Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia Hopes That Russia Will Help Build New Nuclear Power Reactor

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia Hopes That Russia Will Help Build New Nuclear Power Reactor

    ARMENIA HOPES THAT RUSSIA WILL HELP BUILD NEW NUCLEAR POWER REACTOR

    ARKA
    OCTOBER 12, 2009
    YEREVAN

    YEREVAN, October 12, /ARKA/. In an interview with Russian newspaper
    Kommersant Armenian foreign minister Edward Nalbandian said his
    government hopes that Russia will help it build a new nuclear power
    reactor.

    Armenian authorities said they will build a new nuclear power plant to
    replace the aging Metsamor plant. The new plant is supposed to operate
    at twice the capacity of the older, Soviet-constructed facility,
    which is 30 kilometers west of the capital, Yerevan. Metsamor currently
    generates some 40 percent of Armenia's electricity. Australian company
    Worley Parsons has been selected to manage the project.

    "Russia is a key partner of Armenia in development of peaceful
    nuclear programs and we hope that as a strategic ally it will join
    this project as well,' Nalbandian said to the Moscow-based daily.

    According to him, this is a complicated project and it is difficult
    to say whether it could be realized in cooperation with one or several
    partners. He said Russian companies showed interest in this project.

    The Sydney-based Worley Parsons engineering company will be managing
    construction of a new nuclear power station that should replace
    Armenia's aging Metsamor plant by 2017. With a market capitalization
    of approximately $3 billion as of June 2008, Worley Parsons was one
    of the world's largest providers of engineering services to the en
    ergy and other industries. The company has operating offices in 14
    countries, including Russia.

    The Armenian government has yet to attract funding for the project
    that was estimated by a U.S.-funded feasibility study to cost at as
    much as $5 billion.

    With a projected capacity of 1,000-1,200 megawatts, the new facility
    would be more than twice as powerful as Metsamor's sole operating
    reactor that generates more than 40% of Armenia's electricity.

    Under a 2003 agreement Armenian nuclear power plant's financial flows
    are managed by Russian Inter RAO UES, owned by Russian state-run
    Rosatom corporation. The agreement expires in 2013. Experts say the
    plant can operate until 2016.
Working...
X