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Armenia Set To Extend Life Of Its Aging Nuclear Station

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  • Armenia Set To Extend Life Of Its Aging Nuclear Station

    ARMENIA SET TO EXTEND LIFE OF ITS AGING NUCLEAR STATION
    Naira Bulghadarian

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/article/24527862.html
    26.03.2012

    Armenia - The central control panel of the Metsamor nuclear plant.

    Armenia will seek to extend the term of operation for its Soviet-built
    nuclear power plant until it manages to construct a new reactor,
    a local official confirmed on Monday.

    The Armenian government has pledged to decommission the plant in
    Metsamor in 2016 when it plans to have a new and more powerful nuclear
    facility at the same site over 30 kilometers west of capital Yerevan.

    The work on the new nuclear reactor for the landlocked South Caucasus
    state that has very limited energy resources was supposed to start
    in 2012, but the ambitious project has not yet gotten off the drawing
    board as sources of funding for the bulk of the project remain vague.

    The plant's administration has pledged to submit a complex program
    of safety measures to Armenia's State Committee on Nuclear Safety by
    September 1 in order to get permission for extending the term of the
    facility's operation.

    Ashot Martirosian, the head of the committee, told RFE/RL's Armenian
    Service (Azatutyun.am) that by implementing complex safety measures
    it is possible to make sure the existing reactor will function longer
    than planned. The risk threshold continuously gets pushed further
    away with these measures taken regularly, he argued.

    "At present, the nuclear power plant's safety risk can be said to
    correspond to the risk threshold set for such nuclear power plants,"
    Martirosian emphasized.

    The Armenian government has so far named sources for financing
    only less than half of the project that has an estimated cost of $5
    billion. Russia's Rosatom state nuclear energy corporation intends
    to make more than 25 percent of the required investment. Another 20
    percent of the cost of the project would be covered by the Armenian
    government. Negotiations regarding the investment for the remaining
    part of the project are underway, but it becomes highly unlikely that
    Armenia will manage to build the new facility by 2017.

    "Naturally, the new nuclear reactor won't be commissioned in 2016, so
    we start thinking about extending the term of the plant's operation
    early on," said Martirosian, adding that countries like Russia,
    Ukraine, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and others have had
    such experiences. The official said that all requirements of the
    International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) would be considered in
    developing the program for the Armenian plant.

    In 2011, the IAEA's ad hoc Operational Safety Review Team conducted
    an inspection at the Metsamor plant assessing the risk that exists
    there as "acceptable".

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