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U.S. Nuclear Regulator Visits Armenia

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  • U.S. Nuclear Regulator Visits Armenia

    U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATOR VISITS ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 23 2008

    The top U.S. government official in charge of nuclear safety visited
    Armenia this week for talks with government officials in Yerevan that
    focused on the planned construction of a new Armenian nuclear plant,
    it emerged on Wednesday.

    The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan said U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commissioner
    Peter Lyons met senior Armenian officials Monday and Tuesday to
    "familiarize himself with the status of the nuclear power plant at
    Metsamor and Armenia's plans for building a new power plant to replace
    the Metsamor facility."

    "Dr. Lyons also explored with Armenian officials ways that the Nuclear
    Regulatory Commission can help Armenia to develop the regulatory
    infrastructure needed in order to license a new nuclear power plant,"
    the embassy said in a statement.

    The statement added that his interlocutors included unnamed
    officials from the Armenian ministries of energy, foreign affairs
    and environment as well as the state Nuclear Regulatory Agency. With
    Armenian government sources issuing no statements about the talks,
    it was not clear if Energy Minister Armen Movsisian was among them.

    "There may have been a meeting with Mr. Movsisian," a spokeswoman
    for the Armenian Energy Ministry told RFE/RL. She could not give any
    details of the talks.

    Lyons's visit to Yerevan underscored U.S. support for the ambitious
    idea of replacing the Metsamor plant by a new nuclear facility meeting
    modern safety standards. The Armenian government hopes that it will be
    built by 2016, in time for the planned decommissioning of Metsamor's
    sole operating reactor which generates about 40 percent of Armenia's
    electricity.

    The U.S. government allocated last November $2 million for the first
    feasibility studies on the project to be jointly conducted by Armenian
    and U.S. atomic energy experts this year. But U.S. diplomats made it
    clear that Washington will not fully or partly finance work on the
    new plant estimated to cost at least $1 billion.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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