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Global Nuclear Retreat? Armenia, Others, Aim To Keep Plants Alive

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  • Global Nuclear Retreat? Armenia, Others, Aim To Keep Plants Alive

    GLOBAL NUCLEAR RETREAT? ARMENIA, OTHERS, AIM TO KEEP PLANTS ALIVE
    Josie Garthwaite

    http://hetq.am/eng/articles/14365/global-nuclear-retreat?-armenia-others-aim-to-keep-plants-alive.html
    11:05, May 14, 2012

    While Japan is now trying to run its economy without nuclear energy
    for the first time since 1970, the post-Fukushima world's continued
    dependence on atomic power is probably best illustrated on the other
    side of Asia.

    Armenia is vowing to keep its one nuclear reactor running, despite
    international pressure to close the 32-year-old Soviet-designed plant,
    which sits in a broad seismiczone that stretches from Turkey to
    the Arabian Sea. One of the world's last remaining nuclear reactors
    without a primary containment structure, Metsamor is now slated to
    continue operating for as long as four years beyond its original 2016
    retirement date. Armenia has postponed shutdown until a delayed new
    reactor comes online, no earlier than 2019 or 2020.

    The April decision comes at a pivotal time for nuclear energy. Some
    nations are backing away from nuclear power in the wake of last year's
    earthquake-and-tsunami-triggered Fukushima Daiichi accident. Nowhere
    is that more apparent than in Japan itself, where a series of local
    decisions led to the shutdown, as of this past weekend, of all 54
    reactors, once the source of one-third of the nation's power. Germany
    and Switzerland have set timetables for phasing out their nuclear
    plants. And France, which derives 80 percent of its electricity
    from nuclear power, has elected a new president, Socialist Francois
    Hollande, who favors reduced nuclear dependence and closure of the
    nation's oldest reactor, Fessenheim, located in a seismic zone on
    the Rhine River.

    But nuclear energy provided 13 percent of the world's electricity in
    2010, and that amount of power cannot be replaced quickly or cheaply.

    In Bulgaria, where licenses for two Soviet-designed reactors at
    the Kozloduy plant are set to expire in 2017 and 2019, 20-year
    extensions are under review. The United States, world leader in
    nuclear generation, also leads the world in coaxing more life out
    of nuclear reactors, having approved 20-year extensions for as many
    as 71 licenses. In Armenia, there is strong political will to build
    a new nuclear reactor, but the financing and construction of new
    state-of-the-art facilities here and elsewhere is slow. The obvious
    choice, in many nations, is to keep the old plants running.

    Chris Earls, director of safety-focused regulation for the Nuclear
    Energy Institute, which represents the U.S. nuclear industry, sums
    up the advantages succinctly:

    "Once plants are built and operating, they're a very cheap source of
    reliable power."

    Unique Reliance

    Perhaps no country relies more heavily on a single reactor, in a more
    tenuous situation, than the former Soviet state of Armenia in West
    Asia. Supplying more than 40 percent of the country's electricity,
    the Metsamor reactor stands in a region prone to earthquakes,
    close to farmland and population centers. The landlocked nation's
    energy alternatives are limited by blockades and tense relations on
    its borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey. Metsamor is just 20 miles
    (36 kilometers) from the Armenian capital, Yerevan, and 10 miles
    (16 kilometers) from the Turkish border.

    Metsamor is one of just 16 nuclear plants still operating in the
    world that were built without a primary containment structure, all
    of them Soviet-designed. The pressurized-water reactor has undergone
    hundreds of safety upgrades since the devastating 6.8-magnitude Spitak
    earthquake in 1988 killed 25,000 Armenians and left 500,000 homeless.

    Some 60 miles (100 kilometers) from the epicenter, Metsamor's two
    reactors were undamaged. But one reactor was closed for 6.5 years,
    while a slightly older sister reactor was never restarted and is now
    being decommissioned.

