2008
DOI: 10.1177/0963662506066719
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Reframing nuclear power in the UK energy debate: nuclear power, climate change mitigation and radioactive waste

Abstract: In the past decade, human influence on the climate through increased use of fossil fuels has become widely acknowledged as one of the most pressing issues for the global community. For the United Kingdom, we suggest that these concerns have increasingly become manifest in a new strand of political debate around energy policy, which reframes nuclear power as part of the solution to the need for low-carbon energy options. A mixed-methods analysis of citizen views of climate change and radioactive waste is presen… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
184
0

Year Published

2012
2012
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
6
2

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 247 publications
(186 citation statements)
references
References 38 publications
2
184
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The UK debate has been characterised as being dominated by a 'securitisation' discourse (Toke, 2013) where options for deliberation are limited by discussions of 'the lights going out' and threats of climate change. Certainly, the range of issues discussed in new consultation systems in the UK are less diverse than in the 1980s public inquiry system arguably representing a 'post-political' situation (Johnstone, 2014), where wide ranging debate is often limited by a singular focus on C02 emissions alone 'trumping' other ethical considerations producing a 'reluctant acceptance' (Bickerstaff, Lorenzoni, Pidgeon, Poortinga, & Simmons, 2008;Corner et al, 2011) whereas clearly the issue remains politicised in Germany. Wittneben (2012) suggests that media reporting in Germany was more detailed and long-lasting in terms of coverage of the Fukushima disaster whereas in the UK attention was replaced on other issues, representing generally higher levels of reporting on nuclear issues in Germany than the UK.…”
Section: Intensity Of Public Debate Including Media Mentionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The UK debate has been characterised as being dominated by a 'securitisation' discourse (Toke, 2013) where options for deliberation are limited by discussions of 'the lights going out' and threats of climate change. Certainly, the range of issues discussed in new consultation systems in the UK are less diverse than in the 1980s public inquiry system arguably representing a 'post-political' situation (Johnstone, 2014), where wide ranging debate is often limited by a singular focus on C02 emissions alone 'trumping' other ethical considerations producing a 'reluctant acceptance' (Bickerstaff, Lorenzoni, Pidgeon, Poortinga, & Simmons, 2008;Corner et al, 2011) whereas clearly the issue remains politicised in Germany. Wittneben (2012) suggests that media reporting in Germany was more detailed and long-lasting in terms of coverage of the Fukushima disaster whereas in the UK attention was replaced on other issues, representing generally higher levels of reporting on nuclear issues in Germany than the UK.…”
Section: Intensity Of Public Debate Including Media Mentionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, public ambivalence, and the post-Fukushima resilience of the conditional and 'reluctant acceptance' of nuclear power (Bickerstaff, Lorenzoni, Pidgeon, Poortinga, & Simmons, 2008) are presumably both enablers and effects of UK energy policy, which has remained steadfast in its pro-nuclear position. A greater proportion of nuclear electricity in the future energy mix is supported by all leading political parties (with the exception of the Green Party), partly on the environmental grounds that it is 'low-carbon' but more reliable than wind and solar power, the principal renewable alternatives favoured by most environmentalists.…”
Section: Policy and Public Opinion In The Ukmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Technorationality in this context refers to the manner in which scientific progress (with nuclear science as its technological and theoretical pinnacle) becomes synonymous with social progress (Irwin, Allan, & Welsh, 2000). Abstract faith in science is related to techno-rationality, but emphasizes the hope that future scientific progress will solve the problems of today (Bickerstaff et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discourses and Narrativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, arguably, public responses to energy options cannot be fully understood without taking into account the wider context in which choices need to be made. A notable illustration of this is the way in which, in recent years, nuclear power has been reframed in terms of its potential contribution to climate change mitigation and energy security [1]. One reason for the limited number of studies of public opinion of energy systems and emissions contraction scenarios may be the lack of tools available to help with the process.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the academic literature, only one other UK research project has focussed on the public's views of energy system transformation as a whole [5]. The latter uses the energy-emissions calculator available on the UK Department for Energy and Climate Change website 1 , designed for the lay-user, and which has some commonalities with the GRIP software [6], [7] used here.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%