CONDITIONAL ACCEPTANCE: PUBLIC OPINION ON THE ROLE OF NUCLEAR ENERGY IN EUROPE’S ENERGY TRANSITION
Summary
This thesis examines how historical memory and environmental science literacy shape
European public opinion on nuclear energy and its role in the energy transition. While
nuclear power is often assessed in terms of cost, emissions, and technical feasibility,
public attitudes (shaped by accidents such as Chernobyl and Fukushima and by levels of
environmental literacy) play a decisive role in determining policy legitimacy. Using a
qualitative mixed-methods approach, combining surveys (n=168), expert interviews, and
Eurobarometer data, the study finds that historical accidents continue to foster risk
perceptions, whereas higher scientific literacy encourages more nuanced, evidence-based
views. Media and political discourse act as mediating factors, amplifying or reframing
these influences. The findings suggest that nuclear acceptance in the EU depends less on
technical viability than on trust, transparency, and communication. Effective policy
requires framing nuclear as a complementary technology, investing in public literacy, and
fostering inclusive dialogue to strengthen institutional trust.