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Armenia Commits To Implement OSART Recommendations Within 18 Months

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  • Armenia Commits To Implement OSART Recommendations Within 18 Months

    ARMENIA COMMITS TO IMPLEMENT OSART RECOMMENDATIONS WITHIN 18 MONTHS

    /ARKA/
    June 2, 2011
    YEREVAN

    YEREVAN, June 2. / ARKA /. The Armenian nuclear power plant has
    committed to implement the recommendations of the Operational Safety
    Review Team (OSART) acting under the aegis of the International
    Atomic Energy Agency's to improve its operational safety within
    18 months, chief executive director of the plant, Gagik Markosian,
    told reporters today.

    A delegation of OSART arrived in Armenia May 16 for a two-week review
    of the operational safety of its nuclear power plant.

    "We have committed to implement OSART recommendations within 18
    months and have already asked IAEA to assign a repeat mission to
    verify their implementation," said Markosian.

    Gagik Markosian welcomed the OSART assessment of the level of plant's
    safety, stressing that there were disputed issues, which were mainly
    associated with the existing regulations in Armenia and the EU. He
    refrained to name the total amount of future cost of implementing
    the recommendations, saying that most likely they be technical and
    organizational costs. OSART has submitted about 30 proposals to
    improve the security of the nuclear plant.

    According to Armenian government figures, the country has received $115
    million worth of assistance from the United States, the European Union,
    Russia and other international bodies to upgrade the plant's safety.

    The plant located some 30 kilometers west of Yerevan, was built in the
    1970s but was closed following a devastating earthquake in 1988 that
    killed some 25,000 people and devastated much of northern Armenia. One
    of the plant's two VVER 440-V230 light-water reactors was reactivated
    in 1995. 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 Soviet-constructed facility.

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