2005 deadline set to decommission Chernobyl-style reactor.
Published:
12 September 1999 y., Sunday
Lithuania set 2005 as the deadline, winning praise from the European Union, which it seeks to join. President Valdas Adamkus has said he would consider building a new, modern nuclear plant. The cabinet voted unanimously in favor of the date, the first time Lithuania has set a firm deadline for shutting down the reactor at the Ignalina nuclear power plant. Parliament must still approve the shutdown schedule. Ignalina, 70 miles northeast of the capital Vilnius, operates two reactors similar to the one that caused the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine when a reactor exploded, spewing a cloud of radioactive dust over Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and parts of western Europe. The plant currently provides Lithuania with more than 80 percent of its electrical energy needs, making the Baltic state the most nuclear-dependent country in the world. The EU has pressed hard for a firm date for the closure of the Soviet-built Ignalina plant, with some member states linking the date to Lithuania_s drive to start accession talks. Closing the first reactor might cost Lithuania $2.5 billion, Economy Minister Eugenijus Maldeikishe said. Estimates for the full decommissioning of the entire plant range as high as $4 billion, which Lithuania says it will not be able to cover alone. "Concerning the second unit, the issue will be solved in the amended energy strategy in 2004," Maldeikis said. The date is part of Lithuania_s long-term energy strategy, which Maldeikis will present to European Commission officials during a visit to Brussels later this week.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
On 28 July at the square in front of the Ministry of National Defence the solemn initiation ceremony of the assigning of the Chief of Defence of the Republic of Lithuania was held.
more »
On 28 July, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas met with Minister of Foreign Affairs of Bosnia and Herzegovina Sven Alkalaj, who was paying an official visit to Lithuania.
more »
Lithuanian Minister of National Defence and Estonian Defence Minister by phone discussed readiness of Baltic Battalion to be on duty in NATO Response Force after the information that due to extremely difficult economic situation Latvia will decrease its input into the battalion.
more »
In the evening of 27 July in Brussels at the end of the EU foreign ministers’ meeting and before the EU-Belarus consultations, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs V. Ušackas met with Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belarus S. Martynov.
more »
On 27 July in Brussels, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas and EU Foreign Ministers discussed the situation in Georgia and its neighbourhood.
more »
Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas met with Iceland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Össur Skarphedinsson, Minister of Social Affairs and Social Security Árni Páll Árnason and Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Foreign Affairs Árni Thór Sigurdsson.
more »
President Dalia Grybauskaitė received the Apostolic Nuncio to Lithuania, Archbishop Luigi Bonazzi.
more »
On 23 July in Stockholm, Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs of Lithuania Asta Skaisgirytė Liauškienė and Swedish Minister for European Affairs Cecilia Malmström discussed priorities of Sweden’s EU Presidency.
more »
Lithuania’s Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs V. Ušackas had a telephone conversation with Iceland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Össur Skarphedinsson, during which the Ministers discussed Iceland’s decision to apply for the European Union membership.
more »
Acting in conformity the Constitution of Lithuania and based on the proposal submitted by Prime Minister Andrius Kubilius, President D. Grybauskaitė has approved the Government of the Republic of Lithuania.
more »