Nuclear battle continues
A decision on where to build a key nuclear research plant has been delayed until after Christmas.
Governments have failed to come to an agreement on where to locate the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (known as ITER)
The decision, due to be taken in Washington last week, has now been postponed until February.
The two favoured sites are said to be Rokkasho in Japan and Cadarache in France, who have seen off stiff opposition from Canada.
To the surprise of many, Cadarache was chosen as the EU candidate over a site in Spain this November.
ITER builds on research into nuclear fusion that has been going on in Oxfordshire, England, since the 1970s.
Nuclear fusion may, in a few decades time, offer a solution to a potential global energy crisis.
Fusion produces far less radioactive waste than nuclear fission - the current source of nuclear power - and so provides an attractive long-term option.
The basic materials needed for its generation are in plentiful supply, and fusion reactors would not produce fissile materials that could be used in nuclear weapons.
The Parliament Magazine
Issue 291 | 22 June 2009The heart of EuropeVladimír Špidla on Employment Week, the commission's social recovery plan and what the EU can do to protect jobs
Regional Review
Issue 13 | June 2009Be preparedMargot Wallström on the financial crisis, Lisbon treaty and what Sweden must do to ensure a successful EU presidency
Research Review
Issue 9 | May 2009It's all in the mindGet the lowdown and all the latest news from two key research conferences featuring the best of EU-funded projects


