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Government Approves Plan to Decommission Armenia's Sole NPP

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  • Government Approves Plan to Decommission Armenia's Sole NPP

    Global Insight
    November 30, 2007


    Government Approves Plan to Decommission Armenia's Sole NPP, But No
    Date Set

    by Andrew Neff


    The Armenian government yesterday approved a strategy to close the
    country's sole nuclear power plant (NPP) after years of foreign
    pressure about the safety of continuing to operate the Metsamor
    facility. However, while the government approved a decommissioning
    plan for Metsamor, it gave no date for the closure of the plant,
    which is located just west of the Armenian capital, Yerevan. Armenia
    closed the NPP in 1988 due to safety concerns after a devastating
    earthquake rocked the country, but it was forced to reopen the plant
    in 1995 as a result of a severe energy crisis brought on by a
    blockade of energy supplies from Azerbaijan and Turkey due to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Western countries have put heavy pressure
    on Armenia to close Metsamor before its operating lifespan ends in
    2016 because of safety concerns and possible design flaws in the
    Soviet-era facility.

    Significance:Armenia has long resisted international pressure to
    close Metsamor, arguing that operating the plant was necessary to
    ensure the country's energy security in the face of the ongoing
    blockade by Azerbaijan and Turkey. The Armenian government has also
    said that it will only close Metsamor when it has sufficient
    power-generating capacity to replace the plant. Armenia is poised to
    build an NPP to replace Metsamor, with funding for a feasibility
    study on a new facility to come from the United States (see Armenia:
    25 October 2007: ). Armen Movsisian, Armenia's energy minister, said
    that the shutdown of the Metsamor NPP could cost up to $280US
    million. A new NPP, which is proposed to have a capacity of 1,000MW
    (twice as large as Metsamor), is estimated to cost more than $3US
    billion.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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