BRUSSELS — The EU's energy chief Thursday deemed an almost year-long
study on nuclear plant safety in Europe as short on detail and numbers
and demanded further work before publication of the critical report.
"Going
deep is more important than being fast," Commissioner Guenther
Oettinger told journalists, saying that a final report would be
available to the public in the autumn rather than in the summer, as
scheduled.
Ordered in the aftermath of the Fukushima catastrophe,
the European Commission and national atomic regulators launched stress
tests in June on 147 nuclear plants in 15 EU countries -- including
Lithuania which has closed down plants -- plus 15 reactors in Ukraine
and five in Switzerland.
The reactors include those in Germany currently being decommissioned.
After
tough talks, EU nuclear regulators agreed tests on the ability of
reactors to survive earthquakes, floods or man-made events like plane
crashes.
Oettinger said he had agreed with the European Nuclear
Safety Regulators Group (ENSREG) to have more plants visited and to add
more concrete information on the potential impact of airplane crashes.
"We will do additional visits of power plants and analyse some safety aspects in more detail," Oettinger said.
"EU citizens have the right to know and understand how safe the nuclear power plants are they live close to."http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jol2rLXOwQ-7rqnPnOJ29q7nDZCQ?docId=CNG.5f4e1c774335c730ee31b56d4e3bfe91.161
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