Tag: nuclear power plant

  • Nuclear plant is safe: Armenia’s response to Turkey

    Nuclear plant is safe: Armenia’s response to Turkey

    80764YEREVAN. – Safety of Armenia’s Nuclear Power Plant is at the center of international organizations’ attention, and there is no problem concerning safety, Armenian Energy Ministry Press Secretary Lusine Harutyunyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am, in response to the news spread in Turkish media that Turkey’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources had petitioned to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) with the request to shut down the Plant. Harutyunyan also noted that Turkey makes such statements often and they are compelled to respond to them every time.

    Turkey and Azerbaijan were recently alleging that the October 23 earthquake in Turkey had damaged the Plant. And in response to these allegations, Armenian Minister of Energy Armen Movsisyan had noted that the Plant was constructed to withstand a minimum magnitude-9 quake, and that the tremor in Turkey had measured a mere magnitude 3 nearby the Plant. The Minister also recalled that an IAEA OSART (Operational Safety Review Team) mission had visited the Plant and concluded that its operational risks are manageable.

    via Nuclear plant is safe: Armenia’s response to Turkey | Armenia News – NEWS.am.

  • Earthquake in Turkey did not and could not harm the Armenian NPP – ministry of emergency situations

    Earthquake in Turkey did not and could not harm the Armenian NPP – ministry of emergency situations

    YEREVAN, October 24. /ARKA/. A strong earthquake that took place yesterday in Turkey did not and could not cause any damage to the Armenian nuclear power plant (ANPP), said in the statement posted on the website of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Armenia.

    2331According to the press-release, magnitude of the earthquake in Turkey near the city Van was 9-10 and the distance of the Armenian ANPP from the epicenter was about 160 km.

    “In the territory of ANPP magnitude of the earthquake was three points and there has not and could not be any damage to the nuclear station as it can withstand a 9-point earthquake”, states the message.

    The tremors in Turkey did not cause a damage to any settlement or building in Armenia.

    General Director of ANPP Gagik Markosyan said that it is useless to speak about 2-3-point earthquake felt on the territory of the nuclear station.

    He said that ANPP in repair process since September 11.

    According to the recent data, the number of victims of the earthquake in Turkey increased to 239 people. About 1.3 thousand people got injuries.

    Earthquake with 7.2 magnitude took place on Sunday afternoon in the south-east of Turkey. Monday night in the devastated province another earthquake took place with a magnitude of 6.1.

    Local seismologists forecast that the number of victims in the largest disaster in recent years in Turkey may be from 500 to thousand people.

    In 1976 in the province Van an earthquake of the same magnitude took place. At that time 3840 thousand people died

    via Earthquake in turkey did not and could not harm the Armenian NPP – ministry of emergency situations | 24/10/2011 20:07 | News agency ARKA – Armenian news.

  • Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake

    Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake

    Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake

    Julia Harte | October 25th, 2011

    The earthquake struck approximately 20 kilometers north of the city of Van, pictured above. Turkey’s seismology institute estimated the final death toll would reach 1,000.

    A 7.2-magnitude earthquake slammed Turkey‘s eastern province of Van on Sunday. Two days afterward, 366 deaths have been reported, 1,301 injured persons are being treated, and more than 2,000 buildings have collapsed.

    Although the temblor didn’t shake the Black Sea region of Sinop, which was some 800 kilometers northwest of the epicenter, it may have stalled plans to build a nuclear power plant (NPP) there. The Korean nuclear industry now expects the Sinop NPP to be canceled, news agency dongA reports.

    Nuclear ambitions

    Turkey has already signed a deal with Russia to build a NPP at Akkuyu, a city off its southern Mediterranean coast. The Akkuyu plant would be the country’s first. But for the past year, Turkey has also been arranging to build a second NPP at Sinop, on the country’s northern coast at the Black Sea.

    Although South Korea was the first country that Turkish officials considered when planning the Sinop NPP, the Turkish government switched its attention to Japanese nuclear companies last year, apparently attracted by their expertise about building NPPs in seismically active areas. After the Fukushima disaster earlier this year, however, Japan pulled out of all foreign nuclear projects, officially canceling its involvement in the Sinop NPP negotiations in July.

    On an August visit to Seoul, Turkish Foreign Minister Zafer Çağlayan reaffirmed his government’s interest in hearing offers from South Korean nuclear firms for the Sinop project: “My ministry and the Turkish government are open to every proposal by South Korean companies over the issue of nuclear power plants.”

    Cooling down

    After the devastating earthquake that rocked Turkey’s southeast on Sunday, however, the Korean nuclear industry expects Turkey to drop the Sinop NPP. The Korea Electric Power Corporation and the country’s economy ministry will “change their strategy,” according to the report in dongA.

