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2/2003: NEW INITIATIVE TO BUILD BALKHASH
NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
Despite the Kazakhstani
government's rejection in September 2000 of a plan to build
a nuclear power plant (NPP) at Lake Balkhash, Russian
President Putin announced Russia's intention to build the NPP after an 18
February 2003 meeting with Kazakhstani President Nazarbayev. Putin noted that
Russia and Kazakhstan are going to expand bilateral cooperation, particularly in
the nuclear power industry.[1] Indeed, several days after the Russian-Kazakhstani
summit, Kazakhstani Minister
of Energy and Mineral Resources Vladimir Shkolnik announced that an international
tender will be held to select an experienced contractor to construct the NPP. He noted that the
issue of building an NPP at Lake Balkhash had been discussed with Russian specialists before, but no
concrete decision had been made, and that there is no agreement between Russia and
Kazakhstan on this matter.[2,3] According to Shkolnik, it will take a total of 10-15 years
to build the NPP. Of that time period, two years will be required for the
design phase.[4] The
first step is to determine the type of reactor, based on capacity and security
requirements. Shkolnik noted that Russian BBA-640 reactor design meets
these criteria
and
will be among those considered.[5] Shkolnik also stated that before construction
starts, additional seismic and geodetic surveys
of the selected site will have to be conducted, and conclusions
drawn in accordance with international
standards.[2] Specialists estimate that the cost of constructing one power unit
ranges from $1.5 to $2.5 billion, depending on the selected site,
infrastructure, seismic conditions, and preliminary engineering.[1]
1/17/2003: KAZAKHSTAN TO BEGIN FINANCING
TWO MAJOR NUCLEAR PHYSICS PROJECTS
According to Interfax,
Kazakhstan has begun financing two important nuclear physics projects. One
project is the construction of a heavy-ion accelerator at
Gumilev
Eurasian National University in Astana;[1] the other project is the construction of
the Tokamak
thermonuclear test reactor, which will be located on the former
Semipalatinsk test site.[1,2] The
Kazakhstani government has
allocated 161 million tenge (approximately $1 million as of 17 January 2003) for
the construction of the accelerator, and
198 million tenge (about $1.2 million) for
the construction of the Tokamak
reactor.[1] The Tokamak facility is expected to be in operation by 2007, and
will be constructed with Russian assistance at an estimated cost of $15.2 million.[2]
The heavy-ion accelerator will also be built with Russian assistance, in
cooperation with the
Joint Institute for Nuclear Research.[1]
9/26/2000: KAZAKHSTAN REJECTS PLAN TO BUILD BALKHASH
NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
The government of Kazakhstan rejected plans to build the
proposed South Kazakhstan Nuclear Power
Plant on Lake Balkhash citing high construction and maintenance costs, lack of
safety guarantees, and negative
public opinion.
3/14/2000: KAZAKHSTAN'S ARREARS TO IAEA CAUSE LOSS OF AID
Kazakhstani Minister of Foreign Affairs Yerlan Idrisov
said that Kazakhstan's debt has resulted in the suspension of IAEA financial
support for the project to build the South Kazakhstan Nuclear Power Plant.
For more information on this subject, please see the 3/14/00
entry in the International
Organizations: Developments section of
the database.
8/98: ENVIRONMENTAL FEASIBILITY STUDY PUBLISHED
Problemy Nerasprostraneniya published an environmental
feasibility study for the Balkhash NPP. The study outlines basic procedures
at the plant, environmental and waste management, infrastructure development,
the use of natural resources and possible accidents. The study was performed
by Atomenergoproyekt Research, Design, and Construction Institute in St.
Petersburg.
9/11/98: LAKE BALKHASH POWER PLANT TO GO
AHEAD
On 11 September 1998, Timur Zhantikin, Director of
Kazakhstan's Atomic Energy Agency, said that the plans to build a major
nuclear power plant on the banks of Lake Balkhash will probably go ahead.
This prognosis is based on the results of a special commission of experts
who looked into the technical and economic basis for the project.
Doubts remain, however, due to Kazakhstan's economic situation and the
resulting uncertainty about the potential demand for power. Russia's
economic and political turmoil could also become a source of uncertainty
about the project; if the reactors are ordered from Russia, a guarantee
that the orders will be fulfilled would be necessary. According to
Zhantikin, foreign companies would be allowed to participate in the project,
but a Kazakhstan-based company would be formed to build and manage the
plant, which would be subject to strict environmental standards.
Construction was due to start this year; the first unit should take around
seven years to complete and cost about $1 billion, while the other units
should each take two years to complete and cost somewhat less.
12/97: NEW PROJECT DISCUSSED AT SCIENTIFIC
CONFERENCE AT ULBA
A December 1997 scientific conference held at the
Ulba Metallurgy Plant discussed proposals for the construction of nuclear
heat and electric power plants in Balkhash, Leninogorsk and Ust-Kamenogorsk.
