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NIRS Alert: This Valentine's Day, February 14: Before you go away to that romantic rendezvous. This Valentine's Day: CALL YOUR CONGRESSMEMBERS! And tell them: NO SWEETHEART DEALS FOR THE NUCLEAR POWER INDUSTRY! The FY 2008 federal budget released by George Bush February 5 includes whopping increases for nuclear power and cuts for renewable energy and energy efficiency programs needed to address the climate crisis. A Public Citizen statement providing more details is below. Show your love for the planet, and join thousands of people
in calling both of your senators and your representative with a simple
message: It's
time to stop wasting more of our tax dollars on ineffective, dangerous and
unnecessary nuclear power programs. We need to redirect those funds where
they will help most: for solar power, energy efficiency, wind power, geothermal,
and so
on. We have a good chance for success with the new Congress, but it won't
happen Phone Numbers: The main U.S. Capitol Switchboard numbers are 202-224-3121 or 202-225-3121. You can reach every member of Congress from those numbers. There are also toll-free numbers you can use. These are: 1-800-828-0498, 1-800-459-1887, 1-800-614-2803, 1-866-340-9281, 1-866-220-0044. Please forward this Alert widely! Put up on your blogs, myspace and similar pages! Spread the word! --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the NIRS E-Mail Alert list. You are on this list because you signed up on our website, at a NIRS table at a concert or other event, on a petition, or directly to NIRS. Your name and address are never sold, rented, or traded with anyone for any reason. For address changes or to unsubscribe, just send an e-mail to nirsnet@nirs.org. Your friends and colleagues can join this list by sending a note to nirsnet@nirs.org Feb. 5, 2007 Bush Administration Budget Proposes to Squander More Than a Billion Dollars on Unsafe and Polluting Nuclear Power and Nuclear Waste Programs in FY 2008 Statement of Michele Boyd, Legislative Director, Public Citizen's Energy Program Just how much taxpayer money does the federal government
have to squander before it realizes that it is chasing a nuclear power
mirage? Apparently, more than
a billion dollars in Fiscal Year 2008 alone. The Bush administration's
budget Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. * $4 billion in proposed loan guarantees for nuclear and coal plants in FY 2008, compared to a $5 billion cap for biofuels, electricity transmission and the vast array of renewable energies. The DOE set these amounts, but according to the budget request, has yet to evaluate the financial risks for U.S. taxpayers. A 2003 estimate by the Congressional Budget Office concluded the risk of loan default for a new nuclear plant would be 'œwell above 50 percent.'? Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your
privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the
Internet. * $802 million for nuclear power research and development, a
38 percent increase
from the FY 2007 request (the pending FY 2007 Continuing Resolution does
not provide full funding). More than $1.4 billion has been spent on nuclear
power research and development since FY 2001. Yet it is unlikely that we
will see any new reactors before 2017 ' if ever. Meanwhile,
significant efficiency measures and renewable energies could be implemented
in the next few years if federal Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. * $114 million for the Nuclear Power 2010 program, which pays the wealthy nuclear industry for half the cost of applying for new reactors and licensing new designs. More than $251 million has been appropriated for this program since FY 2001. The DOE has granted $260 million to a consortium of utilities and manufacturing companies, called NuStart, for only one construction and operation license application. Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. * $36.1 million for developing designs for the 'œnext generation'? of nuclear reactors. More than $200 million has been spent on the program since FY 2001. According to the DOE, these designs will cost between $610 million and $1 billion. None of these designs is part of any of the new reactor proposals. New reactors would also mean more radioactive waste, but the Bush administration budget has no solutions: Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. * $405 million in FY 2008 for the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP), a program to promote reprocessing that the Bush administration first announced last year. This represents a $285 million increase from the pending FY 2007 Continuing Resolution for the ill-defined program. Reprocessing is expensive and the most polluting part of the nuclear cycle. It also would threaten U.S. national security by producing highly radioactive plutonium that is vulnerable to theft. More than $586 million has been appropriated for reprocessing research since FY 2001. But according to the National Academy of Sciences, a full-scale reprocessing and plutonium fuel program for the waste that we have today would cost at least $100 billion (1997 dollars). There is significant skepticism in Congress about the partnership. The report of the House FY 2007 Energy and Water Appropriations bill found that 'œthe Department of Energy has failed to provide sufficient detailed information to enable Congress to understand fully all aspects of this initiative, including cost, schedule, technology development plan, and waste streams from GNEP.'? Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your
privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the
Internet. * $494.5 million for the proposed high-level waste repository
at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, a $49 million increase for the program. Despite
claims by the DOE that its priority is to submit a 'œhigh quality'?
license application to the In comparison to lavish funding for the mature nuclear industry,
the administration proposes to keep solar funding flat, to cut wind and
weatherization budgets and to eliminate geothermal funding. As with past
Bush administration budgets, the real solutions for combating climate change
and meeting energy needs ' renewables and efficiency ' get
the very, very short |
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