URGENT: Tell your Rep TODAY! No nuclear loan guarantees
This letter, except for the first paragraph (which I added), was just sent out by the Nuclear Information and Resource Center. You can also call your Rep at 202-224-3121. Note that this page is keyed to me. Scroll down about a half a screen and then click “if you are not Shel”–before you fill in the petition, especially if you’re modifying the text.
If you’re not familiar with the many problems with nuclear power, do a search in this blog on “nuclear”
Dear Representative,
Nuclear power is NOT Green, has serious environmental and security problems, and should not be supported. If we learn nothing else from the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico–we should know not to put our faith in dangerous technologies when people think they can figure out a fix AFTER something goes wrong.
I have learned that the House Appropriations Committee may take up the FY 2011 energy and water funding bill next week.
I understand the Department of Energy is seeking additional funding for new nuclear reactor loans in this bill: a whopping $36 Billion increase for construction of new reactors, That’s taxpayer money that would go to some of the wealthiest companies in the world, companies like Electricite de France, Areva, NRG Energy, Toshiba, General Electric, and the like.
As you may know, these loan “guarantees” are actually taxpayer loans from the Federal Financing Bank. This is not the time to shell out billions more taxpayer dollars for the benefit of one special interest industry.
Please act to ensure that NO new loan “guarantee” authority for nuclear reactors is provided in the FY 2011 energy funding bill. Please tell your colleagues on the Appropriations Committee that they should vote no on new nuclear power loans.
Thank you,
David, thank you for inclujding my log in your roundup.
David, thank you for inclujding my log in your roundup.
David, thank you for inclujding my log in your roundup.
[…] Horowitz writing from his blog, Principled Profit, argues against the government guaranteeing loans to private companies to build nuclear power […]
David, thank you for inclujding my log in your roundup.