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BAKU: Metsamor Nuke Plant: Fateful Combination Of Risks

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  • BAKU: Metsamor Nuke Plant: Fateful Combination Of Risks

    METSAMOR NUKE PLANT: FATEFUL COMBINATION OF RISKS

    news.az
    May 3 2011
    Azerbaijan

    News.Az reprints from 1news.az an article by political scientist
    Fikrat Sadikhov.

    Not only specialists are aware of a serious threat posed by the
    Metsamor nuclear power plant in Armenia.

    Armenia accounts for the only nuclear power plant in the region,
    locating near Metsamor city, some 20-30km south of Yerevan. It was
    launched in 1976 while now only the second unit of the Armenian
    nuclear power with a capacity of 407.5 MW is functioning.

    Armenian side has long been trying to persuade the world community
    that this nuclear plant is almost the safest in the world but in vain.

    Is it true? The National Geographic has lately published an article
    entitled "Is Armenia's Nuclear Plant the World's Most Dangerous?"

    about the activity of the station and its security issue. The first
    phrase in the article wipes off the farfetched arguments of the
    Armenian side making them completely senseless.

    The article says "fateful combination of design and location make
    Metsamor among the most dangerous nuclear plants in the world".

    According to the magazine, the Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant which
    is just 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the Turkish border in a
    seismically active area, attracts an even increased attention in
    the wake of Japan's quake-and-tsunami-triggered Fukushima Daiichi
    crisis. Armenian officials say modifications made to the reactor over
    the past 15 years have made it safer.

    However, IAEA said necessary upgrades do not comply with general
    standards and were done after its restart.

    Additionally, the 'VVER 440s installed at the plant share one
    characteristic with Chernobyl that has been a continuing concern
    to many who live nearby: They have no containment structure', the
    magazine says.

    It continues that 'instead, VVER 440s rely on an "accident localization
    system," designed to handle small ruptures. In the event of a large
    rupture, the system would vent directly to the atmosphere'.

    They refer to an article in NEI's 1997 Source Book on Soviet nuclear
    plants saying 'they cannot cope with large primary circuit breaks'.

    "As with most Soviet-designed plants, electricity production by the
    VVER-440 Model V230s came at the expense of safety", the magazine says.

    The opinion of Antonia Wenisch of the Austrian Institute of Applied
    Ecology in Vienna, who calls Metsamor "among the most dangerous
    nuclear plants still in operation", also sounds important.

    She said 'despite the upgrades to the plant the overall safety has
    not improved sufficiently'.

    It is also known that since it failed to persuade Armenia to close
    the plant, the EU has focused on providing aid for improving the
    plant safety, spending more than 59 million euros ($85 million) on
    such projects as well as for renewable energy, and regional energy
    cooperation efforts. However, it offers 200 million euro ($289 million)
    loan to finance Metsamor's shutdown, but the issue of its closing
    has not yet been settled and the Armenian side with its peculiar
    'obstinacy' still pretends not to be seeing what happens.

    It all raises fears in Turkey.

    "Armenian nuke plant is the most outdated in the world and most
    organizations including IAEA are demanding its shutdown since it
    represents a serious threat for Turkey", Turkey's Energy Minister
    Taner Yildiz said.

    "The station is located 16 km from the Turkish border and applies
    old technology which might turn it into an epicenter of a serious
    disaster", he added saying Turkey continues campaign for its shutdown.

    The location of the plant is the biggest shortcoming in terms of
    security. Being located in the highlands, in case of failure, it may
    face shortage of water necessary for cooling the active zone of the
    reactor. Another important thing is that two serious crashes occurred
    at the nuke plant throughout its operation. About 400 km of cable
    burned down during one of them.

    The task to attain the plant's shutdown has already become among
    priorities for Azerbaijan, as well.

    Thus, the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan and its Ministry of Ecology
    and Natural Resources draw up materials that prove the danger posed
    by the Metsamor nuclear plant. These materials are to be submitted
    in international organizations. Intensive talks on this issue are
    also held in IAEA.

    Now that the events in Japan showed that no country, either highly
    technological or progressive, is secured from such man-caused
    disasters, what can we say about Armenia which is on the verge of
    economic bankruptcy and cannot even implement primary social programs
    and is located in a highly seismic area? Can a country in such a
    state ensure the safety of a nuclear plant, especially that Armenia
    undertook to close it when it was joining the Council of Europe?

    The Metsamor power plant is morally and technically outdated and
    is on the list of most dangerous ones by the IAEA ranking list. It
    represents a real threat for humanity and nations, residing in the
    South Caucasus and neighboring regions. This issue must be actively
    raised to the Russian side, since the disaster on the nuclear plant
    would have an imminent effect on the population of Russia's south.

    This issue can be raised at the sessions of the UN General Assembly,
    European and other international structures, primarily, IAEA, through
    joint efforts of Azerbaijan, Turkey, Georgia and other countries. It
    is necessary to show the world community that the risk of disaster
    at the Metsamor nuke plant is high enough especially now when the
    future of the overall nuclear power engineering is at issue.

    But if the Armenian side is going to use this factor as a trading
    object and for different speculations, it must be prevented from
    doing so.




    From: A. Papazian
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