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Calls on sector to lead the way! Nuclear power stations could be the in thing PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 03 December 2009 09:21

Dungeness Nuclear Power Station

The future of a climate resilient Britain depends on the engineering sector’s response to the challenge. That’s the message from Environment Secretary Hilary Benn speaking at the joint Defra and Engineering the Future Conference.

Mr Benn called on the sector to lead the way in building Britain’s future infrastructure - from transport networks to nuclear power stations to withstand the changes to our climate.

Hilary Benn said: “The floods of last month, and the collapse of bridges, show us how much a resilient infrastructure matters. Protecting ourselves against negative impacts, and also taking advantage of the benefits of a changing climate, is all part of building Britain’s future.

“The UK’s engineering sector is vital to tackling this challenge and is well-placed lead in designing and engineering climate resilient and low carbon infrastructure for global markets, as well as the UK.”

Last summer Defra published the Climate Change Projections 09, based on Met Office science. These illustrate the extent of the changes the UK might face with warmer and wetter winters, hotter and drier summers, increased risk of coastal erosion and more severe weather events such as flooding and heat waves. Already all ten of the hottest years on record globally have been since 1990, and the extreme weather experienced in recent years and most notably the flooding in Cumbria has tested the resilience of the country’s infrastructure.

Yesterdays conference brought together senior engineers from the Engineering the Future group and executives from across industry, government policy and academia, to look at the global opportunities for the UK’s engineering sector in climate change adaptation, identify the challenges to action and help to shape joint working between Government and the engineering profession.

Professor Robert Mair, Senior Vice President of the Royal Academy of Engineering said:

"Resilience in the face of climate change is a challenge all engineers must rise to. In partnership with our customers, policy makers and the users of the infrastructure we provide, engineers can provide the solutions that will protect us from the worst effects of climate change. This is essential to maintaining and developing our modern way of life, as well as sharing the benefits of progress equitably across the world. The challenge has never been greater for engineering."

For further information on the climate projections launched last summer see click here. For further information on the Government’s Adapting to Climate Change Programme, see here.

Photo: Fred Dawson


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Kelvin Currie  - Nuclear Power Stations   |2009-12-03 04:41:06
We should have been building nuclear power stations ove the past 20 years. This is what has happened in France and they are a net exporter of electricity with negligibel carbon footprint.

If we had a nuclear power station on The Island, we would not have to rely on the vulnerability of cables across The Solent*, or have the disfugurement of wind turbines.

The cross-Solent ables would be a back-u p of course and I do know there is a power station in East Cowes and a small waste-derived one near Newport.
Kelvin Currie  - Additional   |2009-12-03 04:41:59
As you can see, although I am a qualified engineer, my typing is rubbish! My apologies for that.
Milky Farmer   |2009-12-03 05:08:06
I dont personally think nuke power should be for the Island.

The Island would never have one over here so we would still be relying on cables as the power plant would be placed at Fawley or a place o ut the way of our AONB.

If we can't get turbines that come down after so long then who would want a nuke power plant on the doorstep?

Over in Wales people in their community's have wind farms and so me turbines belong to the community so they sell power back to the national grid. They have meetings to see how they should spend the ptofits *this includes heat proofing homes and making the communit y look better.

I think if this island was really an eco-island we could have turbines over here and make us stand out on the map.
I think this would bring more green businesses, green jobs and even a ttract researcher and delevlopers

We probably never be fully self efficent here but least we could say we tried. And if it did go wrong and it wasn't the right choice, its not to much trouble removin g them turbines compared to clearing a nuke power plant
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