The European Union said on March 23 that Lithuania must close its sole atomic power station by 2009
Published:
28 March 2001 y., Wednesday
The European Union said on March 23 that Lithuania must close its sole atomic power station by 2009, warning that a failure to commit to that date could jeopardize Lithuania's bid for EU membership.
EU officials said the age of the twenty-year-old, Soviet-built reactors at the Ignalina power plant dictate they be closed before 2010. The EU has earlier warned that Ignalina poses an environmental threat to the region.
The government in January approved a plan to shut down one of two reactors at the power plant, but it hasn't yet decided the fate of the second reactor.
The endorsement of the closure plan, initiated by an earlier administration, sets out a detailed schedule for switching off the first reactor at Ignalina, some 130 kilometers north of the capital, Vilnius. The EU has repeatedly urged Lithuania to shut down the entire plant, but it hadn't before suggested a deadline by which it would like that to happen.
Lithuania has said it wants to finish its current membership talks with the EU in 2002 and enter the powerful economic bloc in 2004. The EU hasn't yet fixed a clear timetable for accepting new members. International donors, mostly from the 15 members of the EU, have pledged some 200 million dollars to help pay for closing the first reactor. That's roughly the amount Lithuania said it needed for the project.
Ignalina's two reactors are the same type as those at Chernobyl, Ukraine—site of the world's worst nuclear accident in 1986—though they have had safety upgrades since Lithuania regained independence. The facility generates more than 70 percent of Lithuania's electricity and does so more cheaply than other forms of power, allowing the country to keep its energy costs to consumers relatively low. Many Lithuanians fear that closing Ignalina and developing alternative energy sources would be too costly, running into the billions of dollars by some estimates, and could damage Lithuania's economy.
Šaltinis:
balticsww.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus congratulated President of the Federal Republic of Germany Horst Köhler on the Day of German Unity.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus visited the Military Air Force Base in Zokniai where NATO Baltic air-policing mission is deployed.
more »
Thursday, October 2, Vilnius – Today President of the Republic of Lithuania met with the Director General of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), Ambassador Mr. Rogelio Pfirter.
more »
President of the Republic of Lithuania sent congratulations on behalf of himself and the people of Lithuania to the President of the People’s Republic of China Hu Jintao and to the President of the Republic of Cyprus Dimitris Christofias on the national holidays of their countries.
more »
On October 1 State Secretary of the Ministry of National Defence Jurate Raguckiene will take part in the annual Industry Day organised in Brussels by the NATO Allied Command Transformation.
more »
Concluding his working visit to the United States of America, President of the Republic of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus visited the Newseum, a museum of news and journalism.
more »
Minister of National Defence Juozas Olekas met with the Chief of Defence Staff of Luxembourg Gen. Gaston Reinig and congratulated the country’s decision to join the EU monitoring mission (EUMM) in Georgia, September 30.
more »
During his working visit to Greece, Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas continued to look for EU solidarity in addressing Lithuania’s energy security problems.
more »
Lithuanian team of five – representatives of the Foreign and National Defence Ministries and Police Department under the Ministry of the Interior – was sent to the EU Observer Mission to Georgia
more »
The US financial crisis and global ripple effects, including the EU and Lithuania, have been among major issues discussed between Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas and EU Commissioner responsible for Economic and Monetary Affairs Joaquin Almunia in their meeting earlier today.
more »