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Japan nuclear prompts Armenian nuclear worries

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  • Japan nuclear prompts Armenian nuclear worries

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 590
    May 11, 2011


    JAPAN QUAKE PROMPTS ARMENIAN NUCLEAR WORRIES

    Authorities insist aging plant is earthquake-proof.

    By Armen Poghosyan

    The nuclear disaster in Japan has revived concerns about environmental
    safety at the aging Metsamor power station in Armenia, a country which
    suffered a massive earthquake in 1998.

    Experts say they are all the more alarmed as the Armenian government
    has been sparing with information about the plant and about disaster
    contingency plans

    `Japan was regarded as the world's safest country in terms of seismic
    protection and for surviving earthquakes and nuclear disasters. But
    look what happened there,' Inga Zarafyan, head of the environmental
    group Ecolur, said.

    The tsunami that was triggered by a huge earthquake off the coast of
    Japan in March damaged water-cooling systems at a series of reactors
    at the Fukushima-1 plant, causing overheating, explosions and
    radioactive leaks.

    The Metsamor plant, where the first reactor dates from 1979, was
    closed following the Armenian earthquake of 1988, which came two years
    after the Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster in Ukraine.

    But with Armenia's economy devastated by the quake, the conflict in
    Nagorny Karabakh, and the economic collapse that followed the end of
    the Soviet Union, energy shortages forced the authorities to reopen
    Metsamor in 1995, and it now provides 40 per cent of the country's
    electricity.

    The plant is due to be closed and replaced by a more modern power
    station, but according to Zarafyan, the completion date for the new
    facility is `unclear, even though many experts believe that the
    reactors at Metsamor are already at the end of their working life, or
    pretty much near the end'.

    Zarafyan said little technical information was publicly available
    about the pressurised water reactors used at Metsamor, especially
    upgrades carried out since they were first built.

    `We're told that modernisation work has been carried out, but no
    details have been made known, for example about what technologies were
    employed in this process,' she said. `We are assured that all is well
    and that changes have been made, but words alone aren't satisfactory.'

    Vahram Petrosyan, head of the energy ministry's Nuclear Power Research
    Institute, said there was no reason to worry about nuclear safety.

    `Armenia is constantly taking steps to ensure safety at the nuclear
    power station meets the required standards,' he said. `In addition,
    there are International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA] requirements for
    security and modernisation. Armenia has fulfilled all aspects of IAEA
    requirements.'

    Petrosyan said the risk of damage caused by earthquakes was minimal.

    `The Metsamor plant's location was well chosen, as it has a thick
    layer of basalt, meaning that the force of any earthquake is reduced
    by about 1.5 points. That means that in this part of the country, the
    chances of an earthquake of level eight or more are insignificant,' he
    said, referring to the 12-point MSK scale used in the former Soviet
    Union to measure earthquake intensity. According to this scale,
    widespread structural damage occurs only at level eight or above.

    `If there is an earthquake that poses a threat to the facility, the
    system will swiftly recognise this and send instructions for the
    reactor to shut down,' Petrosyan added. `All equipment are fitted with
    modern Japanese dampers which will absorb the shock of a quake and
    prevent major impact on the power station.'

    Zarafyan is also concerned about the possible effects of a quake on
    nuclear waste stored underground.

    `We can't send nuclear waste out of the country, since there is no
    railway link with the outside world. The waste material is building up
    here. Of course, it goes into a special storage facility, but it's
    underground. No one can say for sure what would happen to it if there
    was an earthquake - whether there radiation would seep out through
    underground water,' she said.

    Other analysts are concerned that current disaster response measures
    would not be adequate if something did go wrong.

    `The training to cope with these situations is in very poor shape in
    Armenia's schools. There's virtually no public warning system for
    natural or man-made catastrophes,' Richard Giragosian, director of the
    Yerevan-based Regional Studies Centre, said.

    The ministry for emergencies insists a comprehensive disaster response
    plan is in place and is updated regularly.

    According to Hovhannes Yemishyan, who heads the ministry's civil
    defence office, `This plan sets out rules for rescue efforts and for
    the state institutions that have to take specific steps. The
    emergencies ministry will coordinate all this work, including civil
    defence, evacuation, accommodation, monitoring and so on.'

    Armen Poghosyan is a freelance journalist.

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