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Armenia's energy system should be based on nuclear power - expert

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  • Armenia's energy system should be based on nuclear power - expert

    Armenia's energy system should be based on nuclear power - expert

    Azg, Yerevan
    1 Apr 04


    Nuclear energy should be the core of Armenia's energy system, the
    director of the Russian research institute for nuclear energy has told
    the Armenian newspaper Azg. Prof Armen Artavazd Abaghyan said that
    Armenia has no oil, gas or coal resources, instead it has problems
    with importing fuel from abroad. For this reason, Armenia should
    become a nuclear state like Japan, he said. The following is an
    excerpt from Ruben Ayrapetyan's report by Armenian newspaper Azg on 1
    April headlined "Armenia should become a nuclear power". Subheadings
    have been inserted editorially:

    A real war for energy resources is going on in the world today. How is
    nuclear energy developing against this background and is there a
    larger interest in the sector? What are the prospects for nuclear
    energy? The director of the Russian scientific research institute for
    exploiting nuclear power stations, the vice-president of the
    Rosatomenergo [Russian atomic energy] concern, a member of the Russian
    Academy of Sciences, Prof Armen Artavazd Abaghyan answers these and
    other questions.

    Merciless struggle for energy

    "It is a fact that a merciless struggle for oil is going on in the
    world," Prof Abaghyan said. "But the thing is that there are volumes
    of crude oil, natural gas and coal which remain accessible sources of
    energy. So one cannot say that against the background of all this,
    atomic energy is developing quickly. The nuclear sector is developing
    at a different pace in various countries: intensively in China, India,
    Korea, Japan; moderately in Russia and slowly in Europe. But there is
    no doubt that more importance will be attached to the role of atomic
    energy, for the natural resources will run out at some point.
    Unfortunately, people's character is unchangeable and they will not do
    anything about it until the situation becomes really critical. In this
    respect, we do not have to go too far. I guess people have not
    forgotten the difficult days of the early 1990s (energy crisis), when
    the Armenians closed down the nuclear power plant without thinking of
    its consequences. Later, they had to reopen it due to economic,
    ecological and housekeeping problems. This is what will happen when
    oil and gas resources are exhausted."

    [Correspondent] But uranium resources are also limited, aren't they?

    [Abaghyan] It is not really so. At present, atomic energy is extracted
    mostly from the fission of uranium-235 which accounts only for 0.7 per
    cent of the natural composition.

    [Passage omitted: Details of nuclear fission; Russia is disposing of
    nuclear waste products]

    Nuclear energy should be the core of Armenia's energy system

    [Correspondent] Let's talk about the energy sector of Armenia. You
    have always been a devoted proponent of developing nuclear energy in
    our country, and have made a great contribution to this issue. Has
    anything changed in your position?

    [Abaghyan] No. I really thought and still think that nuclear energy
    should be the core of Armenia's energy policy and the greatest
    attention should be paid to it. I frequently repeat that we should
    face up to severe realities: Armenia has no oil, gas or coal, but
    instead, it has serious transport problems (with importing fuel from
    abroad). For this reason, Armenia should become a nuclear state, like
    Japan, for instance. The second bloc of the Metsamor Nuclear Power
    Plant can operate till 2031.

    [Correspondent] But there is external pressure demanding its closure.

    [Abaghyan] That is already politics. And politics, as we know, are not
    an exact science, and it is not my sphere. I base my statements on
    scientific, technological and economic realities.

    [Correspondent] What about rehabilitating the first bloc of the
    Armenian Nuclear Power Station?

    [Abaghyan] Time goes by and its operation requires more funds that
    Armenia does not have. The matter should have been dealt with in time,
    though not everything has been lost yet.

    [Correspondent] Russia has acquired the major energy generating
    stations of Armenia, and RAO YeES [Unified Energy Systems of Russia
    Joint-Stock Company] is currently the managing company of the Armenian
    Nuclear Power Station. I don't know what this means. But I have a
    question: If Russia ever becomes the holder of the controlling block
    of shares of the Nuclear Power Station, will then the "tone" of the
    European Union change in this matter? For Russia is not as small as
    Armenia.

    [Abaghyan] Everything is possible. Right now, I am not very
    well-informed about the political-legal nuances of the contract on
    managing the Nuclear Power Station. Maybe I will have a clearer idea
    of the issue after I meet the Armenian president in Yerevan within the
    framework of the Nuclear Security Council.
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