    Sinop is on a small peninsula that juts into the Black Sea, and was one of the areas in Turkey most affected by the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear meltdown. The radiation that emanated from Chernobyl destroyed years of harvest for Turkish farmers along the Black Sea coast, and is believed to be responsible for unusually high cancer rates in the area today.

    Although Sinop (unlike Akkuyu) doesn’t lie on an active fault, Sunday’s earthquake occurred 100 kilometers from the nearest major faultline, highlighting the unpredictability of seismic activity in this especially earthquake-prone country.

    via Turkey Expected To Cancel Nuclear Plans After Massive Earthquake | Green Prophet.

  • Iran Agrees With Russia, Turkey to Build Power Plants, IRNA Says

    Iran Agrees With Russia, Turkey to Build Power Plants, IRNA Says

    Iran reached agreements with Russia and Turkey on sharing know-how and investment in power plants inside the Persian Gulf country, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported, citing Energy Minister Majid Namjou.

    Power stations to be built with Turkish companies will allow the transfer of electricity to neighboring Turkey or to a third country, Namjou said, according to the IRNA report.

    Iran and Russia agreed in separate talks earlier this month to jointly build power plants in Iran for export, Namjou said, without giving details of the projects.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Ladane Nasseri in Tehran at lnasseri@bloomberg.net.

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew J. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net.

    via Iran Agrees With Russia, Turkey to Build Power Plants, IRNA Says – Bloomberg.

  • Turkey would consider US proposal for nuclear power plant

    Turkey would consider US proposal for nuclear power plant

    US proposal to build a nuclear power plant would be considered: Turkish Energy minister

    AFP

    Turkey’s energy minister said Monday Ankara would consider a proposal from the United States to build a nuclear power plant in the country’s north.

    “If a proposal comes from the United States, we could evaluate it but so far, no concrete proposal has been made to us,” Energy Minister Taner Yildiz told reporters.

    Turkey reached an agreement with Russia in May 2010 to build Turkey’s first nuclear plant in Akkuyu in Mersin province, in the south.

    In December, Turkey and Japan also signed a memorandum on civil nuclear cooperation, a step towards a possible $20-billion deal for Japanese companies to build a nuclear plant at Sinop, on Turkey’s Black Sea coast.

    Yildiz said Turkey wanted to hear the same political will from Japan after the latter’s prime minister changed.

    “I can say we are negotiating with different countries and different companies in order to generate alternative solutions in case Japan is unable to carry on with us,” Yildiz said.

    The minister declined to name which countries or firms Turkey was negotiating with but said everything would be clarified by the end of October.

    He repeated the Turkish government’s insistence to press ahead with plans to build its first nuclear power plant amid concerns raised by Japan’s nuclear disaster.

    “There is a logic to our determination,” said Yildiz. “We want to minimise our dependence on energy imports.”

    via Turkey would consider US proposal for nuclear power plant – Region – World – Ahram Online.

  • Turkey Amenable to South Korea’s Nuclear Energy Proposals

    Turkey Amenable to South Korea’s Nuclear Energy Proposals

    By. Joao Peixe

    Turkey’s Economy Minister Zafer Caglayan told reporters during a meeting with South Korean Knowledge Economy Minister Choi Joong-Kyung in Seoul, “My ministry and the Turkish government are open to every proposal by South Korean companies over the issue of nuclear power plants.”

    Turkey is expected to attract new investment from South Korea totaling $2.5 billion following the anticipated signing of a free trade agreement between the countries soon, Turkey’s Anadolu Ajansi reported.

    Caglayan told journalists, “More investments will come to Turkey under the FTA. We have solved many problems during the visit. We have removed the obstructions in front of the FTA to a great extend. Hyundai earlier said it could not invest in Turkey as there was not a FTA. A Free Trade Agreement will enable many South Korean companies to invest in Turkey.”

    Turkey intends to build two nuclear plants, one in Akkuyu on the Mediterranean coast, to be constructed by Russia’s state-owned atomic power company ROSATOM with an estimated cost around $20 billion. The Akkuyu facility’s construction will start in two years, with its first reactor planned to come online and begin generating electricity in 2018. Turkey’s second nuclear plant is planned to be built in the Black Sea province of Sinop. Turkey had been negotiating with Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power company, the owner and operator of Japan’s stricken Fukushima facility, which last week informed Turkey that it had withdrawn from the project, opening the way for potential South Korean involvement.

    Source: https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Turkey-Amenable-To-South-Koreas-Nuclear-Energy-Proposals.html

    By. Joao Peixe, Deputy Editor OilPrice.com

    via Turkey Amenable to South Korea’s Nuclear Energy Proposals.