Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Leaving Euratom !!
With the recent headlines little if any coverage has been given to Mrs May's determination to leave Euratom as well as leaving the EU !
I suspect very few realise the consequences of such a decision.
http:// bruegel .org/20 17/02/b rexit-g oes-nuc lear-th e-conse quences -of-lea ving-eu ratom/
Put simply Euratom controls the entire European stocks of and access to Nuclear fuel!
Once out of Euratom , Euratom is a separate entity to the EU and we have been in Euratom since 1959, we no longer have access to fuel for our newly commissioned ,French / Chinese built, nuclear power plants!
Your views?
I suspect very few realise the consequences of such a decision.
http://
Put simply Euratom controls the entire European stocks of and access to Nuclear fuel!
Once out of Euratom , Euratom is a separate entity to the EU and we have been in Euratom since 1959, we no longer have access to fuel for our newly commissioned ,French / Chinese built, nuclear power plants!
Your views?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by EDDIE51. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Eddies1: For goodness sake get real. We'll simply come to a new arrangement with whomsoever we want. That is because it will be in our mutual best interest. You're going on about the fact that this has nothing do with nuclear weapons and then going on about nuclear weapons. You seem to be thinking that it is impossible to set up new regulatory bodies or arrangements. Why is it hard?
Why would it be a problem? Switzerland is independent for energy, why would Britain not be the same - as we already are. Apart from its own nuclear programme, the UK is surrounded by the sea with endless wave and wind power potential and it sits on vast quantities of coal with new oil sources still being discovered.
Khandro, I'm not saying it will be a problem. I'm saying that it is an example of the hundreds, if not thousands, of complications of leaving the EU. Each one will take time to sort, by a finite number of people. Each one will cost money.
If wind and wave were a viable solution we wouldn't be having new nuclear power stations built.
If wind and wave were a viable solution we wouldn't be having new nuclear power stations built.
There's something of a paradox in Brexiteers' complaints about how much being in the EU interfered in their lives, but seem convinced that it basically will take at most a week to clear off and be entirely separate. Really? I'm not suggesting that the UK can't survive without the EU, but the transition isn't exactly going to be smooth, is it?
With respect to NJ's point about how other countries can survive without the EU, that's true, but then they weren't a part of it to start with. I think a good analogy might be to think of conjoined twins, or some such: it's obvious that one person can survive on their own, and doesn't need a second person attached to them, but still: separation of conjoined twins is an operation that's fraught with risks and can go horribly wrong, because they weren't two separate people to start with and had become rather co-dependent as a result. It can also go right, and both twins lead perfectly happy and healthy lives separated, but if you just grabbed a chainsaw and cut the two apart in a few seconds it wouldn't end so well.
But anyway. Euratom is a complication I was only vaguely aware of, and I'm not therefore going to go on about how crap it's going to be now that we are leaving it, but like all other Brexit questions it deserves respect and to be taken seriously.
With respect to NJ's point about how other countries can survive without the EU, that's true, but then they weren't a part of it to start with. I think a good analogy might be to think of conjoined twins, or some such: it's obvious that one person can survive on their own, and doesn't need a second person attached to them, but still: separation of conjoined twins is an operation that's fraught with risks and can go horribly wrong, because they weren't two separate people to start with and had become rather co-dependent as a result. It can also go right, and both twins lead perfectly happy and healthy lives separated, but if you just grabbed a chainsaw and cut the two apart in a few seconds it wouldn't end so well.
But anyway. Euratom is a complication I was only vaguely aware of, and I'm not therefore going to go on about how crap it's going to be now that we are leaving it, but like all other Brexit questions it deserves respect and to be taken seriously.
jim
but seem convinced that it basically will take at most a week to clear off and be entirely separate. Really?
A link to anyone who thought that would be fantastic ... hilarious in fact.
jim
but the transition isn't exactly going to be smooth, is it?
It could be a lot smoother if there was a will for that ... but there isn't is there.
but seem convinced that it basically will take at most a week to clear off and be entirely separate. Really?
A link to anyone who thought that would be fantastic ... hilarious in fact.
jim
but the transition isn't exactly going to be smooth, is it?
It could be a lot smoother if there was a will for that ... but there isn't is there.
It's not a complication, it's merely one of the things to replace. One makes alternative plans then switches from existing process to new at the relevant point in time. There's no reason it can't go smoothly unless someone's trying to cause problems to overcome. And even then, you just deal with them.
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