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Armenian Government Promises To Close Soviet-Era Nuclear Plant

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  • Armenian Government Promises To Close Soviet-Era Nuclear Plant

    ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PROMISES TO CLOSE SOVIET-ERA NUCLEAR PLANT

    The Canadian Press
    Nov 30 2007

    YEREVAN, Armenia - Armenia approved a plan Thursday to shut down its
    lone nuclear power plant, following years of pressure from foreign
    countries concerned about its Soviet-era design and safety.

    The government gave no date for closing the Medzamor reactor, located
    about 32 kilometres west of the capital, Yerevan. The 27-year-old
    plant, which supplies nearly half the country's electricity, halted
    operations after a 1988 earthquake but was restarted during an energy
    shortage in 1995.

    Since then, Armenia has been under constant pressure to close the
    plant ahead of its 2016 operational end-life due to safety concerns
    and possible design flaws. The European Union has pledged loans and
    other assistance estimated to about cover the cost of closing it.

    The shutdown could cost up to $280 million, Energy Minister Armen
    Movsisian said.

    Armenian officials have long refused to shut it without another source
    of electricity.

    Last week, the United States said it would fund a preliminary
    feasibility study on building a new nuclear plant.

    President Robert Kocharian has said that building a new, 1,000-megawatt
    plant - double that of Medzamor - would cost more than $3 billion.

    In 2004, Russia's state-run electricity grid operator, RAO Unified
    Energy Systems, assumed financial control of Medzamor in a deal struck
    to relieve Armenia's massive debts to Russian energy suppliers. UES
    and Armenia now share management of the plant.
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