Eleven Spanish towns have volunteered to host a major new nuclear waste storage site, a long-delayed project that is fiercely opposed by environmentalists, Spanish media reported Saturday.

Spain's six nuclear plants, which produce about 20 percent of its electricity, currently store their own spent fuel but last month the government called for bids from locations interested in building a central storage site.

The 11 towns that had filed bids before a Friday deadline all have fewer than 800 inhabitants, daily Catalan newspaper El Periodico reported.

Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has said the location of the site, which is expected to cost 700 million euros and employ around 100 people once it becomes operational, would be reached by "consensus".

The waste site will bring millions of euros in government subsidies to its host town.

Environmental group Ecologists in Action denounced the selection process as a "circus", arguing that most towns in the race were "poor, with few residents and whose mayors made the bids without knowing what the risks are."

The bids have also met opposition from neighbouring municipalities, who fear they will share in potential risks without the financial gains.

Regional government leaders in both central Castile-La Mancha and northwestern Catalonia have also vowed to block construction of a nuclear waste site on their territory.

The government estimates Spain's nuclear power stations will no longer have storage room on site as of 2013. Parliament voted in 2004 to build a central waste storage site, but the project has since been at a standstill.

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