The art of war
The "ecological" transition to nuclear power
Manlio
Dinucci
The Climate Clock, installed by Italian Minister Roberto
Cingolani on the façade of the Ministry of Ecological Transition, has begun its
countdown: there are less than 7 years before the global warming climate
catastrophe. The clock is set on the forecasts of the Berlin Mcc Institute, not
on the IPCC ones (UN Commission on Climate Change). It calculated that the
global average temperature, which has risen by about 1 ° C since the 1750
pre-industrial level, could rise in 2050 (after three centuries) by 1.5 ° C,
mainly due to CO 2 (carbon dioxide). CO2 is released into the atmosphere by
human activities causing an intensification of the greenhouse effect. According
to UN scientists the more intense activity of the Sun - other scientists think
it is the main cause - contributes secondarily to global warming.
Minister Cingolani
was the main organizer of Milan Pre Cop 2020, during the meeting the complex
scientific framework of climate change and its environmental consequences was
spectacularized with catastrophic film techniques. Faced with the
"scientific" prediction that in seven years the planet Earth will be
overwhelmed by the climate catastrophe, the 400 young people from all over the
world gathered by Cingolani in Milan, asked to close the fossil fuel industry
by 2030 and that governments stop financing it right now, replacing it with
green sources without CO2 emission. Minister Cingolani pledged to achieve this
goal. There would actually be a way to do it, if Italy had a strategic plan to
create an integrated energy system based on photovoltaic, and above all
thermodynamic solar (with mirrors concentrating the sun's rays), and on
large wind farms mainly offshore (with wind turbines floating or installed on
shallow waters). The innovative thermodynamic solar project, developed by Nobel
Prize Carlo Rubbia, which would have made possible to produce a third of
Italian electricity needs with some zero-emission solar power plants, was
decimated and now this technology is used in China. The construction of offshore
wind farms is hindered, so much so that there is only one in Taranto.
However, Minister
Cingolani had the "solution": nuclear power (see article by
Greenpeace Italy director on the September 3 poster). Cingolani declared it in
an open and polemical way when he was invited by former Prime Minister Matteo
Renzi to Italia Viva School of Political Education. Minister Cigolani then
sponsored a Conference of nuclear advocates. It is no coincidence that
afterwards he met John Kerry, the US President's special envoy for climate
management, who reconverted from opponent to proponent of nuclear power.
Lega Leader Matteo Salvini immediately joined Cingolani and said: «A nuclear
power plant in Lombardy? And what's the problem?" Therefore, the powerful
nuclear lobby has also taken root in Italy, which has already achieved a first
fundamental result in the EU: the Joint Research Center, commissioned by the
European Commission, has included nuclear energy among the "green energy
sources" supported and financed
by the European Union to eliminate CO2 emissions by 2050.
The EU is thus relaunching
the nuclear industry at a time when the EU is in a deep crisis due to rising
costs and technical problems. Solar power plants can produce more electricity
than nuclear power plants without additional costs or dangerous emissions. Only
to temporarily store the enormous amount of radioactive waste produced by EU
nuclear power plants is expected to cost 420-570 billion euros. Moreover, there
is the huge amount of money necessary for dismantling the plants themselves,
which for the most part have reached or exceeded the age limit of 35 years
becoming increasingly expensive and dangerous. Meanwhile, the International
Atomic Energy Agency has authorized the discharge into the sea of over one
million tons of radioactive water, accumulated in the Fukushima nuclear power
plant after the 2011 accident, the result is that cancer deaths caused by the
«Green energy source» will increase.
Manlio
Dinucci
(il manifesto,
October 5, 2021)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.