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Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Nov 5, 2001

The UK Government has launched its biggest review of energy policy for over half a century and professional engineers along with the general public will now have the opportunity to contribute

The UK Government has launched its biggest review of energy policy for over half a century and will report on a way forward by the end of the year.

Professional engineers along with the general public will now have the opportunity to contribute to the debate at a conference on 'Energy and Resources in the 21st Century' on 7 November at the University of Hertfordshire.

The conference, which is being organised by the East of England Engineering, Science and Technology Association (EEESTA), will see two leading environmental experts debate issues of vital importance to the well being of our economy and global environment.

They will address the difficult question about whether a nuclear option is the only way forward to sustainable energy management for our planet.

Dr Malcolm Kennedy, CBE, Chairman of P B Power, and former member of the Competition Commission's Electricity Panel and Water and Telecoms Panel says, 'Forecasting the shape of the electricity supply industry can be hazardous but it is vitally important for the future health of both our economy and the planet.

Political agendas, environmental laws, efficiency and the structure of the industry all have a huge impact on the global supply.

We must consider that gas may not be the fuel of the future as we thought some 12 months ago and that nuclear power may have a future too.' Also speaking is Sara Parkin, Director of Forum for the Future, a leading charity working to encourage a sustainable society.

She will argue that 'a healthy environment and a satisfied society, teamed with prosperity' can be achieved, but only with a 90% improvement in the efficiency with which resources are used.

''This is a very practical challenge, and engineers will play a crucial part in addressing this sustainability challenge' says Ms Parkin, also Chair of the Real World Coalition of NGOs and Board Member of the Environment Agency.

The Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire sub-group of EEESTA, representing the engineering profession in those areas, is staging this forum, which is open both to industry experts from around the region and members of the public.

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