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Russia To Look For Uranium In Armenia

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  • Russia To Look For Uranium In Armenia

    RUSSIA TO LOOK FOR URANIUM IN ARMENIA
    By Shakeh Avoyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 23 2007

    The Russian and Armenian governments agreed on Monday to jointly
    develop Armenia's untapped uranium reserves which they said could
    make the country self-sufficient in production of nuclear energy.

    A relevant agreement was signed in Yerevan by Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian and Sergey Kirienko, the visiting head of Russia's Federal
    Agency on Atomic Energy (Rosatom).

    "The main purpose of the agreement is to look for radioactive materials
    in Armenia and jointly develop those resources," said Environment
    Minister Vartan Ayvazian.

    According to Kirienko, the two sides will set up a joint venture that
    will explore areas in the southeastern Syunik region which Armenian
    and Russian geologists believe are rich in uranium. He was confident
    that they will discover commercially viable reserves of the radioactive
    metal used in nuclear power generation.

    "Armenia will be able to meet its needs and sell [uranium] to others,"
    the Rosatom chief told journalists "It is turning from an energy
    resource dependent country to an energy resource exporting one."

    A U.S. company, Global Gold, is already looking for uranium in another
    region of Armenia.

    The mountainous country was a major center of non-ferrous metallurgy
    in the former Soviet Union and still exports copper and gold in large
    quantities. But its uranium reserves, estimated at 30,000 metric tons
    by Soviet geologists, have not been developed so far. Officials said
    the real reserves may be twice bigger.

    In Kirienko's words, Armenia could become one of the few countries
    of the world with a full uranium production cycle from extraction of
    the metal to its transformation into nuclear fuel. Some of that fuel
    would be supplied to the nuclear power station at Metsamor, he said.

    The Armenian government plans to decommission the Metsamor plant by
    2016 in accordance with its commitments to the European Union and the
    United States. It announced plans last year to replace the Soviet-era
    facility with a new plant meeting modern safety standards. The
    government pushed through parliament a legal amendment allowing
    it to look for foreign investors that would be willing to provide
    an estimated $1 billion needed for its construction. Kirienko said
    Moscow is ready to participate in the ambitious project.
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