RWE

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RWE background

RWE is an international energy and water business, with interests in Germany, the UK, Central and Eastern Europe, and the US.[1]

In the UK, it owns Thames Water Utilities, the largest water and sewage company in the country, with over 4,000 employees and 13 million customers across London and south-east England.[2]

It also owns the energy firm nPower, which supplies electricity and gas to 6.2 million customers. RWE nPower has major interests in renewable energy and developed the UK's first major offshore wind farm.[3]

RWE Nukem background

Nukem was set up in 1960 and was one of Germany's first nuclear power firms. It became a subsidiary of TESSAG Technische Systems und Services Aktiengesellschaft (Tessag) in 1999, which was later to become RWE Solutions. In 2001 Nukem bought AEA Technology's nuclear engineering arm.[4]

Nukem now offers design and build, decommissioning, land remediation, consultancy, radiation safety and nuclear support services. Its annual turnover in the UK is excess of £60 million, and £245 million worldwide. UK staff are based at permanent offices in Risley, Dounreay, Sellafield, Harwell and Winfrith.[5]

Leaks and dodgy reports

In October 2005, decommissioning work on a lab at Dounreay was stopped after routine tests on eight contractors working for Nukem suggested they had breathed in traces of plutonium. According to the local newspaper:

The lab, where reprocessing experiments were carried out on highly enriched uranium and plutonium, was shut down a year ago following a similar health scare involving 15 workers. Tests showed that some had inhaled tiny amounts of plutonium.[6]

In 1999, the reliability of an 'independent' Nukem report on the safety of nuclear waste transportation in Britain, commissioned by the government, was called into question after it emerged that the firm had close ties to BNFL, including a joint £54m contract to decommission a nuclear reactor at Sellafield. Nukem was paid £50,000 by the government to carry out a safety survey of BNFL trains carrying spent nuclear fuel. Unsurprisingly, it gave BNFL the all-clear.[7]

RWE and Greenpeace

In 2001 RWE and the environmental pressure group Greenpeace entered into a 'partnership' - backed by Tony Blair - to promote 'npower Juice', a "clean, green electricity at no extra cost to you or the planet". "Through our clean electricity, we can help people across the country make a difference," explained Andy Duff, CEO of RWE npower. "For every unit of electricity taken from the National Grid by customers of npower Juice, we will replace it with a unit of electricity from renewable sources. This will effectively offset their electricity use and help reduce the greenhouse gasses entering the atmosphere." Greenpeace, which does not benefit financially from the agreement, said that the project will lead to the creation of the North Hoyle wind farms off the coast of Wales.[8]

Who runs RWE Nukem?

RWE Nukem's website lists its senior executives: [1]

PR

Burson-Marsteller provided consultancy services for Thames Water in 2003/4 and for RWE npower and RWE Thames Water during 2005. [2] [3]

Corporate memberships

External links

Register of members and clients June-Nov 05 (pdf file).

Articles

Notes

  1. RWE website: 'RWE - A leading European utility company', undated, accessed February 2006.
  2. RWE website: 'RWE Thames Water', undated, accessed Jan 18 2010
  3. RWE website: 'RWE npower business', undated, accessed 18 Jan 2010
  4. A Brief History of RWE NUKEM Limited, RWE Nukem website, version placed in web archive 28 Apr 2006, accessed 18 Jan 2010
  5. A Brief History of RWE NUKEM Limited, RWE Nukem website, version placed in web archive 28 Apr 2006, accessed 18 Jan 2010
  6. Iain Grant, Inspectorate allays fears over run of mishaps at Dounreay, Press and Journal, October 19, 2005, accessed 18 Jan 2010
  7. Iain Grant, Inspectorate allays fears over run of mishaps at Dounreay, Press and Journal, October 19, 2005, accessed 18 Jan 2010
  8. npower & Greenpeace, npower website, version placed in web archive 11 Dec 2004, accessed in web archive Jan 18 2010