BRASILIA (AFP) – Brazil said Wednesday it has shelved plans to build
new nuclear power stations in the coming years in the wake of last
year’s Fukushima disaster in Japan.
The previous government led by former president Luiz Inacio Lula da
Silva had planned to construct between four and eight new nuclear plants
through 2030.
But the energy ministry’s executive secretary, Marcio Zimmermann, was
quoted as telling a forum Tuesday that there was no need for new
nuclear facilities for the next 10 years.
“The last plan, which runs through 2020, does not envisage any (new)
nuclear power station because there is no need for it. Demand is met
with hydro-electrical power and complementary energy sources such as
wind, thermal and natural gas,” Zimmermann said in remarks released by
the ministry Wednesday.
“The 2021 plan, as far as I know, will not consider nuclear power
stations either, ” he added, although he did not rule out construction
of such facilities in the longer term.
“After the (2011 Fukushima) accident in Japan, not just Brazil but
the entire world stopped to analyze and assess,” Mauricio Tomalsquim,
president of the EPE energy research firm, told the same event.
Tomalsquim said that in the next 10 years, the hydro-electrical
contribution to Brazil’s energy mix will fall from the current 75
percent to 67 percent while that of renewable energy sources — wind,
solar and biomass — will rise from eight to 16 percent.
Brazil’s sole nuclear power plant, located in Angra dos Reis, a
coastal town near Rio, has two pressurized water reactors in operation,
with outputs respectively of 657 MWe (megawatt electrical) and 1350 MWe.
After a 24-year dispute, work resumed last June on a third reactor at
that facility with a projected output of 1245 MWe. It is expected to be
completed in 2015.
The Angras do Reis plant currently generates around three percent of
Brazil’s energy production, which relies overwhelmingly on hydroelectric
installations.
Economic expansion, however, is outstripping supply, resulting in occasional blackouts across regions.
Greenpeace and other environmental lobby groups oppose broadening
Brazil’s nuclear program, arguing that there is potential for widespread
ecological damage in case of an accident.
Brazil, Latin America’s dominant power, and neighboring Argentina are
the only South American countries operating civilian nuclear power
stations.

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