October 18th 2005
Finland: How Kyoto was used as an
argument ?and what happened afterwards
The need to protect climate is more and more often
used as an argument for nuclear power. In one
European country, Finland, this argument was
successfully used by the nuclear lobby, the
Parliament ratified in May 2002 the permission to
build the 5th nuclear power station. It might be
worthwhile to know how this decision was prepared
and what happened afterwards.
Finland's nuclear history in a nutshell
Finland built 4 nuclear power stations in the second
half of 1970ies and the first half of 1980ies. The
first nuclear project was a part of bilateral trade
between Finland and Soviet Union agreed between the
that time president Kekkonen and the Soviet
leadership. At that time Finland exported into
Soviet Union mainly industrial products and bought
mainly raw materials, as oil. Soviet Union wanted to
sell some industrial products, too, and for this the
nuclear reactors were taken to a part of this trade.
Soon also another Soviet reactor was ordered. These
2 power station units were built in the island of
Hästholmen in the city of Loviisa on the southern
coast. Fortunately, these were not "Chernobyl-type"
designs but pressurized water reactors.
The Finnish industry leaders did not want to be
dependent on Soviet nuclear design only and several
big companies formed a joint company TVO
(Teollisuuden Voima, Power for the Industry), which
ordered 2 nuclear units from the Swedish company
Asea Atom. Both of these units are of the boiling
water reactor type. These were built in the island
Olkiluoto, in the Eurajoki municipality on the west
coast.
In the first half of the 1980ies the common
thinking in the Finnish energy sector was that many
more nuclear reactors are needed. The decision on
the 5th nuclear reactor was already in the pipeline
in the 1980ies, but the Chernobyl accident in April
1986 stopped this plan. The legislation was changed
so that for each new nuclear unit the permission of
the Parliament is needed.
The application for the 5th nuclear power station
was renewed after the 1991 elections. Most people
believed that the Parliament would give the
permission. But after a very intensive debate both
in the Parliament and in the whole society, the
Parliament rejected this permission, in autumn 1993,
with 107 no votes out of 200. But the nuclear lobby
never accepted this as a final end of the story. And
finally, in May 2002 the Parliament gave the
permission.
2001: "Nuclear power the cheapest option for
Kyoto"
Nuclear power seems to be a wonder remedy for
everything, if you believe the arguments of nuclear
lobbyists. In the 1980ies it was advocated simply to
fill the power thirst of the industry. In the first
half of the 1990ies, when Finland was undergoing a
very severe recession, nuclear power was the remedy
to boost growth and employment. And when Kyoto
Protocol saw the daylight in December 1997, nuclear
power became the way to curb greenhouse gas
emissions.
I was minister for the environment in the second
cabinet led by Prime Minister Lipponen. This cabinet
was formed after elections in March 1999. It was a
coalition of 5 parties, one of them my party, the
Greens. One of the first decisions of this cabinet
was to prepare a national climate action program, to
see how to meet our Kyoto target. The Ministry of
Trade and Industry, which is responsible for energy
policy was given the task to lead this work, under
Ms Mönkäre, the minister. As the minister for
environment, I, of course, followed rather closely
this work.
The results of this work were published and given
to the Parliament as a communication of the
government in spring 2001, titled "The National
Cimate Srategy". There were two alternative
scenarios. Both met Finlandīs Kyoto target for the
years 2008-2012 (to keep the emissions on the same
level as they were in 1990). There were 3 main
elements in the first, non-nuclear option: energy
efficiency, domestic renewables and replacing coal
with natural gas. In also the nuclear option
renewables and energy effiency were promoted, but
not as much as in the non-nuclear option, and most
of the coal use in electricity production was
replaced by nuclear power after the 5th nuclear
power station was connected to the grid.
The basic assumptions for the economic
calculations more or less favoured the nuclear
option. E.g. no technological development leding to
cheaper prices of new clean energy technology was
assumed. This way the nuclear option seemed slightly,
but only very slightly cheaper than the non-noclear
option. The difference in the year 2010 was between
0,1-03, % of GDP. Anyone who knows anything about
forecasting economy, knows that even the next year
cannot be forecasted with this precision, let alone
a decade. For an average family this difference
meant some tens of euros per year.
Anyway, when the National Climate Strategy was
published, the main headlines said that nuclear is
the cheapest way to meet our Kyoto target. The
ministry of trade and industry presented the results
as if there would be costs only in the non nuclear
option, not in the nuclear scenario.
One of the several strange details in this work
was the following. One of the basic assumptions
which made the nuclear option to seem cheaper was
that in this option coal burning was not reduced
before 2008-2010. Therefore the nuclear option
showed to emit more carbon dioxide than the
non-nuclear option in the graphs illustrating the
forecast for emissions of these two scenarios. So,
the nuclear option seemed a little cheaper but also
dirtier. The CO2 emission graphs were censored from
the version which was published and given to the
Parliament.
2002: "Nuclear power the only option for Kyoto"
In January 2002 the Government majority voted in
favour of giving the permission for the 5th nuclear
power station and proposed this to the Parliament.
The Greens and the Left Alliance voted against.
The nuclear lobby had changed argumentation since
the previous year. They did not say that nuclear is
the cheapest way to meet the Kyoto target, they said
nuclear is the only option. Otherwise families would
be short of electricity in wintertime when it can be
-25 oC or colder, and Finland would become too
dependent on natural gas coming from Russia, our
traditional enemy.
Several experts heard in the committees of the
Parliament showed that the potential for energy
efficiency and renewables is far bigger than
presented in the National Climate Strategy.
Environmental NGOs presented their own Kyoto
scenarios based on figures by the ministry for trade
and industry, and showed the same, the potential for
clean energy technology is far greater than assumed
in the National Climate Strategy. But these
alternatives were practically absent in the media.
Instead there were lyric descriptions of windmills
functioning as guillotines for migrating birds.
In the spring 2002 the tone was: Kyoto, of course,
our holy duty, we have to protect our planet and to
curb our emissions, and exactly therefore we need
the new nuclear power station. The Parliament
ratified the Kyoto Protocol unanimously on May 8th.
All stakeholders, including industry and trade union
representatives gave their green light for Kyoto.
This is all documented in the protocols of the
Environment Committee of the Parliament.
In May 24th 2002 the Parliament voted and
ratified the permission of the 5th nuclear power
station, with 107 yes votes out of 200. The Greens
decided to leave the government coalition.
"Kyoto – an unfair trap for Finland"
Very soon after the Parliamentīs nuclear vote the
very same industry leaders and also trade union
leaders who had used Kyoto as their main argument
for nuclear power, switched their attitude to Kyoto
by 180o. Since then, Kyoto has been presented as
something which is extremely unfair and even
catastrophic for our small, brave and clean country,
something that Green environment ministers have
negotiated behind the backs of the reast of the
Government and the whole society. Still in 2005 this
message is in Finnish newspaper almost weekly, the
latest 3 days before writing this article.
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