - 22 Comments

The new EPR site at Olkiluoto, Finland

The OL3 European Pressurised Reactor (EPR) project, under construction at Olkiluoto, Finland, is seen by the nuclear industry as the blueprint for a new generation of reactors they'd like to see being built all over the world.

Already well behind schedule and way over cost, serious problems were uncovered two days ago in the primary coolant pipes, only a week after documents leaked to Finnish media revealed that designs for the most vital and fundamental part of this untried and untested nuclear reactor - the safety systems - are still not yet in place.

Sellafield plant may have to shut

17 February, 2009

The troubled plutonium and uranium reprocessing plant at Sellafield may have to shut down.

The Sellafield mixed oxide plant (SMP) cost the taxpayer £472 million and was intended to turn plutonium and uranium recovered from used nuclear fuel into usable fuel for overseas nuclear reactors.

New nuclear reactor's waste is seven times more hazardous

Posted by jamie - 3 February 2009 at 12:47pm - 8 Comments

The construction site of the EPR reactor at Olkiluoto, Finland

The waste from this EPR in Finland will be seven times more hazardous than existing nuclear reactors © Greenpeace/Cobbing

Thanks to Justin at Nuclear Reaction for allowing us to reproduce this scandalous story:

Following the French government's announcement that it wants to build a second EPR (European Pressurised Reactor) comes the news that the nuclear waste produced by this so-called state of the art reactor is far more dangerous than that of ordinary reactors.

Planned nuclear reactors will produce seven times more hazardous waste

2 February, 2009

Nuclear waste from the reactors likely to be built in the UK will be up to seven times more hazardous than that produced by existing reactors.

The admission was made in an 'environmental impact assessment' report by nuclear company Posiva. Posiva are responsible for managing the waste which will be produced by the European Pressurised Reactor (EPR) currently being constructed in Olkiluoto, Finland.

And an independent nuclear consultant has warned that this will increase the costs of nuclear energy, as waste storage and safety expenses will rise above expected levels.

Waiting for a nuclear disaster

Posted by saunvedan - 13 August 2008 at 3:40pm - 0 Comments

Olkiluoto

More breaking news on nuclear safety from Nuclear Reaction this morning; we found the Olkiluoto 3 construction site in Finland, where they are building the so-called state of the art European Pressurised nuclear Reactor (EPR), to be unsafe after examining leaked documents from Areva, the French company building it. Olkiluoto 3 is a white elephant whose construction has been mired with 1,500 flaws, is £1.5 billion over budget and is already running 2-3 years late.

Double whammy to EPR sites in France and Finland

Posted by ben - 25 June 2008 at 10:53am - 0 Comments

EPR

20 Greenpeace activists blocked the entrance to 3 quarries in Normandy that supply concrete and gravel for the European Pressurised Reactor (EPR) site at Flamanville yesterday. We took this action to stop the re-opening of the construction site, which had been ordered by the French Nuclear Safety Agency (ASN). This was despite none of the safety problems the ASN discovered over a month ago having been adequately resolved by EdF, who are carrying out the project.

Construction stopped on French 'flagship' nuclear reactor

Posted by ben - 27 May 2008 at 4:16pm - 4 Comments

We've learned that the French nuclear safety agency has ordered a halt to the construction of the new EPR reactor in Flamanville, France. Only six months after work first began. The EPR is the same type of reactor that is proposed to be built in the UK.