German anti-nuclear protests heat up ahead of 21 September election

About one thou­sand Cas­tor cas­kets full of nuclear waste are pro­duced by just one atom­ic pow­er sta­tion dur­ing its oper­a­tive life with­out there being a final repos­i­to­ry for it any­where.

That’s a point the Ger­man anti-nuclear activist group Cam­pact is mak­ing with demon­stra­tions in 12 cities of the coun­try, which goes to the polls on 27 Sep­tem­ber.

About one thou­sand Cas­tor cas­kets full of nuclear waste are pro­duced by just one atom­ic pow­er sta­tion dur­ing its oper­a­tive life with­out there being a final repos­i­to­ry for it any­where.

That’s a point the Ger­man anti-nuclear activist group Cam­pact is mak­ing with demon­stra­tions in 12 cities of the coun­try, which goes to the polls on 27 Sep­tem­ber.

The con­ser­v­a­tives of Chan­cel­lor Angela Merkel, keen back­ers of nuclear pow­er, are tipped to win by a large mar­gin.

Last Fri­day Com­pact put on its spec­tac­u­lar show in Berlin, the cap­i­tal, on Sat­ur­day they were in Ham­burg, the sec­ond-largest city.

Part of the action is a huge life­like mock-up of a Cas­tor cas­ket, the kind of recep­ta­cle in which waste is trans­port­ed and stored.

Mean­while 30 farm trac­tors from the Gor­leben waste dump area are rolling towards Berlin, to be joined by 100 more lat­er, for a demo on 5 Sep­tem­ber expect­ed to draw tens of thou­sands of pro­test­ers. More than 1,000 peo­ple and 120 trac­tors sent them on their jour­ney of hun­dreds of kilo­me­tres. At this writ­ing they had passed through Lueneb­urg, Uelzen and Braun­schweig.

A left­wing news­pa­per, “taz”, reports that nuclear pow­er com­pa­nies are giv­ing their appren­tices time off work to attend a pro-nuclear demon­stra­tion at the Bib­lis pow­er sta­tion, one of whose two blocks is to be shut down by the end of this year. It is sit­u­at­ed in a heav­i­ly indus­tri­alised and pop­u­lat­ed cen­tral Ger­man area encom­pass­ing Frankfurt/Main, Darm­stadt and Mannheim. The pow­er com­pa­nies deny that they’re pres­sur­ing the trainees, but one source in the RWE com­pa­ny said there’s a clear order to take part. If all do, that would make 10,000 pro-nuclear demon­stra­tors.

Mean­while the Fed­er­al Radi­a­tion pro­tec­tion agency reports that a lump of 20,000 tonnes is like­ly to drop 40 to 45 metres out of the ceil­ing of a for­mer salt mine in Morsleben which is one of sev­er­al dodgy nuclear waste dumps in Ger­many.

The agency says there’s even a pos­si­bil­i­ty that the entire ceil­ing could col­lapse. Peo­ple in the area would be able to feel it, glass­es would wob­ble. Brine is run­ning in the mine and has even formed sta­lagtites.

Morsleben used to be the nuclear dump of the for­mer com­mu­nist East Ger­many and Ms Merkel, then envi­ron­ment min­is­ter, allowed dump­ing to con­tin­ue there despite warn­ings by sci­en­tists that it was unsafe. It was final­ly stopped by a court order, ini­ti­at­ed by Green­peace.Anti-nuclear demonstration in central Hamburg