“Report”: Poker about the election date, power grid construction site and heavy historical legacy

2024-01-22 12:51:06

On January 23rd at 9:05 p.m. on ORF 2; Guest in the studio: Verbund CEO Michael Strugl

Vienna (OTS) – Susanne Schnabl will present the “Report” on Tuesday, January 23, 2024, at 9:05 p.m. on ORF 2 with the following topics:

Wahlpoker

Autumn or spring? Will the National Council election be brought forward or will it take place as planned at the end of September? The poker surrounding the election date is a concern for domestic politics. What lies behind the tactical considerations? Who might benefit from an early election and what role does the EU election in June play? A report by Martin Pusch and Alexander Sattmann.

Power grid construction site

voestalpine wants to make its blast furnaces more climate-friendly. The first ovens should be running electrically in just three years. The supervisory board gave the green light for this almost a year ago. For Austria, this might mean five percent fewer CO2 emissions. There is currently one thing standing in the way of the vision of green steel: the power grid needs to be expanded. But the planned expansion is supposed to run next to residential areas and through a nature reserve, which is why a citizens’ initiative is currently blocking the project. The Federal Administrative Court is now dealing with it, report Laura Franz and Helga Lazar.

Verbund CEO Michael Strugl is a live guest in the studio regarding this and the question of electricity prices.

Heavy historical legacy

What to do with the relics from National Socialism and Austrofascism? Grind? Silence? Rework? Recently there was excitement around the Dollfuß Museum in Texing, Lower Austria. The now closed birthplace of the Austrofascist chancellor, which resembled more of a shrine than a museum, was handed over to the MERKwür association for redesign. But now the project is probably in danger of coming to an end because the lenders had the house unexpectedly evacuated. However, the debate regarding the so-called “connection monument” came to a happy end in Oberschützen in Burgenland. Contemporary witnesses began to tell stories, opened their private archives and school classes visit it today and talk openly regarding it. Sabina Riedl reports on the different ways of dealing with historical contamination.

Questions & Contact:

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