According to Kazakhstani delegates, the population of the Balkhash region
supports the future project. Opposition remains in East Kazakhstan,
where Leninogorsk and Ust-Kamenogorsk are located; however, at a meeting
conducted after the conference experts from National Nuclear Center of
Kazakhstan presented the proposed project for construction of the Leninogorsk
Nuclear Heat and Electric Power Plant to local authorities, heads of enterprises,
and the general public.
9/10/97: NEW NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS IN KAZAKHSTAN
Vladimir Shkolnik, the Minister of Science and the
President of the Academy of Sciences of Kazakhstan, said on 10 September
1997 that four to six small nuclear stations, each with a capacity of 1
MWe, are to be built in the western and central parts of Kazakhstan.[1]
The combined cost of the facilities is estimated at $5 to $6 billion.
The project will take about 30 years to complete.[2]
7/25/97: NEW NUCLEAR HEAT AND ELECTRIC PLANT IN
KAZAKHSTAN
According to Valeryan Shemanskiy, Vice President
of AO KATEP, Kazakhstan plans to build a nuclear heat and electric plant
near Almaty. The construction of this plant will help to improve
the environmental situation in Almaty. The estimated cost of the
project is $500 million.
1/22/97: NEW NUCLEAR PLANT TO BE BUILT AT LAKE BALKHASH
Vladimir Shkolnik, Kazakhstani Minister of Science and New Technologies
and President of the Kazakhstani Academy of Sciences, said that a mothballed
half-built coal-fired plant at Lake Balkhash, 420 km north from Almaty,
will be the site of a new nuclear plant. According to Shkolnik, $220 million
has been already invested in preparing the site for construction.
7/96: NUCLEAR PLANT IN SOUTHERN KAZAKHSTAN DISCUSSED
Referring to "inside governmental sources," an article in The Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists states that Kazakhstan and Russia have reached
a preliminary agreement on building a VVER-type reactor in Southern Kazakhstan.
Russia has reportedly offered to use the money it owes Kazakhstan for the
return of nuclear warheads on Kazak soil as a down payment on the nuclear
power plant, and has proposed that Kazakhstan's share of the US payment
to Russia in exchange for formerly Soviet uranium could be used to cover
the cost of the reactor. In addition, Russia agreed to loan Kazakhstan
the rest of the money for the reactor. Some local experts suggest using
empty missile silos, currently slated for destruction under the terms of
the START I treaty, for the disposal of nuclear waste produced by the plant.
4/96: NUCLEAR PLANT TO BE BUILT IN SEMIPALATINSK
Plans are underway for an international tender for the development and
construction of a new nuclear power plant to be built at the Semipalatinsk
site. According to the Kazak Nuclear Society, the design will likely be
a 1000 MW reactor or two smaller units of the same power equivalency. More
details are expected to be announced at a conference on nuclear power in
Kazakhstan in June 1996.
1-2/96: NUCLEAR SPECIALISTS PLAN TO BUILD SEVERAL NUCLEAR PLANTS
According to Yuriy Cherepnin, Director of the Institute of Atomic Energy,
Kazakhstani specialists are considering building several nuclear reactors
before 2015. Their plans include replacing the BN-350 reactor in Aktau
by an advanced modular BMN-170 reactor, building two small nuclear heat-and-power
plants in Kurchatov, building a nuclear power plant in the Atyrau region
with two Russian 640-MWe reactor units, and designing nuclear heating plants
for districts in a number of cities.
12/23/95: POLLS ON BUILDING NUCLEAR PLANT IN SEMIPALATINSK
In a referendum, the inhabitants of Semipalatinsk were asked the following
question: "Would you agree to the construction of an atomic power station
on the territory of the Semipalatinsk Oblast?" Forty-three percent responded
"No," 40 percent were amenable to the idea, and 10 percent were undecided.
Fearing the specter of another Chernobyl, the issue of continued development
of Kazakhstan's nuclear infrastructure has recently become subject to increased
criticism.
10/18/95: GOVERNMENT PLANS TO CONSTRUCT NUCLEAR PLANT IN
SEMIPALATINSK
The government of Kazakhstan passed a resolution which, among other things,
calls for the construction of a modern nuclear power station "of the latest
design" on the territory of the former Semipalatinsk nuclear testing site.
Instructions were also included regarding the solicitation of foreign firms
to take part in the project. In addition, a report is being planned to
map out the course of development for Kazakhstan's nuclear industrial development
until 2030. Three ministries have been designated to prepare a technical
and economic analysis detailing appropriate locations for future nuclear
plants in Kazakhstan.
6/2/95: SEMIPALATINSK SITE CAN HOST A NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
It was reported that the Kazakhstani Foreign Ministry has not ruled out
the possibility of converting the Semipalatinsk test site to a facility
housing a nuclear power station.
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