EU launches Sustainable Nuclear Energy Research Platform with CEA
Nuclear energy has won a place in the EU's
low-carbon energy mix following the launch of a new forum for nuclear
energy research by the European Commission and the French Atomic Energy
Commission (CEA).
The Sustainable Nuclear Energy Technology Platform will bring
together researchers and industry to define a Strategic Research Agenda
(SRA) and Deployment Strategy, with the goal of maintaining European
leadership in this vital sector.
Europe currently has the largest nuclear industry in the world,
with one-third of its electricity coming from nuclear plants. With
worldwide energy consumption likely to double between 2000 and 2050,
nuclear energy will remain a key element in future low-carbon energy
systems.
A vision document outlining how the sector should develop in the
future was unveiled at a stakeholder meeting in Brussels to officially
launch the new European Technology Platform (ETP) on 21 September. The
ETP's main goal will be to develop a fully integrated approach to
nuclear energy research within Europe.
'For those countries that choose it, nuclear power will be a very
important part of their solution to security of supply and reduction of
greenhouse gases,' said EU Science and Research Commissioner Janez
Potocnik at the launch of the Platform.
'It is clear that we need to address two important concerns -
ensuring that nuclear power is economically competitive and, more
importantly, our duty to make it as neutral as possible in
environmental terms and in terms of the legacy we leave future
generations,' Mr Potocnik added.
Research and development (R&D) and innovation will be Europe's
tools for addressing these concerns, said the Commissioner. Studies
will address a significant reduction in nuclear waste, as well as sound
ways of recycling or storing it.
The European Technology Platform will bring together all nuclear
energy stakeholders to implement their vision of how the sector should
develop in the short-, mid- and long-term, identifying the research
needed to make that vision a reality.
It will provide expert advice and recommendations to the European
Commission and national governments to help define and concentrate the
efforts and budgets on priorities agreed at EU level.
In this way, the EU hopes that it will reinforce the European
scientific base, while fostering dialogue on key issues such as
management of waste and safety, and the protection of populations
against radiological hazards. This is essential in order to reassure
the public that these issues are being addressed appropriately.
One of the partners in the Platform is the French Atomic Energy
Commission, the CEA, which has a long history of involvement in nuclear
research and is at the forefront of technological development in the
field as it works on fourth generation nuclear reactors.
According to its Director General, Alain Bugat, the CEA would like to play a leading and cooperative role in the platform.
'The CEA would like to be the big brother in the Sustainable
Nuclear Energy Technology Platform. The main approach behind the
platform will be to share infrastructure, undertake groundbreaking
research into future nuclear reactors and provide answers to the needs
of our industrial partners,' Mr Bugat told CORDIS News.
The platform forms part of the Commission's wider Strategic Energy
Technology Plan (SET Plan) to promote EU R&D efforts on low-carbon
technologies, due to be published at the end of 2007.
Copyright © European Communities, 2007. Neither the Commission of the European Communities, nor any person acting on its behalf, is responsible for the use, which might be made of the attached information. The attached information is drawn from the Community R&D Information Service (CORDIS). The CORDIS services are carried on the CORDIS Host - http://cordis.europa.eu. Access to CORDIS is currently available free-of-charge.

