Teollisuuden Voima Oyj

TVO

Teollisuuden Voima Oyj operates Finland's Olkiluoto nuclear power plant and supplies electricity at cost to its industrial shareholders.

Lobbying Activity

Meeting with Ditte Juul-Joergensen (Director-General Energy) and

2 Jun 2025 · Nuclear energy policy, Onkala (spent nuclear fuel repository, and SMR/PINC

Meeting with Massimo Garribba (Deputy Director-General Energy) and

15 May 2025 · Exchange of views on the role of nuclear energy in the EU and related developments in Finland

Finnish nuclear operator TVO welcomes simpler EU taxonomy reporting

26 Mar 2025
Message — TVO supports reducing data points to improve taxonomy usability and administrative efficiency. They specifically advocate for scrapping the requirement to report nuclear energy exposures separately. They believe taxonomy-aligned activities should be treated equally without additional reporting burdens.123
Why — This would reduce administrative costs and help maintain low capital costs for nuclear.45

Meeting with Merja Kyllönen (Member of the European Parliament)

4 Mar 2025 · TVO:n ajankohtaiset asiat

Meeting with Jussi Saramo (Member of the European Parliament)

4 Mar 2025 · Clean Industrial Deal ja ydinvoima

Meeting with Tsvetelina Penkova (Member of the European Parliament)

4 Mar 2025 · Discussion of enregy priorities

Meeting with Eero Heinäluoma (Member of the European Parliament)

3 Dec 2024 · EU ja energiapolitiikka

Meeting with Sebastian Tynkkynen (Member of the European Parliament) and Pohjolan Voima Oyj

26 Nov 2024 · EU:n investointivarmuuden parantaminen

TVO backs nuclear energy for low-carbon hydrogen production

25 Oct 2024
Message — TVO supports the proposal and seeks to classify nuclear-based hydrogen as low carbon. They suggest simplifying regulation to distinguish only between low-carbon and fossil fuels.12
Why — This methodology provides investment visibility by clarifying the low-carbon status of nuclear hydrogen.3
Impact — Fossil fuel interests lose as the methodology strictly separates their products from low-carbon hydrogen.4

Meeting with Sebastian Tynkkynen (Member of the European Parliament) and Aula Europe

15 Oct 2024 · Ydinvoiman tulevaisuus EU:ssa

Meeting with Elsi Katainen (Member of the European Parliament)

15 Oct 2024 · Energiapolitiikka

Meeting with Aura Salla (Member of the European Parliament)

15 Oct 2024 · Future of nuclear energy in the EU, upcoming commission work programme and the role of nuclear power re. Europe´s competitiveness

Meeting with Eero Heinäluoma (Member of the European Parliament)

14 Oct 2024 · Ajankohtaisaiheet

Meeting with Elsi Katainen (Member of the European Parliament)

3 Apr 2024 · EU energy policy

Meeting with Olivia Gippner (Cabinet of Commissioner Wopke Hoekstra) and Aula Europe

13 Feb 2024 · 2040 target communication

Meeting with Mauri Pekkarinen (Member of the European Parliament)

25 Oct 2023 · Discussion on the role of nuclear energy in the EU

Meeting with Joan Canton (Cabinet of Commissioner Thierry Breton)

25 Oct 2023 · Energy markets in Europe, role of nuclear energy

Meeting with Adam Romanowski (Cabinet of Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič), Aleksandra Baranska (Cabinet of Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič) and Aula Europe

