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Nuclear Policies in Central Europe

Environmental Policy and Enlargement of the European Union: Austria’s Policies towards Nuclear Reactors in Neighboring Countries

by Michael Getzner (Author)
©2003 Monographs 106 Pages

Summary

Austria’s anti-nuclear policies are rooted in the successful anti-nuclear referendum on the Zwentendorf nuclear power plant (Lower Austria) in 1978 and the great impact of the Chernobyl catastrophe on Austria in 1986. Since about 1990, official Austria has pursued anti-nuclear policies not only at home but also abroad. In particular, reactors in Central and Eastern European Countries (CEEC) are the focal points of Austria’s foreign anti-nuclear policies. Strategies include increasing nuclear safety, promoting energy efficiency and sustainable energy sources (such as renewable resources), and extending international legal frameworks to account for nuclear safety. Involvement in domestic energy issues in other countries is not an easy task, and while Austrian policy makers have had some success in increasing awareness of nuclear safety in Europe, they have also made a number of strategic mistakes. Notwithstanding real and substantiated concerns regarding nuclear safety, Austrian policies have lost credibility during recent years. This book explores the history and the development of Austrian anti-nuclear policies, and discusses the political economy of such policies. Particular emphasis is laid on the 2002 referendum against the Temelín reactor in the neighboring Czech Republic.

Details

Pages
106
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631507476
Language
English
Keywords
Kernenergiepolitik Atompolitik Österreich Umweltpolitik Außenpolitik Europäische Union Zentraleuropa Mitteleuropa
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2003. 105 pp., 1 fig., 2 tables, 1 graph

Biographical notes

Michael Getzner (Author)

The Author: Michael Getzner is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Klagenfurt (Austria). His main fields of research include economic policy and public finance, particularly ecological and environmental economics, and energy, regional and cultural economics and policies.

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Title: Nuclear Policies in Central Europe