China scraps uranium processing plan following protests

July 13, 2013 03:36 pm | Updated 03:37 pm IST - BEIJING

Local authorities in a southern Chinese city on Saturday scrapped a plan to build a uranium-processing plant, a day after hundreds of local residents protested against it owing to safety concerns.

The city government of Heshan in Guangdong province said in an online statement that it would halt the 37 billion yuan ($6 billion) project by China National Nuclear Corp., which would have built facilities for uranium conversion, enrichment and manufacturing of nuclear fuel equipment.

“The people’s government of the city of Heshan has decided to respect the public opinion and will not consider CNNC’s Longwan industrial park project,” read the one-line announcement.

CNNC could not be immediately reached for comment, but its plans are part of national efforts to reduce China’s reliance on coal and to boost the use of clean energy.

In March, the corporation signed agreements with the Heshan government regarding both land use and investment for the industrial park, according to state media.

The Saturday’s decision by Heshan government came after hundreds of protesters paraded through the streets of Jiangmen on Friday, holding banners and wearing T-shirts with phrases opposing the project while chanting slogans. “Give us back our rural homes. We are against nuclear radiation,” they shouted in scenes seen in television video.

Local officials initially responded by extending the consultation period by another 10 days, but by Saturday morning they said the plan was scrapped.

Increasingly aware of environmental safety, members of the Chinese public have been taking to the streets to oppose environmentally risky projects, and local governments have yielded under public pressure in some cases by scrapping the projects, postponing them or relocating them.

It also shows that the Chinese public has no other effective venue but street protests which can turn violent to voice their concerns. Environmentalists have long called on local governments to take steps allowing for greater transparency and better public involvement when introducing projects that may be environmentally risky.

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