Nuclear power for a dictatorship: state and business involvement in the Spanish atomic program 1950-1985

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Date
2016Version
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Type
Artículo / Artikulua
Version
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa
Impact
|
10.1177/0022009415599448
Abstract
Spain was the first developing country to exploit a nuclear power plant commercially. By
the early 1970s Spain had become the major nuclear client of the USA, the world’s
largest reactor exporter. Despite its importance, historians are just beginning to revisit
and establish the sequence of the events that make up Spain’s nuclear history. This
article analyses the role played by the state in ...
[++]
Spain was the first developing country to exploit a nuclear power plant commercially. By
the early 1970s Spain had become the major nuclear client of the USA, the world’s
largest reactor exporter. Despite its importance, historians are just beginning to revisit
and establish the sequence of the events that make up Spain’s nuclear history. This
article analyses the role played by the state in enabling one of Western Europe’s poorest
countries to join the exclusive nuclear power club. In a departure from the technological
approach used in previous literature, the history of Spain’s progress in the
nuclear power field is retraced against the background of its political and economic
evolution. [--]
Subject
Dictatorship,
Economic history,
Electricity sector,
Energy policy,
Nuclear energy,
Spain
Publisher
SAGE
Published in
Journal of Contemporary History
2016, Vol. 51(2) 385–411
Departament
Universidad Pública de Navarra. Departamento de Economía /
Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa. Ekonomia Saila