25 Oct 2023 · Energy, nuclear

Response to Mid-term evaluation of the ERDF, the CF and the JTF 2021-2027

9 Oct 2023

TEOLLISUUDEN VOIMAS VIEWS ON THE EUS COHESION POLICY FUNDS Teollisuuden Voima Oy (TVO) is grateful for the opportunity to provide input for the mid-term evaluation of the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the Cohesion Fund (CF) and the Just Transition Fund (JTF). TVO considers these instruments useful for bolstering growth and enabling the green transition across the EU. More specifically, all these instruments can support the effective transition to clean energy by providing support for job creation and enhancing the competitiveness of firms in the energy sector. However, these efforts are hampered by the limitations on the types of investments allowed included in the legal framework on these files. These include: Article 7 (a) of the Regulation governing the European Regional Development Fund which excludes the decommissioning or the construction of nuclear power stations. Article 7 (a) of the Regulation governing the Cohesion Fund which excludes the decommissioning or the construction of nuclear power stations. Article 9 (a) of the Regulation governing the Just Transition Fund which excludes the decommissioning or the construction of nuclear power As the Treaties give Member States the right to choose their own energy mix, these limitations hinder their efforts to reach climate neutrality using technologies that suit their circumstances the best. Furthermore, these limitations are not coherent with other Union policies. For example, the EUs taxonomy for sustainable finance identifies nuclear power as a technology that can significantly contribute to the mitigation of climate change provided that certain criteria are met. As the inclusion of nuclear into the taxonomy was based on the thorough, science-based evaluation by the Joint Research Centre (JRC), the contribution of nuclear to the green transition is evident. This fact should also be reflected by the Unions funding instruments. TVO therefore considers it vital for the Commission to review the legal framework and remove these categorical exclusions of nuclear energy in existing instruments and not establish such limitation for potential new instruments.
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Meeting with Elsi Katainen (Member of the European Parliament)

4 Aug 2023 · Get to know Olkiluoto nuclear power

Meeting with Ville Niinistö (Member of the European Parliament)

28 Jun 2023 · Energy & industry

Meeting with Eero Heinäluoma (Member of the European Parliament)

8 Jun 2023 · Current energy legislation

Meeting with Thor-Sten Vertmann (Cabinet of Commissioner Kadri Simson)

8 Jun 2023 · The role of nuclear power in the EU’s energy policy, the ongoing electricity market reform and the 2040 climate targets.

Meeting with Jerzy Buzek (Member of the European Parliament)

8 Mar 2023 · on the Electricity Market Design

Meeting with Elsi Katainen (Member of the European Parliament)

7 Mar 2023 · Energy and climate politics in general

Meeting with Mauri Pekkarinen (Member of the European Parliament)

7 Mar 2023 · Dinner meeting on Olkiluoto 3 -nuclear plant, Reform of the EU electricity market design, promoting the competitiveness of nuclear power and other timely EU affairs concerning climate and energy politics

Meeting with Aleksandra Tomczak (Cabinet of Executive Vice-President Frans Timmermans)

15 Nov 2022 · Finish energy sector decarbonisation

Meeting with Petri Sarvamaa (Member of the European Parliament)

14 Nov 2022 · EU Green Deal

Meeting with Nils Torvalds (Member of the European Parliament)

15 Jun 2022 · Energy, industry

Meeting with Andrea Beltramello (Cabinet of Executive Vice-President Valdis Dombrovskis) and Aula Europe

14 Jun 2022 · Taxonomy of environmentally sustainable economic activities

Meeting with Peeter Kadarik (Cabinet of Commissioner Kadri Simson), Thor-Sten Vertmann (Cabinet of Commissioner Kadri Simson)

14 Jun 2022 · To discuss the role of nuclear power in the taxonomy for sustainable finance and the Fit for 55 package.

Meeting with Taneli Lahti (Cabinet of Commissioner Jutta Urpilainen) and Aula Europe

16 Nov 2021 · taxonomy

Meeting with Jutta Urpilainen (Commissioner) and Aula Europe

21 Jan 2021 · sustainable finance

Meeting with Brian Synnott (Cabinet of Commissioner Ylva Johansson)

