Not whether, but how fast on CO₂ storage in Norway
The following op-ed by Eivind Berstad, Bellona’s CCS team leader, originally appeared in Teknisk Ukbladet. When the European Free Trade Associatio...
News
Publish date: October 28, 2003
News
Under EU law, EU governments must inform the Commission in advance if it is planning to grant authorisation to dispose of radioactive waste so that it can assess the risks to health in neighbouring countries. Britain failed to give the required six months’ notice when authorising waste from Devonport dockyards, run by Devonport Management Limited, owned by KBR, a division of US engineering and construction firm Halliburton, the Commission said. “Since the disposal of radioactive waste may affect another member state from a health point of view, assessment of the radiological impact of such waste by the Commission remains crucial,” it said in a statement announcing it was taking Britain to the European Court of Justice. The EU court can demand changes in government behaviour but has no power to impose penalties the first time it hears a case
The following op-ed by Eivind Berstad, Bellona’s CCS team leader, originally appeared in Teknisk Ukbladet. When the European Free Trade Associatio...
For the past eight years, disinformation has dominated news around elections all over the world. Despite this, it is still a widely misunderstood con...
A ruling by the European Free Trade Association Court that Norway’s continental shelf falls under the European Economic Area Agreement could dramatic...
Bellona held a seminar on countering Russian disinformation in the Arctic at the Arctic Frontiers international conference in Norway