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Armenia Approves New Nuclear Plant Over Green Objections

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  • Armenia Approves New Nuclear Plant Over Green Objections

    ARMENIA APPROVES NEW NUCLEAR PLANT OVER GREEN OBJECTIONS
    Gayane Lazarian

    Environment News Service
    Dec 28 2009

    YEREVAN, Armenia, December 28, 2009 (ENS) - Armenia has cleared the
    way for a new nuclear power plant, despite green groups' objections
    that its location could put the country's capital at risk.

    Earlier this month, the government approved the creation of
    Atomstroyexport, a joint Russian-Armenian company that will own
    the station.

    "Today we are taking a political decision, we are giving our agreement
    to the creation of a joint venture with our Russian partners," said
    Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan on December 3.

    Armenia plans to finish the new generating unit by 2016, and it will
    replace the Metsamor plant, which produces 40 percent of the country's
    power but is nearing the end of its life. Without the nuclear plant,
    Armenia would be largely dependent on gas imported from Russia or Iran.

    "The new nuclear power station will become a security zone for Armenia
    in the energy system. A nuclear reactor is necessary as an energy
    resource that can ensure the self-sufficiency of the country," said
    Sevak Sarukhanyan, an economist and deputy director of the Noravank
    think tank.

    Sargsyan said the new station is crucial to efforts to revive Armenia's
    economy, which has suffered both from the post-Soviet collapse and
    the blockade imposed by Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    "If we do not build the nuclear power station then, of course, our
    competitive position will significantly worsen," he said.

    Construction of the plant will take five or six years, and it should
    have a working life of 60 years, which will guarantee Armenia's
    electricity supply far into the future.

    Ecological groups, however, remain strongly opposed to the plans.

    Hakob Manasaryan, head of the Union of Greens, said the government
    did not explore other energy options in its rush to approve a new
    nuclear plant. He worries that Armenia, which is prone to earthquakes,
    could see a disaster such as the one that struck Ukraine's Chernobyl
    reactor 23 years ago.

    "I have the impression that the officials are thinking only of
    the next 15 or 20 years. A new structure, with a capacity of 1,200
    megawatts should be at least 100 to 150 kilometers (60 to 90 miles)
    from big cities. The existing Metsamor station, which is just 20 km in
    a straight line from the capital, does not even meet this condition,"
    he said.

    "There is not one safe working reactor. Of course it is good if it
    is super-modern, which means, it is less dangerous, but who can vouch
    for that? And with a capacity of 1,200 megawatts, the consequences of
    the risk could be more significant. The construction of a new reactor
    in the same place [as the Metsamor plant] is even more dangerous,"
    said Manasaryan.

    But Areg Galstyan, deputy energy and natural resources minister,
    said new reactors are built to far higher safety standards than
    Chernobyl-type nuclear power stations, and that the ecologists have
    nothing to worry about.

    Armenia's Metsamor nuclear power station (Photo courtesy Nuclear Threat
    Initiative) The Metsamor power station sits in the Ararat Valley, in
    the very heart of Armenia, and is surrounded by the towns of Armavir,
    Echmiadzin and Metsamor. Its first unit started producing power in
    1976, and the second in 1980.

    According to Armenia's Department of State Atomic Control, the
    structure was strengthened after the devastating earthquake of 1988.

    The waste is not stored permanently on site, but is sent to Russia
    for disposal.

    Sarukhanyan said an atomic plant is probably the cleanest possible
    option for Armenia - compared to a fossil fuel or hydro station -
    and would allow the country to become a major exporter to neighboring
    countries. That could even include selling power to Turkey, if a
    peace deal agreed this year is ratified.

    "What would happen to Armenia, if there is another war in Georgia? You
    can say the same thing about Iran. If, because of the tense political
    situation, our gas supplies are cut, then we would face an energy
    collapse," he said.

    At the moment, Armenia's electricity network has the capacity to export
    200 megawatts to Turkey. After the two countries normalize their ties,
    Yerevan could upgrade the power lines and become a major source of
    energy for eastern Turkey, which is growing quickly.

    Stepan Safaryan, a parliament deputy from the Heritage party, said
    this could prove a major source of revenue for Armenia.

    "All predictions about global energy resources, and particularly for
    electric energy, in the next decade show a tendency towards growth.

    There are developing countries in the region, therefore in the long
    term we have not only a market but also chances of creating our own
    electricity," he said.

    Sargsyan in spring even announced that Turkish companies would be
    welcome to participate in the tender for the plant's construction,
    which was organized by Australia's Worley Parsons. Nationalists were
    shocked by his comments at the time but Sarukhanyan said they need
    not have worried, since the only serious bidder for the project was
    the Russian State Atomic Energy Corporation.

    Sarukhanyan said top western companies would not be prepared to invest
    such large amounts of money in exchange for a non-guaranteed return.

    "For Russia it is a realistic decision, however, since it will have a
    leading position in Armenia's energy sector. For a French or American
    company, it would be a doubtful deal, since the Armenian economy
    remains closed," he said.

    But Safaryan worries that Armenia is becoming over-dependent on Russia,
    which already dominates much of the Armenian economy, including the
    telecom and electricity sectors.

    "This will lead to a deeper dependence by our country with all
    the political consequences inherent in that," he said. "In this,
    like in any other sector, the existence of an alternative and of
    diversification is a question of independence and sovereignty."

    {Gayane Lazarian is a journalist with Armenianow.com. This article
    originally appeared December 24, 2009 in Caucasus Reporting Service,
    produced by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting}
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