This article needs to be updated.(October 2018) |
Nuclear power in the European Union accounted for approximately 26% of total electricity production in 2019[1] and nearly half of low-carbon energy production across the EU.[2]
The energy policies of the European Union (EU) member countries vary significantly. As of February 2020, 13 out of 27 countries have nuclear reactors. The countries with reactors are: Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Netherlands, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain and Sweden.[3] The United Kingdom (a former member of the European Union with interconnected electricity links with the EU) also operates nuclear reactors.
As of November 2021, 5 member countries jointly urged the European Commission to keep nuclear power out of the EU's green finance taxonomy; namely the countries are Germany, Austria, Portugal, Denmark, Luxembourg.[4][5][6] As they collectively comprise less than 19% of the member states & less than 25% of the overall European Union population, they would be unable to block the European Commission's recommendations to include both natural gas and nuclear power within the EU's green finance taxonomy.[6]