Italy is considering restarting nuclear power after nearly 40 years as the government seeks solutions to high energy costs and heavy dependence on imported gas. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has made nuclear energy a key part of her economic strategy, arguing it could stabilize long-term electricity prices. Officials are studying reactor technologies from countries including Canada, France, the United States, and South Korea, while also exploring newer small modular reactors. Italy has already approved a legal framework to revive nuclear power and aims to produce a national strategic plan by 2027. However, strong public opposition, high costs, safety concerns, and Italy’s earthquake risk could complicate any return to atomic energy.
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If you compare Germany with France – one country has spent hundreds of billions, while the other actually has low prices – it’s really a no-brainer. But this requires serial production and getting rid of modern red tape.
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Italy is considering restarting nuclear power after nearly 40 years as the government seeks solutions to high energy costs and heavy dependence on imported gas. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has made nuclear energy a key part of her economic strategy, arguing it could stabilize long-term electricity prices. Officials are studying reactor technologies from countries including Canada, France, the United States, and South Korea, while also exploring newer small modular reactors. Italy has already approved a legal framework to revive nuclear power and aims to produce a national strategic plan by 2027. However, strong public opposition, high costs, safety concerns, and Italy’s earthquake risk could complicate any return to atomic energy.
If you compare Germany with France – one country has spent hundreds of billions, while the other actually has low prices – it’s really a no-brainer. But this requires serial production and getting rid of modern red tape.