Jordanians Step Up Nuclear Protests

jordan-greenpeace-nuclear-protestAnti-nuclear campaigners in Jordan have staged another protest against the nation’s plans to build a nuclear reactor

Around a month ago, Jordanians held a protest in Amman against the government’s plans to build a nuclear station which they remarked posed more risks than potential positive impacts. Now, they have stepped up their protests with support from Greenpeace Jordan which is urging the country to reconsider renewable energy resources as an alternative to nuclear power.

Wearing gasmasks and surrounded with mocked-up radioactive nuclear waste barrels, the campaigners insisted that nuclear power was dirty, unsafe and a security threat. The nuclear plans are part of Jordan’s effort to become more self-sufficient at providing its own energy.

The Kingdom’s nuclear power programme consists of building a 1,000 megawatt (MW) nuclear reactor by the end of the next decade and the construction of up to four plants to produce over half the country’s electricity needs.

Raouf Dabbas, a senior advisor to the Ministry of Environment in Jordan told Green Prophet in a previous article that the country imports around 98% of its oil and energy from the outside and needed to look for sustainable forms of energy. Renewable energy accounts for under 1% of the nation’s current energy mix.

Jordan has set itself the target of sourcing 20% of its energy mix from sustainable sources by 2020. However, campaigners state that the government needs to seriously reconsider renewable energy alternatives such as solar and wind power which provide clean and safe energy rather than relying on nuclear energy.

Concerns have been raised over safety as Jordan lies on a fault line (with predications of a serious earthquake every 100 years) and doesn’t readily have the large amounts of water needed to cool a nuclear reactor.

Jordan has already received several bids from energy companies to build the 1,000 MW nuclear reactor. The country will also begin receiving bids for its first 90 MW wind farm this month (which will the country’s largest) – judging by the MW, Jordan is clearly happier putting its eggs in the nuclear basket.

:: Image via Hamza Omari/ Greenpeace Jordan/facebook.

For more on Jordan and nuclear power see:

Protest Against Nuclear Power In Jordan

Jordan Signs up for Epic ‘Sahara Forest Project’

Jordanian Environmentalist to Fight Ajloun Forest Construction

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Arwa Aburawa
Author: Arwa Aburawa

Arwa is a Muslim freelance writer who is interested in everything climate change related and how Islam can inspire more people to care for their planet and take active steps to save it while we can. She is endlessly suspicious of all politicians and their ceaseless meetings, especially as they make normal people believe that they are not part of the solution when they are the ONLY solution. Her Indian auntie is her model eco-warrier, and when Arwa is not busy helping out in the neighborhood alleyway garden, swap shopping or attempting fusion vegetarian dishes- with mixed success, she’d like to add- she can be found sipping on foraged nettle tea.

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