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EU halts E100m aid to Armenia in nuclear row

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  • EU halts E100m aid to Armenia in nuclear row

    EU halts E100m aid to Armenia in nuclear row

    Irish Times
    May 29, 2004

    Alarmed at the potential for another Chernobyl-type nuclear accident,
    the European Union has frozen E100 million of grant aid to this small
    state in the Caucasus following the refusal of the government here
    to agree to a date for c losure of an ageing Russian-built nuclear
    power plant sited in one of the world's most active seismic zones.

    The pressurised water reactor at Metsamor, about 40 kilometres west
    of the Armenian capital, Yerevan, was first commissioned in the mid
    70s but shut down in 1988 after an earthquake killed 25,000 in cities
    and towns in the area. The reactor was restarted in 1995 due to severe
    energy shortages in the country.

    'Our position of principle is that nuclear power plants should not
    be built in highly active seismic zones,' said Mr Alexis Louber,
    head of the EU's delegation in Armenia. 'This plant is a danger to
    the whole Caucasus region.'

    As part of a general policy seeking the closure of ageing nuclear
    plants in territories of the former Soviet Union, the EU had offered
    the E100 million in aid to Armenia for finding alternative energy
    sources and helping with decommissioning costs at the plant. The EU
    decision to freeze the aid, made some weeks ago but only just revealed
    here, is seen as a mark of Brussels' frustration on the issue.

    'We cannot force Armenia to close Metsamor,' said Mr
    Louber. 'Originally it was agreed the plant should cease operations
    this year - now we're asking for a definite date as to when the plant
    will be closed. We feel that should be well in advance of the end of
    the plant's design life cycle in 2016.'

    The plant, in a gently rolling plain in view of the snowy peak of Mt
    Ararat in nearby Turkey, has no secondary containment facilities to
    prevent radioactive leakage in the event of a nuclear accident - a
    safety requirement now considered essential in all reactors. Another
    worry is that, due to border and railway closures with surrounding
    territories, nuclear material to feed the plant has to be flown into
    Yerevan's civilian airport from Russia and then transported along a
    badly surfaced public highway to the plant.

    'It is the same as flying around a potential nuclear bomb,' said
    Mr Louber. 'It's an extremely hazardous exercise.'

    Mr Areg Galystyan, Armenia's deputy minister of power, dismissed
    suggestions that Metsamor is unsafe, saying dollars 50 million had
    been spent on upgrading safety features at the plant.

    'It was a big mistake to shut the plant down in 1988,' he said. 'It
    created an energy crisis and the people and economy suffered. It would
    be impossible for us to cause the same problem again by shutting off
    the plant.'

    He also insisted that all necessary safety measures were taken when
    flying in fuel to feed the reactor, though exact details of the
    operation were kept secret 'to avoid alarming people'.

    Dr Alvaro Antonyan, president of Armenia's National Survey for
    Seismic Protection, said Russian scientists built the power station
    on a special raft in order to withstand earthquakes. Dr Antonyan
    said the 1988 earthquake, which measured 6.7 on the Richter scale,
    had not damaged the reactor.

    'I fear for my two children because I do not think the plant is
    safe,' said Mr Gohar Bezprozvannkh, who worked at the plant for two
    years. 'Earthquakes happen here and there is danger. On the other
    hand we do not have any other options for work.'
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