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Merkel has a new headache, and this time it's nuclear

EDF may face criminal trial over Greenpeace affair
Nanterre, France (AFP) Sept 4, 2010 - Prosecutors have called for French state energy giant EDF, accused of spying on environmental campaigners Greenpeace, to face criminal trial, EDF lawyer Alexis Gublin said Saturday. The energy company, and former executives Pierre Francois, who was the company's second highest security official, and his immediate superior Pascal Durieux, are also implicated, along with two other employees. It will now be down to the judge Thomas Cassuto to decide on whether or not the case should go to the criminal court. In 2009 the two EDF executives were suspended for "unlawful intrusion into information systems" and accused of hacking into the computer of the former head of campaigns for Greenpeace France, Yannick Jadot, in 2006. "It is vital that the potential responsibility of EDF is confirmed and the chain of responsibility in this very serious affair is established," said Jadot, now a deputy in the European Parliament. The energy giant had said it was a victim of the detective firm Kargus, and that it had registered as a civil plaintiff in the case.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Sept 5, 2010
Battered from all sides by environmentalists, lobbyists and bickering ministers, German Chancellor Angela Merkel Sunday hosts a summit on nuclear energy, an issue set to dominate politics in coming months.

The crunch get-together at Merkel's office in Berlin will bring together senior politicians to thrash out an emotive issue that will determine future energy policy in Europe's largest economy and one that riles ordinary Germans.

The explosive debate centres around what to do with Germany's 17 nuclear reactors that Merkel's predecessor Gerhard Schroeder had decided to mothball by around 2020.

Merkel, 56, wants to postpone the shutdown as part of a new "energy concept" for the country due to go before her cabinet on September 28.

She calls the extension a "bridge" until renewable sources of energy like wind and solar power can produce more of Germany's power as it seeks to reduce dependence on coal.

But the question raging in the country and the government is how long to extend and what price to exact from the energy industry, which would profit enormously from such a move, in exchange.

Merkel's coalition has tumbled in recent opinion polls and surveys suggest a majority of Germans oppose the idea of a postponing of the date that the country goes nuclear-free.

A large street protest is planned on September 18, an unwelcome development for Merkel who faces six crucial regional elections next year that analysts say could make or break her second term.

The chancellor, a former environment minister herself, has hinted that her preference is for an extension of 10-15 years, saying this is what is "technically reasonable."

But not everyone in her squabbling coalition agrees.

Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen, from Merkel's own conservative Christian Democrats, said last week he wanted to limit the extension to eight years.

But Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle, from the pro-business Free Democrats, Merkel's minority coalition partners, contradicted Roettgen, saying he wanted an extension of up to 20 years.

A government-commission report last week was meant to bring clarity but with so many variables, not least predicting future electricity and oil prices and demographics, it ended up highly inconclusive.

It did however outline how high the stakes are.

Without nuclear power, the report said, Germany can forget about its target of reducing CO2 emissions by 80 percent in 2050 from 1990 levels.

Environmental pressure group Greenpeace heaped scorn on the report and accused Merkel of yielding to the powerful nuclear energy lobby, a charge echoed by an increasingly confident opposition.

"Ten or 15 years extension. That sounds harmless, but it's not," said Tobias Riedl, Greenpeace's nuclear energy expert, on Friday.

Another item in the mix is a debate over how to make energy companies such as RWE, Vattenfall and E.ON pay for the extension of their plants and ensure a greater contribution to Germany's energy output from renewable sources.

As part of an 80-billion-euro austerity programme for the period 2011 to 2014, Berlin wants to tap energy firms for 2.3 billion euros per year, a quid pro quo for keeping their plants open for longer.

But the utility companies are putting all their considerable lobbying powers into resisting such a levy and the nuclear tax was not in the austerity package the cabinet approved Wednesday.

Furthermore, Merkel has a tricky legal scenario on her hands, as she needs to ensure any draft law would not be subject to approval in the Bundesrat upper house, where she lost her majority earlier this year.



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