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TBILISI: New Nuclear Power Stations Worry Georgian Greens

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  • TBILISI: New Nuclear Power Stations Worry Georgian Greens

    NEW NUCLEAR POWER STATIONS WORRY GEORGIAN GREENS
    By M. Alkhazashvili
    Translated by Diana Dundua

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Oct 4 2006

    Russia's Federal Atomic Agency, or RosAtom, has decided to build a
    nuclear power station in the south of Russia, said RosAtom Director,
    Sergei Kirienko, at a press conference on September 28. The new nuclear
    power station will serve the Russian North Caucasus republics and the
    Krasnodar region will be located close to the Georgia-Russian border.

    Chairman of the Georgian Green Party, Giorgi Gachechiladze, suggests
    that Russia's decision to construct a new nuclear power station
    could be an attempt to make them less reliant on oil and natural gas,
    freeing more of their reserve. This way, he asserts, more supply is
    available to export and they can continue to influence Eastern and
    Central Europe, which relies on their energy resources.

    The Turkish government have also recently announced plans to build
    an atomic plant in the vicinity of Georgia's borders in the port of
    Sinop. According to Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    construction will begin this year and the plant will be finished
    by 2012.

    A Soviet-era nuclear power plant is located 100 kilometres south of
    the Georgian border in Metsamor, Armenia. Georgia could soon have
    nuclear power stations surrounding it on all sides.

    Furthermore, Georgia has recently been mulling over the possibility
    of building its own nuclear power station. The possibility was very
    publicly discussed by Parliament Speaker Nino Burjanadze and the
    president's economic adviser Mart Laar recently.

    Gachechiladze claims Georgia's hydro electric potential could generate
    80 million megawatts of power, so it won't be easy to justify building
    a nuclear power station in Georgia.
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