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Armenia's Aging Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant Alarms Caucasian Neighb

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  • Armenia's Aging Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant Alarms Caucasian Neighb

    ARMENIA'S AGING METSAMOR NUCLEAR POWER PLANT ALARMS CAUCASIAN NEIGHBORS
    Written by John Daly

    OilPrice
    http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Nuclear-Power/Armenias-Aging-Metsamor-Nuclear-Power-Plant-Alarms-Caucasian-Neighbors.html
    Oct 3 2011

    The USSR might have imploded two decades ago, but debris from its
    headlong industrialization drive litter the post-Soviet landscape,
    and nothing more unsettles the population of the fifteen new nations
    carved out of the Soviet Union than its nuclear legacy.

    The poster child for Caucasian nuclear concerns is Armenia's aging
    Metsamor nuclear power plant, which provides nearly 40 percent of
    the country's electricity.

    The facility has not only alarmed neighboring Georgia, Turkey and
    Azerbaijan but begun to receive international notice as well - on 11
    April National Geographic ran a story entitled "Is Armenia's Nuclear
    Plant the World's Most Dangerous?"

    Metsamor, 20 miles west of the capital Erevan and 10 miles from the
    Turkish border, encapsulates the dilemma facing many energy-poor
    nations heavily dependent on nuclear power - unlike Germany, they do
    not have the cash or alternatives needed to shutter such facilities
    and consequently, keep them running while crossing their fingers.

    Metsamor, which began operations in 1976, contains two VVER-400 V230
    376 megawatt nuclear reactors generating about 2 million kilowatt
    hours of energy annually. Many environmentalists regard it as an
    accident waiting to happen. The Armenian government closed Metsamor's
    Unit 1 in February 1989 and Unit 2 the next month following a massive
    December 1988 earthquake which killed more than 25,000, left much of
    northern Armenia in ruins and caused more than $4 billion in damage.

    Perhaps not surprisingly, the facility itself is a hostage to the
    vicious politics disrupting the Caucasus. Armenia went to war with
    Azerbaijan in February 1988 over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave. During the clash, which lasted until May 1994, Azerbaijan
    blockaded roads, rail lines and energy supplies, leading to severe
    energy shortages in Armenia. In 1991 pressure to restart Metsamor
    increased after a natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan was blocked by
    a Turkish and Azeri fuel embargo. By the winter of 1994-95, residents
    of Yerevan often had only an hour or two of electricity daily, which
    the restart of Metsamor's Unit 2 in October 1995 increased to 10-12
    hours per day and has been running ever since, environmentalists
    be damned.

    Earlier this month however Metsamor was brought offline on 11 September
    and will resume operation on 27 October. The EU has classified the
    Metsamor's reactors as the "oldest and least reliable" category of
    all the 66 Soviet reactors built in Eastern Europe and the former
    Soviet Union.

    Azerbaijani National Academy of Sciences President Mahmud Karimov
    recently voiced his country's concerns over Metsamor, stating, "The
    European Union also expressed the need to close the plant. Despite
    regular inspections of the plant by international organizations,
    the results of these inspections are kept secret and no information
    is given to Azerbaijan about them. The countries of the region -
    Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia - have repeatedly proposed allowing the
    specialists of these countries to examine the Metsamor nuclear power
    plant. But the reports on Metsamor are not available to these three
    countries. The Armenian side says ten different committees have checked
    the Metsamor NPP in 2011. But the test results are not available to
    neighboring countries, that is, the inspections lack transparency."

    Quite aside from its aging technology, Metsamor, high in the mountains,
    lacks suitable water resources to use as reactor core coolant in the
    event that an earthquake damaged the facility, while Armenia's parlous
    fiscal situation means that its government lacks financial resources
    to address the consequences of a possible accident. Metsamor is one
    less than a half dozen remaining nuclear reactors of its kind that
    were built without primary containment structures.

    Nor is the only threat to Metsamor's operations coming from its aging
    technology - more than 140 workers at Metsamor have threatened to
    quit their jobs if their wages are not raised, Radio Free Europe/Radio
    Liberty's Armenian Service reported.

    Metsamor Director Ashot Markosian told RFE/RL on 23 September that
    despite the workers writing him directly, the plant currently lacks
    the funds for a salary increase. Earlier this month several Metsamor
    employees sent an open letter to Armenia's presidential staff, the
    Prime Minister as well as European branches of the International
    Atomic Energy Agency, accusing Metsamor's chief engineer Movses
    Vardanyan of abusing his official position, nepotism and embezzlement.

    But no mind - Armenian authorities have said they will build a new $2-5
    billion nuclear power plant to replace the aging Metsamor facility,
    which will operate at twice the capacity of the Soviet-built power
    station. In 2004 the European Union's envoy called Metsamor "a danger
    to the entire region," but Armenia later turned down the EU's offer
    of a 200 million euro loan to finance Metsamor's shutdown.

    Aging nuclear technology, a disaffected work force in a facility
    located in a seismically active region - what could possibly go wrong?

    Time for the EU to up its bribe - err, loan.

    By. John C.K. Daly

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