12 Jan 2021 · Presentation of the implications of Taxonomy proposals for Finnish nuclear industry.

Response to Climate change mitigation and adaptation taxonomy

18 Dec 2020

Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) is a Finnish non-listed public nuclear company that delivers electricity for its shareholders, Finnish industrial and power companies, at a cost price. After the commissioning of the Olkiluoto 3 nuclear power plant in 2021, approximately 30% of Finland´s electricity will be produced by TVO. TVO possess expertise on the entire lifecycle of a nuclear power plant, and we have a sustainable solution for high level waste (HLW) – it is placed safely in interim storages for cooling and dealt with in a highly responsible manner under the Euratom legal framework. We have solved final disposal in a safe manner, which means deposition in a bedrock, called “Onkalo”, in Olkiluoto Finland. For more evidence, please see the document attached in this submission. As TVO is a private company and does not receive state aid. The interest bearing liabilities expose TVO to interest rate risk. When TVO has been investing into several billion euros to new production and into waste solution, the nuclear´s taxonomy-eligibility is vital for TVO. TVO supports the goal to use Sustainable Finance taxonomy to strengthen a fair, acceptable and technology-neutral transition towards 2050 climate target. TVO encourages the Commission to make the decision to include nuclear energy in the Sustainable Finance Taxonomy criteria as soon as possible. The current uncertainty among nuclear energy´s taxonomy-eligibility creates also an unjust market distortion between clean energy technologies and a negative impact in the EU´s Single Market ¬– all clean energy sources should have the same funding opportunities. The International Energy Agency (IEA, 2019) has confirmed that all scientifically-proven and commercially available low-carbon energy solutions must be used in order to successfully achieve the clean energy transition. Moreover, the Commission’s Joint Research Council (JRC) recently published a report, concluding that there is ‘no technical basis for justifying the exclusion of nuclear energy’ from EU sustainability schemes (Development of EU Ecolabel criteria for Retail Financial Products, 2020). TVO encourages the Commission to take into consideration the report´s recommendations that the outcome of the JRC´s upcoming study on nuclear energy should be taken into account in the sustainability framework decision-making. Furthermore, attention must be paid to the unneeded unpredictability in the European energy market and security of supply as long as the nuclear energy is not included in the Sustainable Finance taxonomy. Nuclear sector can provide affordable and stable power economically in great quantities and it is a necessary source of energy with the aim of reducing the growth of emissions and to stop further climate change. The life cycle emissions produced by nuclear energy compare fairly with those from renewable energy sources. According to the IPCC (2014), the nuclear life-cycle emissions (12g of CO2/KWh) are equal to those of wind power and are four times lower than from solar power. TVO requests that life cycle analyses are conducted on all technologies in the Sustainable Finance taxonomy.
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Meeting with Katherine Power (Cabinet of Commissioner Mairead Mcguinness)

8 Dec 2020 · Taxonomy

Meeting with Aleksandra Tomczak (Cabinet of Executive Vice-President Frans Timmermans)

2 Dec 2020 · Nuclear industry and the European Green Deal

Response to Climate Law

30 Apr 2020

Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) supports the Commission’s target to achieve climate neutrality in the EU by 2050. TVO welcomes the common goal, where the EU’s first Climate Law will involve every economic sector and the whole society to play their part in this enormous and necessary transition. As the Commission has recognised, the European energy sector and its companies play a vital role in the battle against climate change. TVO also wants to highlight the importance of energy production and consumption on cutting down greenhouse gas emissions, as well as the essential role of ‘the transition to a sustainable, affordable and secure energy system relying on a well-functioning internal energy market’, as stated in Preamble 6 of the proposal for a European Climate Law. In order to achieve the essential and ambitious climate goals by 2050, the Climate Law legislation must uphold the principle of technology neutrality in setting the trajectory towards climate-neutrality. All power producing technologies must be evaluated according to the same criteria to ensure a level playing field and the most efficient transition in accordance with the proposal’s recommendations. In addition, the climate action trajectory must be in line with the best available scientific findings, including from the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), as stated in Article 3(j) of the Climate Law proposal. The International Energy Agency (IEA, 2019) has confirmed that all scientifically-proven and commercially available low-carbon energy solutions must be used in order to successfully achieve the clean energy transition. TVO wants to draw attention to every Member States freedom to choose their own low carbon technologies to achieve the joint climate neutrality target. The Climate Law proposal also emphasises the ‘energy efficiency, energy affordability and security of supply’. Nuclear fission technology is the only developed energy source that is capable of delivering enormous quantities of electricity safely, reliably, economically, and sustainably. Moreover, the life cycle emissions produced by nuclear energy compare reasonably with those from renewable energy sources. According to the IPCC (2014), the nuclear life-cycle emissions (12g of CO2/kWh) are equal to those of wind power and are four times lower than from solar power. Nuclear energy is a sustainable energy source, and the European Commission’s 2018 communication A Clean Planet for All describes nuclear energy as a “backbone” of European electricity production in 2050. It estimates, that nuclear energy’s share of the total electricity supply in 2050 supporting renewable sources will be 15%. The same 15% share in 2050 was also estimated by the Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) in its 2019 Global Climate Outlook. Moreover, the IPCC (2018), the International Energy Agency (2019) and the JRC (2017) state that nuclear energy is a necessary piece to make the ambitious 2050 climate target a reality. Finally, TVO wants to highlight that the principle of technology neutrality is an essential part of the sustainable finance and taxonomy legislation – without it and the 15% share of nuclear power, the EU cannot achieve its climate targets. Nuclear power is thus an essential part of tackling climate change and achieving climate neutrality by 2050. It is a necessary energy source with the aim of reducing the growth of emissions and to stop further climate change.
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Response to Climate change mitigation and adaptation taxonomy

