Bush calls for nuclear construction by 2010 (AFP) Updated: 2006-02-21 11:10 US President George W. Bush warned that US
dependency on oil left the country "hostage" to countries that may be hostile
and urged new nuclear plant construction by 2010.
"Some of the nations we rely on for oil have unstable governments, or
fundamental differences with the United States," he said during a trip here,
without naming the countries to which he was referring.
"These countries know we need their oil and that reduces influence. It
creates a national security issue when we're held hostage for energy by foreign
nations that may not like us," said Bush.
Drawing on the examples of France, China, and India, the president pushed a
1.1 billion dollar program to promote the construction of new nuclear power
plants, something the United States has not done since the 1970s.
"We ought to start building nuclear power plants again. I think it makes
sense to do so. Technology is such that we can do so and say to the American
people, these are safe -- and they're important," he said.
The US leader, echoing remarks he made at his State of the Union speech last
month, said the United States was "addicted" to oil and that some crude imports
came from countries that have "unstable governments or fundamental differences
with the United States."
In his speech to the US Congress on January 31, Bush called for research into
ethanol, coal-fired plants, solar and wind technologies and nuclear energy so
that 75 percent of oil imports from the Middle East can be replaced by 2025.
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