| A surprising 59 percent of Californians support building more nuclear plants, according to a recent poll conducted by the Field Institute, a nonpartisan polling organization. The last time the organization polled Californians about nuclear energy was 1984 five years after the accident at Three Mile Island and it found 61 percent opposed to nuclear power. The pollsters said the findings suggest how deeply the power crisis has affected people in the state, which has been hit by rolling blackouts and soaring electric bills over the past few months.
In my interpretation, the current energy crisis has some bearing on the publics changed attitudes on nuclear power, said Mark DiCamillo, spokesman for the Field Institute. The public is searching for clean ways to add to the capacity. I think the poll is saying that nuclear should be included in that consideration.
The Field poll comes as the Bush administration pushes for a renewed look at nuclear power. Vice President Dick Cheney, who heads the presidents energy task force, has promoted nuclear power as essential to Americas energy needs and said that at least some of the 65 power plants that need to be built annually to meet future electricity demand ought to be nuclear.
No utilities have ordered any new nuclear power plants in the United States since 1978.
The poll of 1,015 California adults was taken May 11-20. It showed that 59 percent of Californians favor nuclear power and 36 percent are opposed. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.2 percentage points.
Carl Zichella, the Sierra Clubs regional staff director for California, Nevada and Hawaii, said Californians have not thought about nuclear energy for about 20 years and do not have as much information as they did around Three Mile Island. I think this number really reflects a lack of knowledge on the part of the public about the problems that drove nuclear power underground, he said. The more people know about nuclear power, the less theyre going to like it.. |