21 Apr 2020

Teollisuuden Voima Oyj (TVO) supports the European Union’s ambitious climate targets by contributing to them by producing responsible and sustainable carbon free electricity in its nuclear power plants in Finland. To ensure further climate mitiga-tion activities TVO supports the EU's plan to redirect financing towards sustainable economic activities. When the nuclear power plant unit Olkiluoto 3 is completed, TVO will contribute approx. 30% of Finland’s electricity. If nuclear power’s crucial role is not recognized and it is excluded from the taxonomy, the EU cannot achieve its climate targets. This was also acknowledged by the Technical Expert Group (TEG) in its final report stating, that ‘Evidence on the potential substantial contribu-tion of nuclear energy to climate change mitigation objective was extensive and clear’. TVO supports TEG’s recommendation, that a group with in-depth knowledge on nu-clear life cycle technologies is launched. The group must also evaluate the existing and potential environmental impacts in such an assessment. In order to evaluate nu-clear energy within the EU context objectively and robustly, the Commission needs to ensure the transparency and expertise of this group, including the call for mem-bers and how the group is going to be organized and execute its work. In addition, the Platform on Sustainable Finance must also have members with in-depth exper-tise on nuclear. The principle of technology neutrality must be included into the future Taxonomy regulation. TVO requests that all power producing technologies are evaluated ac-cording to the same criteria. The International Energy Agency (IEA, 2019) has shown that all scientifically-proven and commercially available low-carbon energy solutions must be used in flexible and clean energy transition that is a must to reduce the growth of emissions and to stop further climate change. The life cycle emissions produced by nuclear energy compare reasonably with those from renewable energy sources. According to the IPCC (2014), the nuclear life-cycle emissions (12g of CO2/KWh) are equal to those of wind power and are four times lower than from so-lar power. The IPCC analysis for nuclear includes the whole nuclear life cycle, in-cluding uranium mining, enrichment and fuel fabrication, plant construction, use, decommissioning and long-term waste management. In Finland TVO already has a sustainable solution for high level waste (HLW) – The Finnish Government granted a licence a construction of a final disposal facility for HLW in 2015, the first licence in the world. Currently HLW is placed safely in inter-im storages for cooling and dealt with in a highly responsible manner under the Eur-atom legal framework. The nuclear sector produces a very small amount of all haz-ardous waste that is produced in the EU each year. In the EU, responsible actions for radioactive waste and especially for HLW are taken care of by the nuclear industry and national authorities according to the EU’s Radioactive Waste and Spent Fuel Management Directive (2011/70/Euratom). Each Member State has a national policy for spent fuel and radioactive waste management. According to the Commission's 2nd report COM (2019) 632 final on the progress over 95 % of the radioactive waste in the EU territory had already been disposed of in 2016. HLW made up 0.2% of the radioactive waste inventory in 2016 and in the stepwise process of implementing ge-ological disposal solution for HLW Finland, France, and Sweden are the most ad-vanced. Furthermore, EU itself is a contracting party to the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management, which is managed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Each contracting party must report the continued progress in the implementation of the generally ac-cepted fundamental principles, requirements and guides on how to implement safety objectives for the safe use on nuclear energy
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Response to 2030 Climate Target Plan

