Germany says energy supply safe despite nuclear exit
Last three reactors will go offline on Saturday
13 April, 16:00The debate has riven the coalition led by Social Democrat Chancellor Olaf Scholz, with the support of the pro-business FDP and the fiercely anti-nuclear Greens. The phase-out has been "a dramatic mistake, with painful economic and ecological consequences", the FDP's deputy leader Wolfgang Kubicki told the Funke media group. Opposition figures have also called for an extension. "We want the three current nuclear power plants to continue to operate and three more to be made available in reserve" to overcome the current energy crisis, Bavaria's conservative leader Markus Soeder told website Focus Online.
"The nuclear exit makes our country safer," said Environment Minister Steffi Lemke. "The risks of nuclear power are ultimately unmanageable." The end of nuclear hailed a "new era of energy production", Lemke said, with the government betting on the speedy expansion of renewable energy to cover its needs.
The increase in wind and solar power would provide "additional security", Habeck said, with the minister aiming to source 80 percent of Germany's energy from green sources by 2030.
sea/fec/fb (ANSA-AFP).