Young climate activist tells Greenpeace to drop
‘old-fashioned’ anti-nuclear stance
Swedish teenager Ia Anstoot says group’s
‘unscientific’ opposition to EU nuclear power serves fossil fuel interests
Helena
Horton Environment reporter
Tue 29 Aug
2023 05.00 BST
An
18-year-old climate activist has called for Greenpeace to drop its
“old-fashioned and unscientific” campaign against nuclear power in the EU.
In April,
the environmental campaign group announced it would appeal against the EU
Commission’s decision to include nuclear power in its classification system for
sustainable finance. This “taxonomy” is designed as a guide for private
investors wanting to fund green projects, aiming to boost environmental
investment.
Ia
Aanstoot, from Sweden, who for three years took part in the Friday school
strikes movement started by Greta Thunberg, said Greenpeace’s legal challenge
served fossil fuel interests instead of climate action.
With
campaigners from five other EU countries, Aanstoot has launched the Dear
Greenpeace campaign, asking the NGO to “drop your old-fashioned and
unscientific opposition to nuclear power, and join us in the fight against
fossil fuels instead”.
This week,
Aanstoot submitted papers to the EU court of justice asking to become an
“interested party” in the upcoming legal battle between the European Commission
and Greenpeace. If the court approves the request, she and other pro-nuclear
campaigners will be able to provide testimony in favour of nuclear power.
Greenpeace
has argued that the EU classification system is “greenwashing” that allows
nuclear power plants to receive money that otherwise would have gone to
renewables. Lawyers acting for the NGO have said nuclear energy causes
“significant harm to the environment” so should not be included in the
taxonomy.
Aanstoot
said: “Over a third of the clean energy in the EU is nuclear power, so
Greenpeace’s motion to get rid of it is really harmful, I think. And I would
definitely prefer to be working together with Greenpeace to get rid of fossil
fuels. But when they are actively fighting such a large and useful tool like
nuclear power, I don’t feel like I can work with them.
“Greenpeace
is stuck in the past fighting clean, carbon-free nuclear energy while the world
is literally burning. We need to be using all the tools available to address
climate change and nuclear is one of them. I’m tired of having to fight my
fellow environmentalists about this when we should be fighting fossil fuels
together.”
She has
joined with other young campaigners from Poland, Sweden, France, Finland and
the Netherlands.
One of
these, Julia Galosh, a 22-year-old biologist, said: “I’ve protested opposite
Greenpeace in horror as they campaigned to stop Germany’s nuclear reactors –
something which led to much more demand for coal. Now they want to stop my home
country of Poland from transitioning from coal to nuclear. Enough is enough.”
Aanstoot
thinks this is a generational issue, with younger environmentalists more keen
on nuclear than those from older generations.
She said:
“I feel like a lot of the arguments [that] are used from Greenpeace and other
older environmentalist … are very identity-based. It nearly feels like being
anti-nuclear is a question of identity for these older environmentalists. These
old issues are ones that nuclear has mostly moved past, and also the global
situation has changed. In the 60s and 70s during the anti-nuclear protests, the
climate crisis was not as much of a concern as it is today.
“I feel
like it’s just a matter of moving on with the times and the scientists have
moved on – the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] now says that
nuclear is a really important tool.”
A
Greenpeace EU spokesperson said: “We have the greatest respect for folks who
are worried about the climate crisis and want to throw everything we have at
the problem, but building new nuclear plants just isn’t a viable solution. The
top priority is to cut carbon emissions as fast and, ideally, as cheaply as
possible, and nuclear fails on both scores. The new plant at Hinkley C is over
a decade behind schedule and billions over budget. The next one in line, at
Sizewell C, may not even start generating energy until today’s newborns turn
teenagers. And the industry has no long-term solution for safely storing the
radioactive waste that will remain dangerous for thousands of years.
“The good
news is that we don’t need new nuclear. Solar and wind technologies are a much
cheaper and quicker way to cut emissions, and with modern storage tech, 100
percent renewable systems are perfectly possible. Encouraging investments into
nuclear energy by including it in the EU taxonomy risks diverting funding away
from renewables, home insulation and support for people hit by extreme weather.
We don’t have the luxury of endless time and resources so we should focus them
on the solutions with the best chance of delivering.”

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