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Joint Project With Russia To Mine Uranium Stirs Environmental Worrie

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  • Joint Project With Russia To Mine Uranium Stirs Environmental Worrie

    JOINT PROJECT WITH RUSSIA TO MINE URANIUM STIRS ENVIRONMENTAL WORRIES
    Marianna Grigoryan

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/i nsightb/articles/eav032609b.shtml
    March 26, 2009

    It is not just railways, energy and telecommunications that unite
    Russian and Armenian business interests. This summer, a controversial
    joint project to mine uranium is expected to break ground; a prospect
    that some Armenian environmentalists warn could turn Armenia into
    "an environmental disaster zone."

    The project, launched in February 2008, means fuel for Armenia's
    nuclear power plant and for export. Details about financing are
    sketchy, although Armenia and Russia were originally said to be equal
    partners in the venture. Russia's atomic energy agency, Rosatom, has
    claimed that it will put in "several million dollars" for research
    up until 2010. But the joint enterprise handling the project cannot
    elaborate.

    Exploration began last fall in the southern region of Syunik, known
    for its metal ore riches. The project has so far relied primarily on
    Soviet-era data. Rosatom Senior Director Sergei Kirienko projected in
    2008 that the sites could contain "up to 60,000 tons" of uranium ore.

    Academician and geochemist Sergei Grigorian, who oversees the
    geological survey of the Syunik uranium deposits, told EurasiaNet
    it is still too soon to speak about exact figures concerning the
    deposits. The work, though, he affirmed, "is on the right track."

    "I personally suspended exploration work [at this same location] during
    the Soviet era, because I believed the exploitation of uranium mines
    [in Armenia] was senseless since there were larger deposits in other
    Soviet republics," said Grigorian. "But today, when uranium costs up
    to $300 per kilogram, exploitation of the [Armenian] deposits will
    bring benefits, if the ore is used carefully."

    The director of the joint company set up to oversee the project,
    the Armenian-Russian Mining Company, adds that for the next two years
    the focus will be on geological surveys alone.

    "We can't tell the exact amount of available deposits, but the
    extraction will cover quite a large territory in both the northern and
    the southern regions of Syunik," said director Mkrtich Kirakosian. The
    start of underground survey work, originally expected for this spring,
    "might be somewhat delayed" some months as the project waits for
    government authorization for the work, he added.

    Despite the lack of specifics, environmentalists are already issuing
    dire warnings. Syunik already is home to the copper mining works of
    Kapan and Kajaran. Inga Zarafian, chairman of the non-governmental
    organization Ecolur, said that opening a uranium mine in the area
    would greatly increase the ecological hazards.

    Traces of heavy metals such as mercury and arsenic have already
    been found in the hair of children living near what is expected to
    be the uranium project's primary mining site, Lernadzor, some three
    kilometers away from Kajaran. Surveys by the Armenian National Academy
    of Science's Ecosphere Research Center show that ground radiation in
    the area exceeds the permitted level by more than three and a half
    times; ground contamination by heavy metals is several times higher
    than allowed.

    Given the risks, public discussions on the mining project are a
    must, Zafarian affirms. "Talking about this tomorrow may be too
    late," Zarafian said. "The territories are already environmentally
    endangered. . . . Now, they are going to exploit uranium mines
    there. Imagine what's going happen to the place!"

    Lernadzor village head Stepan Poghosian says that locals are worried
    about the health risks once actual mining begins. "Everybody knows
    what uranium is. . . . People don't want to live in a place that may
    cause diseases in their children," Poghosian said. "The exploitation
    of uranium is not rain, a mudslide or hail, things that villagers
    can handle."

    Both experts involved in the survey work and the Ministry of
    Environmental Protection insist that the project involves no hazards,
    and that mining operations will be "transparent."

    The uranium deposits are mostly hidden within the ground's crust
    and will be extracted via tunneling, said survey overseer Grigorian,
    who seconds the call for a public hearing on the matter. "The mining
    might be dangerous if it were, say, in the basin of Lake Sevan, but
    there is no such danger because Syunik is a mountainous region,"
    said Grigorian. "Maybe a very small area is threatened there, at
    the entrance to the tunnel, but the rest of the work will be done
    underground. So, the population's fears of radiation are groundless."

    Armenian-Russian Mining Company Director Kirakosian echoes that
    line. "It's too soon to talk about environmental problems because, so
    far, it's just about the survey," he said, adding that all work follows
    existing legislation and "observes all environmental requirements."

    Environmentalist Hakob Sanasarian, chairman of the Greens' Union
    of Armenia, counters that uranium prospecting at the Syunik
    site was stopped for a good reason during the Soviet era. "The
    suspension . . . was not a decision that just happened," Sanasarian
    said. Grigorian, who worked on the site in Soviet times, however,
    maintains that the work stopped only because other sites had larger
    deposits. "The environmental hazards threaten to cause genetic
    modifications in humans, as well as cancer, and other defects. Nature
    will have its revenge one day."

    Meanwhile, local residents say they are left in a quandary about
    whether to go or to stay. "I don't know what is going to happen,"
    said Lernadzor's Petrosian. "We have lived here our whole lives . . ."
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