2008 Lithuanian nuclear power referendum
A referendum on extending the operation of the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant was held in Lithuania on 12 October 2008 alongside parliamentary elections. The country's government was obliged to close down Ignalina as part of its treaty of accession to the European Union.[1][2]
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Lithuania |
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Legislature |
Judiciary |
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The electorate were asked to vote on the statement: "I approve of the extension of operation of the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant for a technically safe period, but not longer than completion of the construction of a new nuclear power plant."[3]
Although 91.4% of voters voted in favour of continuing the plant's operation, voter turnout was below the 50% threshold required to make the results valid.
Results
Choice | Votes | % |
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For | 1,156,738 | 91.40 |
Against | 108,798 | 8.60 |
Invalid/blank votes | 40,289 | – |
Total | 1,305,825 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | 2,696,090 | 48.43 |
Source: Central Election Commission |
gollark: In older swarms their internal networks would mess it up, but any remotely modern one uses EM.
gollark: If they're that small.
gollark: As such, you are not hearing individual ones; probably, your head disrupts any nearby antinodality™ lots anyway.
gollark: So 160 times more antinodes would make them VERY close together.
gollark: Really? Hmm. I guess that makes sense.
References
External links
- The Central Electoral Commission of the Republic of Lithuania (in English and Lithuanian)
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