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Contract Awarded For New Reactor At Metsamor

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  • Contract Awarded For New Reactor At Metsamor

    CONTRACT AWARDED FOR NEW REACTOR AT METSAMOR

    Nuclear Engineering
    http://www.neimagazine.com/story.asp?sectioncode= 132&storyCode=2053000
    May 18 2009

    WorleyParsons has won a contract from the Armenian government to
    construct a new nuclear power station in place of the country's
    Soviet-era facility at Metsamor.

    The government expects to complete construction of the new 1000MW
    reactor by 2016, the year the country's existing reactor, Armenia 2, is
    due to shutdown. The new plant is expected to cost around $5 billion.

    According to Vasak Taproshyan, a spokesperson for the Armenian state
    procurement agency, WorleyParsons has won the international tender
    because its bid contained a warranty policy on the plant.

    Taproshyan did not reveal the amount of the firm's bid, he reported
    only that a relevant agreement would be signed to fix the final
    price. The winning bidder will be responsible for drafting a conceptual
    design of the new reactor and supervising its construction.

    Armenia is heavily dependent on the single reactor, which currently
    produces about 40% of the its electricity. But it is under
    international pressure to shutdown the first-generation V-270 VVER
    reactor due to safety concerns,

    Turkey has written to the International Atomic Energy Agency demanding
    that something is done to speed up the closure of Armenia 2 and
    called for more international pressure. The Turkish nuclear agency
    has also claimed that its monitoring stations have detected increased
    radioactivity levels, which it believes are from the Metsamor site.

    The USA and the European Union support the ambitious idea to replace
    Armenia 2, in principle. In November 2007 the US government allocated
    $2 million for the first feasibility studies on the project, which
    were jointly conducted by Armenian and US atomic energy experts in
    2009. But US diplomats made it clear that Washington would not finance
    for the plant's construction.
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