15 Apr 2020

Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) welcomes the opportunity to give feedback on 2030 Climate Target Plan and to support the European Commission’s target to achieve climate-neutrality by 2050. As the Commission rightly states in its Inception Impact Assessment document, the urgency of the climate challenge threatens long-term sustainability on our planet. Therefore, TVO also welcomes the intention to engage every economic sector to contribute to common climate action towards a sustainable transition. In order to reach the common climate target, both the pathway and the plan must be viable and convincing to all economic sectors and regions. When the Commission addresses the need to maintain ‘access to secure, affordable and sustainable energy system’, it means that the Commission must endorse and take into account all available energy solutions that reduce and enable the reduction of the EU’s emissions. EU’s energy policy must be consistent and promote the competitiveness and the innovations of clean energy. At the same time, TVO wishes to highlight the right of every Member States to choose their own national energy sources (TFEU Art. 194 and the European Council’s December 2019 Conclusions). It is not fruitful to curb the Member States’ freedom to use certain technologies, as long as it is a low-carbon solution to achieve the collective climate neutrality target. Respecting technology neutrality leads to the most efficient outcome, when every Member State can choose the most suitable and cost-effective solution to address their unique circumstances on the path to a clean energy transition. The demand of European citizens, cities, transport and industry low-carbon electricity will drastically increase in the coming years. Nuclear energy answers to this need – it is a zero-emission clean energy source that is capable of delivering enormous quantities of electricity affordably, safely and reliably. Nuclear power is a sustainable energy source, and TVO has a solution for the final disposal of nuclear waste. In fact, the European Commission’s 2018 communication A Clean Planet for All describes nuclear energy as a “backbone” of European electricity production in 2050. It estimates, that nuclear energy’s share of the total electricity supply in 2050 supporting renewable sources will be 15%. The same 15% share in 2050 was also estimated by the Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) in its 2019 Global Climate Outlook. Moreover, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2018), the International Energy Agency (2019) and the JRC (2017) state that nuclear energy is a necessary piece to put the ambitious climate target into reality. Despite the challenges the EU is facing due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the EU must not forget its climate targets. The EU is the first major economy willing to do what it takes to become climate neutral, and this means that the Commission needs to ensure that its climate and energy policies maintain feasibility and continuity over time to obtain credibility among global emitters. Therefore, the Commission needs to plan the trajectory together with the industry stakeholders to turn these targets into practical solutions, as well as secure the transparency of decision-making and a science-based approach to the transition.
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Response to Climate Law

5 Feb 2020

Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) welcomes the opportunity to give feedback on EU’s first Climate Law, which will lead the path to 2050 climate neutrality. The European energy sector and companies play a crucial role in the battle against climate change. TVO is also glad to note, that the Climate Law’s roadmap states that "It aims to set the EU’s 2050 climate objective in line with scientific findings of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).” In addition, the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) states in its Special Report, that nuclear power has a pivotal role to play in tackling the climate change. The Climate Law should be in line with the scientific findings, and therefore TVO insists that the following facts are taken into account: • Nuclear is a zero-emission clean energy source. Nuclear generates power through fission and provides electricity without harmful fossil fuel emissions. During its whole fuel cycle, nuclear power has very limited greenhouse gas and other air pollutant emissions compared to other energy sources. • Nuclear energy is more land-use efficient than any other clean energy source. According to the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), wind farms require 360 times more land to produce the same amount of electricity as a typical nuclear facility, while solar power requires 75 times more land. This is particularly important to understand, as the vital role of land-use in climate action has become increasingly more relevant (e.g. UN IPCC Climate Change and Land report from August 2019). • Nuclear fission technology is the only developed energy source that is capable of delivering enormous quantities of electricity safely, reliably, economically, and sustainably. • Over 40 years of research, demonstration and design carried out in the field of nuclear waste management, and with long experience in the geological disposal of low- and intermediate-level operating wastes from nuclear power, the nuclear industry is fully addressing existing and potential environmental impacts of the nuclear fuel cycle. • Nuclear waste disposal is no longer a technical problem – the spent fuel is placed safely in interim storages. Developed solutions for final disposal are proceeding, and projects in Finland, Sweden and France are the most advanced. Nuclear is responsible for a very small amount of the total hazardous waste that is produced by societies across the world, and it is always taken care of in a highly responsible manner under well-established international regulations. Finally, TVO wants to resemble that A Clean Planet for all – A European strategic long-term vision for a prosperous, modern, competitive and climate neutral economy states that "By 2050, more than 80% of electricity will be coming from renewable energy sources (increasingly located off-shore). Together with a nuclear power share of ca. 15%, this will be the backbone of a carbon-free European power system.” TVO also wants to highlight every Member States freedom to choose their own low carbon technologies to achieve the joint climate neutrality target.
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Response to Fast-track interservice consultation on the 'SEIP including a JTM and the JTF"

