Difference between revisions of "Nuclear rebuild: How the Different Newspapers Stack Up"
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''The Independent'' - Argues that the "wrong decision has already been made". The paper argues that the government's threee month consultation "is simply the final stage of a public relations exercise designed to prepare the ground for a Prime Ministerial volte face on nuclear energy. It is a classic New Labour spin operation". [http://comment.independent.co.uk/leading_articles/article340591.ece] | ''The Independent'' - Argues that the "wrong decision has already been made". The paper argues that the government's threee month consultation "is simply the final stage of a public relations exercise designed to prepare the ground for a Prime Ministerial volte face on nuclear energy. It is a classic New Labour spin operation". [http://comment.independent.co.uk/leading_articles/article340591.ece] | ||
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+ | * Hedging their bets | ||
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+ | ''The Guardian'' - The Argues that the "public has good reason to be very sceptical about the claim that there is no alternative to a massive increase in nuclear power station construction if our targets for cuts in greenhouse gas emissions are to be met. In addition to the usual objections to nuclear power - that it has proved far more expensive and less safe than proponents promised - there is a new one, that they will be a prime target for terrorists ...Nevertheless we cannot dismiss the new claim - that however un safe or expensive the nuclear option seems to be, the risks are far less than the alternative of allowing greenhouse gases to erode the viability of the planet itself. When environmentalists such as the Guardian's columnist George Monbiot - hardly Tony Blair's spin doctor - do the sums and find that "renewable" energies cannot save the world on present evidence without consideration of nuclear, it may be time to start examining some prejudices". [http://www.guardian.co.uk/leaders/story/0,,1653652,00.html] |
Revision as of 17:40, 9 February 2006
- For
The Times - Argues that "nuclear energy is necessary to bridge Britain’s energy gap" [1]
The Daily Telegraph - Argues that "Nuclear must be part of Britain's energy mix". For too long, argues the Telegraph "Labour has been paralysed by an irrational fear of civil nuclear power ... Compared with fossil fuels, nuclear power offers clean energy whose provision is not over-dependent on volatile foreign suppliers. Compared with renewables, it has a proven record of substantial electricity production." [The Daily Telegraph (2005) Nuclear Must be Part of Britain's Energy Mix, 30 November, p21]
- Against
The Independent - Argues that the "wrong decision has already been made". The paper argues that the government's threee month consultation "is simply the final stage of a public relations exercise designed to prepare the ground for a Prime Ministerial volte face on nuclear energy. It is a classic New Labour spin operation". [2]
- Hedging their bets
The Guardian - The Argues that the "public has good reason to be very sceptical about the claim that there is no alternative to a massive increase in nuclear power station construction if our targets for cuts in greenhouse gas emissions are to be met. In addition to the usual objections to nuclear power - that it has proved far more expensive and less safe than proponents promised - there is a new one, that they will be a prime target for terrorists ...Nevertheless we cannot dismiss the new claim - that however un safe or expensive the nuclear option seems to be, the risks are far less than the alternative of allowing greenhouse gases to erode the viability of the planet itself. When environmentalists such as the Guardian's columnist George Monbiot - hardly Tony Blair's spin doctor - do the sums and find that "renewable" energies cannot save the world on present evidence without consideration of nuclear, it may be time to start examining some prejudices". [3]