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U.S. Eyes Participation In Armenian Nuclear Power Plant Construction

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  • U.S. Eyes Participation In Armenian Nuclear Power Plant Construction

    U.S. EYES PARTICIPATION IN ARMENIAN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT CONSTRUCTION
    BYLINE: Lilit Gevorgyan

    Global Insight
    November 16, 2010

    Yesterday the Coordinator for U.S. Assistance to Europe and Eurasia
    and Co-Chairman of U.S.-Armenia Joint Economic Task Force (USATF),
    Daniel Rosenblum, stated at a news conference in the Armenian capital
    Yerevan that the U.S. administration hopes that the U.S. companies
    will be interested in participating in the construction of a new
    nuclear power plant (NPP) to replace the Soviet-era Metsamor. The U.S.

    government extended US$2 million in 2007 for a feasibility study on
    the modern and much safer NPP. Rosenblum held meetings with Armenian
    economy minister Nerses Yeritsyan, where besides energy issues the
    parties talked about U.S. assistance in improving the Armenian business
    environment, particularly boosting competitiveness.

    Significance:Metsamor NPP is very important for the Armenian economy
    as it provides about 40% of the country's electricity supply. It has
    also vital strategic importance as the landlocked country has been
    and remains in blockade by two of its four neighbours, Turkey and
    Azerbaijan, over a the status of the Armenian-populated enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. While the South Caucasus is increasingly becoming a
    hub of energy transport routes already in place or in making, Armenia
    is solidly excluded from these routes' maps since they originate
    mainly from hostile Azerbaijan, opposed to any co-operation with
    Armenia. Against this background the importance of Metsamor is even
    more pronounced. It was closed down in the wake of the devastating
    earthquake in 1988, fearing its destruction as the country is
    seismically very active. However, the Armenian government had to push
    aside these concerns due to dire economic consequences triggered by
    energy shortages and reopen it in 1995. The European Union (EU ) has
    since called on the Armenian government to close the aged NPP, but
    the deadline for its closure has been deferred a few times as there
    is no alternative energy supply. The current deadline of 2017 is also
    unlikely to be met, given that the construction of a new NPP will take
    some time. The project is worth US$5 billion and thus far the Armenian
    government has managed to raise only one-fifth of it by concluding an
    agreement with the Russian state nuclear energy corporation Rosatom's
    Atomstroiexport JSC. U.S. participation will certainly make the task
    of fundraising for the new NPP easier for the Armenian government.




    From: A. Papazian
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