Ukraine Secures $6Bln Loan Option to Develop Atomic Energy RIA Novosti, PUBLISHED 11.01.2014 Ukraine said Friday that it has secured an option to borrow $6 billion from Russian banks to help develop its atomic energy industry. The agreement between the two countries was reached last December during an inter-governmental commission, according to a Ukrainian Economy Ministry statement. Russia agreed a large financial aid package for Ukraine last month after Kiev backed off from an association agreement with the European Union, a move that sparked large street demonstrations across the former Soviet country. “Ukraine will use Russian technology because of its good technical features,” said Valery Muntiyana, the Ukrainian official responsible for cooperation with Russia, according to the statement. “It is fourth-generation technology, with a very high security threshold.” The statement did not specify which Russian commercial banks would provide the loans. Russian President Vladimir Putin said in November that Ukrainian companies already owe Russian lenders about $28 billion. Mass demonstrations in Ukraine erupted in November after the government declined to pursue long-planned trade agreements with the EU. Protesters seeking closer ties with the EU and a weakening of Ukraine’s political and economic dependence on the Kremlin remain camped out in the center of the capital, Kiev. In December, Yanukovych and Putin inked deals that slashed the price of gas Russia sells to Ukraine and committed the Kremlin to buying $15 billion of Ukrainian bonds. Topics: East Europe, Ukraine, Russia Other news: Russia to Triple Uranium Production in Next 2 Years – Rosatom In 2015 we will reach 8,400 tons. Rosatom Boosts Foreign Orders Portfolio to $74 Bln Rosatom signed in Helsinki an expected deal with Finnish nuclear consortium Fennovoima on the construction of a 1,200-megawatt Hanhikivi-1 nuclear reactor in Pyhajoki, northwest Finland. First Chapter of US-Russian Megatons-to-Megawatts Deal Closes Russia started delivery of the last batch of low-enriched uranium to the United States under a long-standing program to convert Soviet-made nuclear weapons into fuel. |
Hero of the day We are currently working with the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) on this approach, which was submitted in response to their February 2012 call for alternative proposals. We appreciate that the UK is in the early stages of their policy development activities and are pleased to be involved in such important work. INTERVIEW
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Joint Plan of Action |