Greens guru
offers to bury nuclear waste in his garden
Jun 8, 2006 - Daily Telegraph London
Author(s): Roger Highfield Science Editor
PROF James Lovelock, the scientist who inspired the Greens, yesterday
offered to store high level nuclear waste on his land if it would help
to revive the fortunes of atomic energy in Britain.
Last month the Prime Minister said that a new generation of nuclear
power stations would have to be built to meet energy needs and avoid
dependence on foreign imports, pre-empting the Government's own energy
review.
But the economics of the nuclear industry have always been dogged by
the failure of politicians of all parties to decide what to do with the
high level nuclear waste.
In April the argument over what to do with Britain's 60-year legacy
of civil nuclear waste returned to where it was a decade ago when a
committee recommended burying it in a hole in the ground.
But where that hole should be remains the big issue.
"I have offered to take the full output of a nuclear power station in
my back yard,'' said Prof Lovelock, who lives on the border between
Devon and Cornwall.
"I would be glad to have it. I would use it for home heating. It
would be a waste not to use it.''
His neighbours are enthusiastic supporters, he said. "They are all
farmers and they have got a strong sense of the value of money.''
As for the local council, "one can just imagine putting in planning
permission to store high level nuclear waste''.
The green movement has "built up a miasma of fear'' about nuclear
waste, he said.
"I am a scientist when they [environmentalists] are mostly not,'' he
added, arguing that new reactors should be built on the old sites.
The green movement's recommendations of sustainable development and
renewable energy are well intentioned but too late, said Prof Lovelock,
who was discussing his ideas yesterday at the Cheltenham Science
Festival, which is backed by The Daily Telegraph.
He added that many members of the current Labour Government "are old
CND [Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament] marchers. It was a dream of
theirs to have a nuclear-free Britain and they hate to see that dream
being spoiled. But we are facing a serious energy shortage if we don't
do something about it''.
Prof Lovelock is best known for his ideas that portray Earth as a
living thing, a super-organism - named Gaia, after the ancient Earth
goddess - in which creatures, rocks, air and water interact in subtle
ways to ensure the environment remains stable.
Meanwhile as if the prospect of drought, heat waves and more violent
storms is not worrying enough, Prof Bill McGuire of University College
London, gave a warning last night that climate change could also trigger
volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and tsunamis.
The idea that climate change is linked to geological catastrophes is
not as far-fetched as it might sound, Prof McGuire, a director of the
university's Benfield Hazard Research Centre, told the festival
yesterday.
"Evidence is stacking up that changes in global climate can and do
affect the frequencies of earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and
catastrophic sea floor landslides,'' he said. "Not only has this
happened several times throughout Earth's history, the evidence suggests
that it is starting to happen again.
''There is a growing consensus that if climate change continues
unchecked, we can expect not only a warmer future, but a more
geologically turbulent one too.''
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