Difference between revisions of "Siemens AG"

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Löscher said Siemens would continue to manufacture components, such as steam turbines, which are used in the conventional power industry and can also be used in nuclear plants.  
 
Löscher said Siemens would continue to manufacture components, such as steam turbines, which are used in the conventional power industry and can also be used in nuclear plants.  
  
Instead he said the would boost its work in the renewable energy sector. "Germany's shift towards renewable energies is the project of the century," he said, adding that he saw Germany on track to hit its target of generating 35 percent of its energy using natural power sources by 2020. <ref> SPIEGEL, [http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/response-to-fukushima-siemens-to-exit-nuclear-energy-business-a-787020.html Siemens to Exit Nuclear Energy Business], 19 September 2011, acc 17 July 2012</ref>
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Instead he said they would boost its work in the renewable energy sector. "Germany's shift towards renewable energies is the project of the century," he said, adding that he saw Germany on track to hit its target of generating 35 percent of its energy using natural power sources by 2020. <ref> SPIEGEL, [http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/response-to-fukushima-siemens-to-exit-nuclear-energy-business-a-787020.html Siemens to Exit Nuclear Energy Business], 19 September 2011, acc 17 July 2012</ref>
  
 
==External lobbyists==
 
==External lobbyists==

Revision as of 02:18, 7 November 2012

Nuclear spin.png This article is part of the Nuclear Spin project of Spinwatch.

Siemens AG is a German multinational conglomerate company headquartered in Munich, Germany. It is the largest Europe-based electronics and electrical engineering company.

Nuclear industry pull out

In September 2011 Siemen's chief executive Peter Loescher announced the firm would withdraw entirely from the nuclear industry. The move was a response to the Fukushima disaster and "the clear positioning of German society and politics for a pullout from nuclear energy".

"The chapter for us is closed," he said, announcing that the firm will no longer be involved in managing the building or financing of nuclear plants. Siemens was responsible for building all 17 of Germany's existing nuclear power plants, which the German chancellor Angela Merkel announced would be shut down by 2022.[1]

Löscher said Siemens would continue to manufacture components, such as steam turbines, which are used in the conventional power industry and can also be used in nuclear plants.

Instead he said they would boost its work in the renewable energy sector. "Germany's shift towards renewable energies is the project of the century," he said, adding that he saw Germany on track to hit its target of generating 35 percent of its energy using natural power sources by 2020. [2]

External lobbyists

In the UK:

Resources

Website:http://www.siemens.com/entry/cc/en/

Notes

  1. BBC News, Siemens to quit nuclear industry, 18 September 2011
  2. SPIEGEL, Siemens to Exit Nuclear Energy Business, 19 September 2011, acc 17 July 2012
  3. Association of Professional Political Consultants. APPC Register Entry, 1 Dec 2011 - 29 Feb 2012 and APPC Register Entry, 1 Jun - 31 Aug 2011
  4. Association of Professional Political Consultants. APPC Register Entry, 1 Jun - 31 Aug 2011
  5. APPC Register Entry, 1 Sep - 30 Nov 2010