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Finland
Europe's newest nuclear plant
'I
never get an answer when I ask Iran what they plan to do with the enriched
uranium they produce,' EU foreign chief Javier Solana said on 30 January.
While the Iranian president waits for the west, we take a Nordic diversion
By ANGELA STEEN
Story from CAFE BABEL
You can make out the rows of vines in the distance. Flanked by a dense
forest, the deep green plants protrude into a clear blue sky. There
is a soft breeze. It could almost be France. But the vines are shadowed
by two imposing concrete structures and several tall red cranes. We
are far from the sun-drenched paradise of Bordeaux. This is Olkiluoto,
Finland's largest nuclear power plant, and those vines produce wine
with grapes heated from the plant's waste coolant water. I'd usually
try any kind of wine. Today, I'm resisting.
Olkiluoto 3: first nuclear reactor in Europe after Chernobyl
'Of course we don't sell it!' Olli-Pekke Luhti, environmental officer
at the plant, looks at me ludicrously when I enquire after production.
'It's for our staff parties,' he smiles. 'We produce about 600 gallons
a year.'
That's
a lot of parties. But then, staff at Olkiluoto have a lot to celebrate.
Five years ago, the Finnish government gave the go-ahead for the construction
of a third, top of the range plant, named Olkiluoto 3. It will be the
first nuclear reactor to be built in Europe since the Chernobyl disaster
and the Finnish public opinion is surprisingly in favour of its construction.
'Finnish people are supportive of nuclear power because we don't hide
anything here,' gleams Anneli Nikula, vice president for communications,
the unlikely face of the pro-nuclear debate in the country. She resembles
a soft grandmother in her pastel suit with a welcoming smile. Moments
later, in a chemist's coat and hard hat, she stands by a pool of black
water pointing out the canisters of nuclear waste that lie below. Any
criticisms she deflects with a hardened demeanour. Highly educated and
high powered, she can credit herself with being the driving force behind
Finland's recent nuclear leaps.
Pretty little power plant
Power plants are not pretty places. Remote and secluded, Olkiluoto stands
on an island on the eastern coast, but not even the fir trees that have
been planted around the grounds can hide its enormity. The new reactor
alone covers an area of 27 football pitches.
It's hard to make giant nuclear reactors look attractive, and the developers
have done their best, greeting all guests through the soft oak furnishings
of a brand new visitors centre. The cool Finnish design does little
to block the imposing seventies style red structures that stand behind.
There are no windows. There is no noise. No huge smoking chimneys like
the Springfield plant. Indeed, one of the main selling points for nuclear
energy is the lack of carbon emissions that this form of electricity
creates. There is just the small issue of hazardous, radioactive waste.
But they have that all sorted these days.
Burying waste
The
waste debate was the central issue when concerns were raised about the
building of Olkiluoto 3. The black pools are only a temporary rubbish
dump for the thousands of tones of waste already produced by the two
working reactors. Number 3 will only add to that. There was only one
solution. 'The waste is buried down here,' continues Ms Nikula, as we
wind our way down a steep, underground tunnel on a powerplant shuttle
bus. Half a kilometer beneath the bedrock, we examine the unsuspecting
copper canisters of highly reactive nuclear waste. An information board
is fastened to the gray walls. 'RADIOACTIVE SUBSTANCES ARE BLOCKED FROM
FINDING THEIR WAY TO LIVING NATURE,' it explains. 'RADIOACTIVITY OF
THE WASTE DISAPPEARS FAIRLY SOON - WITHIN A FEW CENTURIES.'
Back above land we are each asked to carry a small radiation detector
with us as we make our way through the winding corridors and endless
staircases inside the reactor building. Security on entry is tight,
but once inside staff zip around silently on small black tricycles,
like human size Doozers from Fraggle Rock. The inside of the plant is
a myriad of pipes and fastners, yellow hazard signs and steel drums.
Everyone wears identical white coats and blue hats, with green socks
covering their shoes. I'm a little on edge, though I can't exactly pinpoint
why. Olkiluoto does have an impressive safety record, but something
about nuclear energy leaves me uneasy, and I find myself glancing repeatedly
to my radiation detector, which stays at a reassuring 0.000 for the
entire tour.
When we leave, we must each file through a huge silver machine, pressing
our bodies against a panel which detects any possible radiation exposure.
A tiny computer man blinks at the end of each scan. 'No contamination,'
he gurgles repeatedly in a mechanical computer voice. By the time I
hang up my hard hat, I could do with that glass of wine after all.
(Published: 10.02.2008.)
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