6533b7d4fe1ef96bd1262895
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Fuel for commercial politics: the nucleus of early commercial proliferation of atomic energy in three acts
Miina KaarkoskiPasi NevalainenMatti Roittosubject
HistorysuurvaltapolitiikkaResource (biology)060106 history of social sciencesNatural resource economicsgeopolitiikkapoliittinen historiaWest germanyPoliticsNuclear industryinvestments0502 economics and business0601 history and archaeologyBusiness and International Managementsuperpower politicsnuclear power stationFinlandtechnology transferNuclear fuelAtomic energy05 social sciencesGreat Britain06 humanities and the artskylmä sotaydinvoimalatinvestoinnitydinenergiaenergiapolitiikkaWest Germanyydinpolttoaineetteknologian siirtoTechnology transfernuclear fuelBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Comparative historical researchBusiness050203 business & managementdescription
Historical research into the nuclear industry has focussed upon military and commercial aspects of the technology whilst ignoring fuel. This article discusses nuclear fuel, the resource at the centre of the industry and the role superpower politics played in its supply. Starting with the context of superpower competition, we examine the spread of nuclear technology from its beginnings in post-war Britain via West Germany in the 1950s to Finland in the 1960s and 1970s. We demonstrate that each country had varied interests affecting the choice of nuclear fuel for early energy projects; British fuel choices were constrained by its weapons programme and Germany needed legitimacy in the face of opposition in the 1950s. Finland was constrained by ‘Finlandisation’ and despite domestic enthusiasm the country had to balancing competing blocs in its choice of reactor and fuel. In short, fuel choices were constrained by local and supranational geopolitical conditions. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-11-24 | Business History |