    Safety improvements have not quelled all concern about Metsamor,
    however, and Armenia has faced international pressure - and collected
    aid from the United States and Europe - to close the Metsamor plant
    by 2016. After Armenia reneged on a deal to close the plant in 2004,
    an EU representative called the plant "a danger to the entire region,"
    not only because of the high seismic risk but also because nuclear
    fuel was flown to the landlocked country's civilian airport, rather
    than being delivered by sea or rail. In 2006, Armenia adopted an
    action plan with the European Union in which it agreed to set an early
    closure date and "deal with the consequences of an early closure,"
    in part by developing hydropower, energy efficiency, and renewable
    energy resources.

    Pressure to retire the Metsamor reactor before 2016 has only
    intensified in the year since the earthquake and tsunami that triggered
    the crisis at Fukushima in Japan. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
    has insisted that the Metsamor reactor is safe, and that it must
    continue operating until a new reactor starts up.

    The estimated $5 billion construction project, a joint venture with
    Russia, was supposed to begin this year, but it has taken longer than
    anticipated to raise financing. It wasn't until early this year that
    Russia agreed to finance 50 percent of the project.

    The decisions that Armenia and other nations now face on nuclear power
    are a simple function of the age of most of the 436 nuclear power
    reactors now operating in the world. In the United States, which only
    this year licensed construction of its first new nuclear power plant
    in 30 years, nuclear plants were typically licensed (and designed)
    for 40 years. The Soviet plants were generally designed for 30 years.

    Aging plants are not inherently dangerous, Earls said. "It's good
    practice to make things better over time. But it doesn't make sense
    to retire an older plant before its time just because there's a new
    widget out there that might make things better," he said. In general,
    he added, "We should not assume that just because a plant is older,
    it's not safe. It is, if it's maintained properly."

    The United States, which generates more nuclear energy than any
    other country and relies on it for 20 percent of its power, has never
    rejected a nuclear license renewal application outright. According
    to Earls, as many as 15 more applications are under review, and
    17 additional plants intend to submit applications. "Over the next
    two to three years, there's going to be a huge bow wave of plants
    entering this extended period of operation," he said. And the industry
    is already looking ahead to a second extension of those licenses to
    keep the reactors operating past 2029.

    Stress Tests

    Proper maintenance and monitoring, with a view to the long term,
    is key. The decision to tack a few years onto the Metsamor reactor's
    lifetime at this late stage could itself be cause for concern. "I would
    be interested to know the mindset of the people who are operating the
    plant," Earls said. If operators think, "We're going to be shut down
    next year. We can safely maintain to that point," he said, some of
    the maintenance and improvements that would be necessary to extend
    the life of the plant may fall by the wayside.

    In an effort to ensure safety and security, Armenia agreed last June
    (along with six other countries that neighbor the EU) to conduct
    "stress tests" at the Metsamor plant and submit to a transparent
    peer-review process similar to those planned for nuclear reactors
    throughout Europe.

    Documented in public reports with a common structure for
    apples-to-apples comparison, the tests are meant to help regulators
    reassess risk and safety margins in extreme (and, pre-Fukushima,
    largely unexpected) scenarios caused by natural disasters or human
    action.

    Switzerland and Ukraine are the only non-EU countries that have been
    fully integrated into the stress test and peer-review process.

    According to a European Commission spokesperson, Armenia is currently
    receiving assistance from the EU to carry out stress tests at
    Metsamor, and a national report could be ready by the end of this
    year or early 2013.

    As with many nuclear projects, the stress tests have taken longer
    than anticipated. Last week, EU Energy Commissioner Gunther Oettinger
    told reporters the European Commission will issue a final report
    on the results no earlier than the fall, rather than next month,
    as previously scheduled. Multinational inspection teams had visited
    only 38 of 147 reactors in the EU as of March 2012. But in this case,
    Oettinger said in a statement, it is not time that is of the essence.

    "EU citizens have the right to know and understand how safe the
    nuclear power plants are they live close to. Soundness is more
    important than timing."

    For National Geographic News Published May 8, 2012

    Photograph by Justyna Mielnikiewicz, Getty Images. Operators check
    functions inside the control room of Armenia's Metsamor Nuclear Power
    Plant in this 2005 photograph.


    From: Baghdasarian
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