Twenty years after Sweden alerted the world to the meltdown at Chernobyl, it aims to phase out nuclear power and end dependency on fossil fuels, putting the country in the vanguard of green energy policy.
With rising oil prices, growing demand, uncertain supply and the need to cut greenhouse gas emissions, energy is in focus and the EU is calling for co-ordinated policy.
But the Nordic region - united by history, a shared concern for the environment and a harsh climate which puts heavy demand on power - is divided on energy, not least nuclear power.
When a reactor at the nuclear plant in the Ukrainian town of Chernobyl exploded in 1986 and spewed radioactivity across Europe, the Nordic region was on the front line: Its pristine lakes and forests were polluted and Arctic reindeer meat and lichen contaminated.
Long before radiation on a Swedish power worker's shoes alerted the world to history's worst nuclear accident, Sweden had voted to get rid of atomic energy, in a 1980 referendum.
It now aims to break with fossil fuels by 2020, when it also wants greenhouse gas emissions cut by 25 per cent against 1990 levels.
"We have to transform into a non-oil economy," said Stefan Edman, who heads the Swedish Government's oil dependency panel.
"We have high ambitions, although I don't think it is realistic that not a drop of oil will be used in 2020."
Sweden has already cut oil use in home heating by 70 per cent in the past 20 years and has kept consumption flat in industry since 1994, despite a 70 per cent increase in production.
Professor Christian Azar, at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, also on the oil panel, said the big challenge would be to do something about oil used in the transport sector, where it accounted for 98 per cent of energy used. "If we could achieve a 50 per cent reduction, that would be an enormous achievement."
The Government hopes that environmental technology will be a money-spinner for Swedish companies. Sustainable Development Minister Mona Sahlin said: "Sweden has a chance to be an international model and a successful actor in export markets for alternative solutions.
"The aim is to break dependence on fossil fuels by 2020. By then, no home will need oil for heating. By then, no motorist will be obliged to use petrol as the sole option available. By then, there will be better alternatives to oil."
Sweden produces about 35 per cent of its energy from oil and with nuclear power on the way out, finding alternative power sources is a priority.
In Finland, however, nuclear power is seen as part of the future and its fifth atomic power plant - the first built in Europe for more than a decade - is due to come online in 2009.
"The main reason was increasing demand for energy," said Anneli Nikula, spokesman for private power generation firm Teollisuuden Voima, which owns the new power plant.
Finland does not want to rely on neighbours Russia, Sweden and Norway for power and has many old fossil fuel plants which have to be replaced to meet climate-change goals.
"Cutting down carbon dioxide emissions has sparked debate on nuclear energy in many European countries," said Nikula. "The second coming of nuclear energy is true."
In Norway and Denmark, atomic power has never been an option.
In the 1970s, when other Western nations were building nuclear plants, Norway started developing the vast oil and gas reserves that make it the world's third biggest oil exporter behind Saudi Arabia and Russia.
But the fact that hydropower dams still generate almost all the nation's electricity has dampened environmental concerns.
Controversy surrounds opening up new areas of the Arctic for oil exploration and using natural gas to supplement hydropower to meet growing demand. But opposition to nuclear power is so entrenched that the centre-left Government did not even mention it when outlining its policies on taking office in October.
Denmark - home to Vestas, the world's largest wind turbine-maker - hopes use of sustainable sources such as wind and biofuels will reach 36 per cent by 2025, from 25 per cent in 2003. It also uses oil and gas from its North Sea fields and the Government's 20-year energy plan emphasises keeping that industry competitive.
Iceland also aims to become the world's first oil-free nation, setting its sights on 2050, by shifting cars, buses, trucks and ships over to non-polluting hydrogen.
By then, in theory, the only oil used on the volcanic North Atlantic island would be in planes. About 70 per cent of energy needs are already met by geothermal or hydropower - only the transport sector is still hooked on oil.
For all these countries, the speed of change will depend on the price of oil. As Azar said: "The political momentum will drop as fast as the oil price."
- REUTERS
Nordic nations sing in one voice: Anything but oil
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