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Russia, Kazakhstan Sign Deal On Uranium Enrichment Center

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  • Russia, Kazakhstan Sign Deal On Uranium Enrichment Center

    RUSSIA, KAZAKHSTAN SIGN DEAL ON URANIUM ENRICHMENT CENTER

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    May 10 2007

    ASTANA, May 10 (RIA Novosti) - Russian President Vladimir Putin's
    visit to Kazakhstan has produced a bilateral agreement to set up an
    international uranium enrichment center in East Siberia.

    The venture, which was part of Moscow's non-proliferation initiative to
    create a network of enrichment centers under the UN nuclear watchdog's
    supervision, will be based at a chemical plant in Angarsk and will
    also be responsible for the disposal of nuclear waste.

    "We consider this document the first step in the implementation of
    our initiative to create a global nuclear energy infrastructure,"
    Putin said during his talks with Kazakh leader Nursultan Nazarbayev.

    The center will come on stream in 2013 and offer uranium enrichment
    services to countries interested in developing nuclear energy for
    civilian purposes.

    Last October, Russia and Kazakhstan, which holds 15% of the world's
    uranium reserves, signed constituent documents to establish their first
    joint venture to enrich uranium. A delegation from the International
    Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) visited the Angarsk chemical plant
    in March.

    The Angarsk plant was previously removed from the list of "national
    strategic facilities," and there are no further legal obstacles to
    its operation.

    Sergei Kiriyenko, head of the Russian Federal Agency of Nuclear
    Power, and Kazakh Energy Minister Baktykozha Izmukhambetov signed
    the agreement following talks between the two countries' leaders.

    "Now that the agreement is signed, the process of establishing the
    center is complete," Kiriyenko said, adding that any country could
    join the project by signing a similar intergovernmental agreement
    in order to secure access to uranium enrichment services and receive
    nuclear fuel.

    He said Russia accounted for 45% of the world's uranium enrichment
    capabilities and that the Angarsk plant would be able to cover
    uranium needs in the next few years, and new facilities could be
    built afterward if necessary.

    Kiriyenko said several countries had voiced their readiness to join
    the project, adding that Armenia was one of them and that a preliminary
    protocol had been signed with Ukraine.

    Russia came up with the initiative to establish joint nuclear
    enrichment centers last year so that countries could have transparent
    access to civilian nuclear technology without provoking international
    fears that low-enriched uranium could be used for a weapons program.

    Russia made a similar proposal to Iran, which has been at the center of
    international concerns following the resumption of nuclear research
    in January 2006 in what the Islamic Republic claims is for power
    generation.

    Russia and Kazakhstan will also sign a deal soon to establish a fifth
    joint venture for uranium prospecting and production. Kazakhstan and
    Russia rank second and third in uranium reserves after Australia,
    with over 1 million metric tons and 800,000 tons respectively.

    "With Kazakhstan we possess the entire technological chain - from
    producing uranium to achieving the final product, low-enriched
    uranium," Kiriyenko said.

    Putin announced Russia is also ready to assist in the construction of
    a nuclear power plant in Kazakhstan. "I am sure that our experts will
    discuss this issue today," Putin said. "It is important to continue
    work on the program to create a common electricity market for Russia
    and Kazakhstan and start implementing it in the near future."

    He added that forming a joint venture to develop innovative projects
    on power units with nuclear reactors of low and medium capacity was
    another crucial bilateral project in the nuclear sector.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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