Grelinette wrote:If Nicolat Hulot is one of them
He is one of them ... let's wait to see if he will do something other than eco-tartuffe ...
Grelinette wrote:If Nicolat Hulot is one of them
"18:56 - EDF is already under the nomination of Nicolas Hulot
Barely appointed to the Ministry of Ecological and Inclusive Transition, Nicolas Hulot is already changing the situation. EDF appears to be its first victim. Following the announcement of his appointment, the leading producer and supplier of electricity in France saw its share fall on the stock market. "The title EDF suddenly stalled, losing up to 6,7% to 8,83 euros", note Les Échos. In question ? The unfavorable nuclear policy that the new minister could adopt. "
Christophe wrote:Ohhh the "poor EDF victim" ... well when you do bullshit for years, you have to go to the cashier one day or another ...
dirk pitt wrote:we will perhaps avoid the accident at bilibino if the floating power station arrives before all the ground has melted around bilibino.
or else, the accident will be the floating power station.
see here
Russia presents the world's first floating nuclear power plant
Russia presented the world's first floating nuclear power plant on Saturday at a ceremony for its mooring in Murmansk, a port in the far north, a project that should supply remote regions but worries environmental organizations.
Built in Saint Petersburg, the Akademik Lomonosov moored in Murmansk port on Saturday and presented to the press on Saturday. It must be loaded with nuclear fuel before reaching its final destination, a remote region of eastern Siberia.
Russia presents the world's first floating nuclear power plant on May 19, 2018 during a mooring ceremony in Murmansk, port of the Far North / © AFP / Alexander NEMENOV
Built by the Russian public conglomerate Rosatom, this massive floating block, 144 meters long and 30 wide, has two reactors with a capacity of 35 MW each (compared to more than 1.000 MW for new generation reactors), close to those used by icebreakers.
Without a motor, this 21.000-ton barge will be towed in the summer of 2019 to the port of Pevek, in the Chukotka Autonomous District in the Russian Far East, 350 km north of the Arctic Circle.
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