The country will now lobby the EU for a «sustainable» label on nuclear power.
Despite the fact that plants are emission-free, «nuclear is currently considered only a low-carbon energy source due to emissions caused by mining and transport,» Euractive wrote this week.
Finland's 5th nuclear plant is nearing completion after years of delays, the report notes.
Nuclear remains an important energy source for the country, which has a target of being carbon neutral by 2035.
Nuclear currently accounts for 30% of the country's power.
Finland's government lobbying nuclear as a clean source of energy «marks a near U-Turn» in the green party, Euractive writes.
The party has been traditionally «fiercely anti-nuclear» and has resigned from previous governments over the issue, the report says.
Now, its views have become «more pragmatic».
Recall, yesterday, we published on uranium, which we have been recommending since December 2020.
We pointed out that the Sprott Physical Uranium Trust has emerged as a powerful buyer of physical uranium, which in a market as illiquid as uranium, would serve as a powerful catalyst to move prices of both the underlying commodity and various producers sharply higher.
We also noted how hedge funds were starting to pour into uranium.
Incidentally, the entire Uranium sector is a tiny fraction of Apple's market cap.
And while Finland is just a tiny brick in the wall in terms of additional adoption, they represent the obvious direction for the energy lobby to eventually focus their efforts on.
Author: ZeroHedge