5 Feb 2020

Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) welcomes the opportunity to give feedback on EU’s first Climate Law, which will lead the path to 2050 climate neutrality. The European energy sector and companies play a crucial role in the battle against climate change. TVO is also glad to note, that the Climate Law’s roadmap states that "It aims to set the EU’s 2050 climate objective in line with scientific findings of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).” In addition, the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) states in its Special Report, that nuclear power has a pivotal role to play in tackling the climate change. The Climate Law should be in line with the scientific findings, and therefore TVO insists that the following facts are taken into account: • Nuclear is a zero-emission, sustanainable clean energy source. Nuclear generates power through fission and provides electricity without harmful fossil fuel emissions. During its whole fuel cycle, nuclear power has very limited greenhouse gas and other air pollutant emissions compared to other energy sources. • Nuclear energy is more land-use efficient than any other clean energy source. According to the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), wind farms require 360 times more land to produce the same amount of electricity as a typical nuclear facility, while solar power requires 75 times more land. This is particularly important to understand, as the vital role of land-use in climate action has become increasingly more relevant (e.g. UN IPCC Climate Change and Land report from August 2019). • Nuclear fission technology is the only developed energy source that is capable of delivering enormous quantities of electricity safely, reliably, economically, and sustainably. • Over 40 years of research, demonstration and design carried out in the field of nuclear waste management, and with long experience in the geological disposal of low- and intermediate-level operating wastes from nuclear power, the nuclear industry is fully addressing existing and potential environmental impacts of the nuclear fuel cycle. • Nuclear waste disposal is no longer a technical problem – the spent fuel is placed safely in interim storages. Developed solutions for final disposal are proceeding, and projects in Finland, Sweden and France are the most advanced. Nuclear is responsible for a very small amount of the total hazardous waste that is produced by societies across the world, and it is always taken care of in a highly responsible manner under well-established international regulations. Finally, TVO wants to resemble that A Clean Planet for all – A European strategic long-term vision for a prosperous, modern, competitive and climate neutral economy states that "By 2050, more than 80% of electricity will be coming from renewable energy sources (increasingly located off-shore). Together with a nuclear power share of ca. 15%, this will be the backbone of a carbon-free European power system.” TVO also wants to highlight every Member States freedom to choose their own low carbon technologies to achieve the joint climate neutrality target.
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Meeting with Timo Pesonen (Acting Director-General Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs)

2 Dec 2019 · presenting their views on nuclear energy - listening mode

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Aula Europe

14 Nov 2017 · Energy issues

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Aula Europe

5 Sept 2017 · Energy policy

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Aula Europe

7 Mar 2017 · Energy policy

Meeting with Kaius Kristian Hedberg (Cabinet of Commissioner Elżbieta Bieńkowska) and Fortum Oyj and Aula Europe

28 Feb 2017 · Winter Package in the context of nuclear power

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Fortum Oyj and

15 Nov 2016 · Energy Policy

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Fortum Oyj and UPM-Kymmene Oyj

9 Sept 2016 · Nuclear power and energy markets

Meeting with Kaius Kristian Hedberg (Cabinet of Commissioner Elżbieta Bieńkowska)

28 Jun 2016 · role and competittiveness of nuclear power in the EU's changing energy policy and electricity market

Meeting with Juraj Nociar (Cabinet of Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič), Manuel Szapiro (Cabinet of Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič)

28 Jun 2016 · Perspectives of nuclear energy under Energy Union

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Aula Europe

28 Jun 2016 · OL3 update

Meeting with Juho Romakkaniemi (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen) and Aula Europe

21 Jan 2016 · Nuclear and electricity legislation

Meeting with Gonzalo De Mendoza Asensi (Cabinet of Vice-President Miguel Arias Cañete) and Pohjolan Voima Oyj

21 Oct 2015 · Role of nuclear power in the EU energy policy

Meeting with Heidi Jern (Cabinet of Vice-President Jyrki Katainen)

27 Apr 2015 · Energy Union