Decommissioning of Rheinsberg nuclear plant to take over 50 years

Decommissioning the former East German nuclear power plant in Rheinsberg will take more than 50 years overall and cost far more than recently estimated. New regulations and a shortage of skilled workers are mounting challenges.

The Rheinsberg nuclear power plant, a remnant from East Germany, faces a protracted decommissioning. Reports indicate the full dismantling will span over 50 years and consume billions of euros—far exceeding recent projections. Escalating issues include ever-new regulations and a shortage of skilled workers, hindering progress and driving up costs.

Related Articles

Winter-delayed construction on Hamburg-Berlin railway: snowy tracks, workers, stalled train.
Image generated by AI

Railway line sanierung between hamburg and berlin takes longer than planned

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The comprehensive sanierung of the railway line between Hamburg and Berlin is delayed due to the harsh winter. Deutsche Bahn states that the original completion date of April 30 cannot be met. A new timeline is to be announced on March 13.

The commissioning of three wind turbines in the Fehrenbötel wind farm between Wahlstedt and Rickling has been stalled for months. Instead of delivering biogas electricity, the plants are currently only incurring costs. There is hope that the situation will change soon.

Reported by AI

The German Environmental Aid warns of environmental and safety risks from the permanent operation of the LNG terminal on Rügen without a land power plant. The organization has filed objections against operator Deutsche Regas's application with the relevant authority. An environmental impact assessment for the modified operation is still missing.

The highway near Rostock in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern will become a permanent construction site until summer 2027. Autobahn GmbH plans to invest one third more in MV in 2026 than the previous year, leading to closures, detours, and temporary bridges. A necessary wave of renovations may cause temporary traffic jams.

Reported by AI

Tokyo Electric Power Company restarted reactor No. 6 at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant after about 14 years, but suspended operations just six hours after achieving a critical state due to an alarm. This event, the company's first restart since the 2011 Fukushima disaster, highlights ongoing safety concerns in Japan's nuclear revival.

The Ethiopian Nuclear Energy Commission (ENEC) has extended the submission deadline for its Request for Expression of Interest (REOI) on consulting services for national nuclear programme infrastructure development and nuclear power project management. The new deadline is April 1, 2026, at 5:00 PM.

Reported by AI

In an update to the arson attack on a Berlin cable bridge claimed by the Volcano Group—which triggered the city's longest post-war power outage—the Federal Prosecutor's Office has assumed control of the probe. Suspected terrorist sabotage motives are under scrutiny as outages persist for over 25,000 households into day four.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline