Difference between revisions of "Royal Academy of Engineering"

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'''The Royal Academy of Engineering'''[http://www.raeng.org.uk/about/default.htm] is a pro-Nuclear British body that claims to "lead debate by guiding informed thinking and influencing public policy." According to ''The Times'', "[r]eports from the Royal Academy of Engineers and the [[Institution of Civil Engineers]] have told ministers that they will have to approve new nuclear power stations to guarantee future supplies." Its president, Sir [[Alec Broers]], who is also the former Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University, has called nuclear energy critical for Britain's future.[http://www.world-nuclear.org/opinion/times180803.htm] In response to the Cabinet Office's 2002 Energy Review, the body published a report calling the government's interest in renewable energy "hopelessly unrealistic". Ian Fells, a member of the body, called the energy policy's aims "laudable" but declared them "largely wishful thinking". (''The Times'', August 30, 2002)
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'''The Royal Academy of Engineering'''[http://www.raeng.org.uk/about/default.htm] is a pro-Nuclear British body that claims to "lead debate by guiding informed thinking and influencing public policy." According to ''The Times'', "[r]eports from the Royal Academy of Engineers and the [[Institution of Civil Engineers]] have told ministers that they will have to approve new nuclear power stations to guarantee future supplies." Its president, Sir [[Alec Broers]], who is also the former Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University, has called nuclear energy critical for Britain's future.[http://www.world-nuclear.org/opinion/times180803.htm] In response to the Cabinet Office's 2002 Energy Review, the body published a report calling the government's interest in renewable energy "hopelessly unrealistic". [[Ian Fells]], a member of the body, called the energy policy's aims "laudable" but declared them "largely wishful thinking". (''The Times'', August 30, 2002)
  
 
==Key Personnel==
 
==Key Personnel==

Revision as of 22:22, 28 January 2006

The Royal Academy of Engineering[1] is a pro-Nuclear British body that claims to "lead debate by guiding informed thinking and influencing public policy." According to The Times, "[r]eports from the Royal Academy of Engineers and the Institution of Civil Engineers have told ministers that they will have to approve new nuclear power stations to guarantee future supplies." Its president, Sir Alec Broers, who is also the former Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University, has called nuclear energy critical for Britain's future.[2] In response to the Cabinet Office's 2002 Energy Review, the body published a report calling the government's interest in renewable energy "hopelessly unrealistic". Ian Fells, a member of the body, called the energy policy's aims "laudable" but declared them "largely wishful thinking". (The Times, August 30, 2002)

Key Personnel

President: Alec Broers
Chief Executive: Philip Greenish

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