| We had nuclear power in Italy. From my house, I could see the cooling towers of the abandoned nuclear power plant in Trino [1] in the distance. There was a referendum in November 1987 asking whether to abolish any form of nuclear power. It won with 80% of yes votes. This was a year after the Chernobyl disaster. Over the next few decades, Italy started to import electricity at a premium, mostly from its French neighbour, which has never stopped investing on nuclear and is today Europe's largest electricity exporter. No politician dared touch this hot potato ever again for the following 24 years, until the June 2011 referendum, that asked whether to revive plans for nuclear power. It failed with 94% of No votes. This was 3 months after the Fukushima nuclear disaster. I do not trust politicians, nor anti-nuclear activists, to ever do the right thing and drop their outdated stance on the matter. -- 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enrico_Fermi_Nuclear_Power_Pla... |
Just a bit of context for non-Italians:
> It failed with 94% of No votes.
Referendums in Italy have weird rules. They may only be called to repeal existing laws. In this case, the then-standing Berlusconi IV cabinet had approved a new nuclear plan, and a referendum was called to abolish it. A referendum is successful if both the repeal votes are more and the turnout is more than 50%. So if you don't want to repeal the law, you just don't go to the polls at all.
This is just to say that when looking at Italian referendums the important number is not the Yes/No valid votes but the turnout, which in this case was 55% or something like that IIRC.
I'd agree that the public opinion is still anti-nuclear, but it's more 55-45 than 95-5.