World leaders promote nuclear energy as climate tool at Brussels summit

The first-ever summit by the IAEA to promote nuclear as "clean and reliable energy" follows on from last year's COP28 UN climate negotiations, at which 22 world leaders backed a call to triple the world's nuclear energy capacity by 2050.

World leaders pose in front of the Atomium during the IAEA Nuclear Energy Summit in Brussels, Belgium, March 21, 2024. / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

World leaders pose in front of the Atomium during the IAEA Nuclear Energy Summit in Brussels, Belgium, March 21, 2024. / Photo: Reuters

More than 30 countries –– including European nations, the United States, Brazil and China –– took part in the first-ever summit held by the United Nations' atomic energy agency to promote nuclear as a "clean and reliable source of energy".

"This is a fight where we have to use all the available, dispatchable, CO2-free energy sources for the common challenge," International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) head Rafael Grossi told the gathering on Thursday at the Atomium in Brussels –– a modernist landmark built for the 1958 World Fair.

The approach is anathema to a number of other European countries –– including Germany and Spain –– and to many environmentalists, who see the drive for nuclear as a harmful distraction from the need to invest massively, and immediately, in renewables.

The summit follows on from last year's COP28 UN climate negotiations, at which 22 world leaders backed a call to triple the world's nuclear energy capacity by 2050.

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'Key role'

"It took 28 conferences on climate change to recognise, at long last, that nuclear should be accelerated," Grossi said. "Better late than never."

Now, said Grossi, the focus was on "what we still need to do" –– including crucially on the question of financing.

Nuclear currently accounts for just under 10 percent of global electricity generation, with 438 plants operating across 31 countries.

More than 500 plants are at various stages of planning and development, with 61 under construction according to World Nuclear Association data.

"I see around the world, nuclear is making a comeback. A very strong comeback," International Energy Agency (IEA) chief Fatih Birol told reporters at the gathering.

Birol attributed the shift chiefly to the quest for carbon-free power source s but also the search for secure and stable energy following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

He said there was "a key role for nuclear", while also acknowledging that the "major part" of carbon-free electricity needed to come from renewables –– solar, wind and hydropower.

Reuters

Environmental activists, including Greenpeace, held a protest on the day of an IAEA Nuclear Energy Summit in Brussels, calling for a focus on renewable energy sources instead.

In the European Union, France has been spearheading a drive to establish nuclear as a key source of carbon-free energy in the bloc, which has included it in its roadmap to reaching its 2040 climate goals.

Questioned by reporters about nuclear safety risks, French President Emmanuel Macron pointed to France 's decades-long record of producing atomic energy "within a framework that is controlled, understood, mature".

"I say we should be much more worried, for instance, about CO2 emissions that have a direct impact on our health every day," Macron said.

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While nuclear plants generate almost no greenhouse gases, critics highlight that compared to renewables they can take decades to build, are expensive and generate hazardous waste.

The Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011 dealt the industry a severe blow and Russia's occupation of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in Ukraine, Europe's largest, has raised alarm in Kiev about the risks of a new Chornobyl disaster.

To make the point, a Greenpeace activist climbed a wall at the venue with a banner reading "Nuclear Fairy Tale".

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