The Return of nuclear power to Italy He enters the heart with the delegated bill that the government will bring to the Council of Ministers on Friday 28 February. Driven by the Minister of the Environment Gilberto Pichetto Fratin, the measure aims to redefine the regulatory framework for the construction and management of atomic systems
The decision comes after weeks of postponements and divisions in the majority, with brothers of Italy pushing on merger while Lega and Forza Italia want to reopen to the fission. On the table there will also be the Bollette decree against dear energy, revised after Giorgia Meloni rejected the initial draft, asking for more incisive measures for families and businesses.
Council of Ministers between postponements, tensions and strategic choices
The infinite pulls and gives up on nuclear power is ready for a new chapter. The government should finally face the bill in the Council of Ministers, with a meeting that, between postponements and rethinking, was moved to February 28th. The Ministry of the Environment pushes to bring the question to the table together with the Bollette decree, but the continuous dilation of the times is no coincidence.
Premier Giorgia Meloni has rejected the draft initial on energy measures, demanding more incisive interventionsespecially for the benefit of the bands most exposed to the increases in costs. While the government plays to regrets, the nuclear dossier remains a test on the executive’s ability to translate promises into concrete actions.
Majority in the balance: opposite visions on energy strategy
Minister Gilberto Pichetto Fratin pushes strongly on the return of nuclear power, but inside the majority you dance on a thin thread. If Lega and Forza Italia press to put the atom on the field, Brothers of Italy Niche, with the Prime Minister who makes the Funambola, citing only the merger, technology still in the laboratory.
Meanwhile, the measure browsing the postponements: from January 23, the bill has remained a ghost on the agenda of the Council of Ministers, rather than a theme on which to put the signature. The search for a political square continues, but time is holding and the nuclear power is waiting for a response that, for now, does not arrive.
The key measures of the government’s energy plan
The Ministry of the Environment has put a action plan who will have to take off in the next two yearswith a series of legislative decrees ready to redesign the future of nuclear energy in Italy.
Among the expected interventions There are:
- regulation of sustainable atomic energy production;
- integration with the production of hydrogen;
- the definitive dismantling of the old unplapped plants;
- The reorganization of skills in the sector, in order to avoid the usual bureaucratic chaos that has slowed down every initiative in the past.
Behind the scenes of the provision there is the work of a commission of experts led by the jurist Giovanni Guzzetta, who traced the guidelines for the construction and management of new generation plants.
Energy and business: between investments, incentives and resources
The bill puts on the track the relaunch of nuclear power in Italy, with a regulatory frame designed to make ends meet Safety and efficiency. The plan includes the construction of new plants, trying to keep up with international directives.
The package also includes it Radioactive waste disposal And the strengthening of research on the merger, which for now remains more a hope than a tangible reality.
On the accounts front, the government aims to move without weighing down the state coffers, exploiting funds already available. There is no shortage of incentives for those who want to invest in research and training in the sector, with the promise to avoid waste and guarantee a concrete return for the country’s economy.
Plants and territories: safety, development and political strategies
To keep the safety regulations under control and monitor the plants, an independent supervisory authority will be created.
But the government does not stop there: to convince the territories to host new nuclear infrastructures, it puts economic incentives and promises of local development on the plate. There is talk of jobs, investments and new opportunities, in a political game where consent and business go hand in hand.