Rosatom Urges Ukraine Not to Politicize Nuclear Fuel Supplies RIA Novosti, PUBLISHED 13.04.2014 Political decisions should not dictate a switch from Russian to American nuclear fuel at Ukrainian power plants as the safe operation of the facilities is at stake, the head of Russian state nuclear corporation Rosatom said Thursday. “There is an absolute right for each company to decide who it should buy fuel from, and political decisions should not have any influence [on that right],” Rosatom head Sergei Kirienko said at a nuclear power safety conference in Moscow. Russia is closely monitoring the possible use of US-produced nuclear fuel at Ukrainian nuclear power plants, he added, noting that fuel sourced from American nuclear fuel company Westinghouse had earlier dangerously malfunctioned at power plants in the Czech Republic and Ukraine. Kirienko said that if Russia were in the position of buying nuclear fuel from abroad "all contract discussions would have ended" the moment such a failure occurred. A Czech nuclear power plant operating Soviet-designed reactors experienced depressurization with the Westinghouse fuel, leading to the suspension of further cooperation with the company. Scheduled maintenance check-ups at a nuclear power plant in South Ukraine over the last two years uncovered technical issues with the US-produced fuel assembly, attributed to Westinghouse design flaws. The losses to the Ukrainian Energoatom company due to the incident topped $175 million. Topics: Russia, East Europe, Ukraine, NFC Other news: Hungary Enacts Law to Expand Nuclear Power With Russian Aid Hungary’s president has signed a bill into law to expand a nuclear power plant in the country with Russian assistance. Hungary Lawmakers OK Russia Nuclear Plant Deal Russia will provide Hungary a loan of up to 10 billion euros ($13.5 billion) - around 80 percent of construction costs. Russia to Lend Hungary $13.7Bln for Nuclear Plant The deal was announced during a state visit to Moscow by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and was hailed by Russian President Vladimir Putin. |
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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