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Dutch government thinks about buying shares in nuclear power station

The Netherlands is prepared to start conversations about purchasing local councils' shares in the country's only functional nuclear power station, the outgoing federal government stated on Tuesday, adding that the center must continue running.

In a statement, the federal government, acting in a caretaker role since elections in November, said city governments in the westernmost province of Zeeland, where the power station is located, hold 70% of the shares however would prefer to sell to the Dutch state.

The staying 30% is owned by multinational German energy business RWE AG. If it opposes keeping the power station open, the Dutch government would consider purchasing its share also, the government statement said.

After months of stalemate, reactionary leader Geert Wilders said last month he expects a brand-new conservative union federal government to be in location by the end of June, but settlements over cabinet posts are continuing.

The inbound union stated last month it aims to broaden atomic energy production as part of strategies to decrease the Netherlands' reliance on unreliable countries. It was not clear whether it supported the idea of buying the regional councils' stake in the existing nuclear plant.

(source: Reuters)