20-11-09
Ματαιώθηκε η πυρηνική συνεργασία Τουρκίας –Ρωσίας. Η δημόσια επιχείρηση ηλεκτρισμού της Τουρκίας (Tetas), ανακοίνωσε ότι ακυρώθηκε η απόφαση κατασκευής του πρώτου Πυρηνικού Ηλεκτρικού Σταθμού στην περιοχή Akkuyu, στα παράλια της Μεσογείου.
Μια κοινοπραξία, με επικεφαλής τη ρωσική εταιρεία Atomstroyexport ήταν η μοναδική που έδωσε ολοκληρωμένη προσφορά για την κατασκευή του σταθμού.
Η διαφωνία της Tetas με την κοινοπραξία, δημιουργήθηκε για οικονομικούς κυρίως λόγους, που αφορούν την τιμή διάθεσης της ηλεκτρικής ενέργειας από την κοινοπραξία
Η διαφωνία της Tetas με την κοινοπραξία, δημιουργήθηκε για οικονομικούς κυρίως λόγους, που αφορούν την τιμή διάθεσης της ηλεκτρικής ενέργειας από την κοινοπραξία
Απώλεια $2 δισεκατομμυρίων θα έχει η Τουρκία από την ακύρωση αυτής της απόφασης σύμφωνα με την εφημερίδα Hurriyet.
Πηγή http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=111783
Πηγή http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=111783
Turkey cancels Russian-won nuclear plant tender
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 19:20:30 GMT
Turkey revokes a tender won by a Russian-led consortium to build the country's first nuclear power plant following a year of constant pressure to cancel the process.
The Turkish Electricity Trading and Contracting Inc. (TETAS) released a brief statement on Friday, announcing its decision to cancel the tender, citing an article in the bid specification that allowed the firm to scrap the process without any liability.
A consortium led by Russia's state nuclear giant Atomstroyexport had won the tender to construct four nuclear reactors with a total capacity of 4,800-megawatts at Akkuyu, in Turkey's Mersin Province.
The cancellation came ten days after a top administrative court suspended parts of the regulation governing the tender and launched a review of a demand by a civil society of engineers to stop the process.
The tender faced strong opposition in Turkey after it came into light that only one consortium had been the only bidder for the project and offered an above-market price for supplying electricity to the Eurasian nation.
The consortium, which also includes Russia's Inter Rao and Turkey's Park Teknik, failed to persuade Ankara even after revising its unit price of 21.16 cents per kilowatt per hour down to about 15 cents, a price Moscow described as below international market levels.
Turkey has been making efforts to build three nuclear power plants in a bid to forestall a possible energy shortage and reduce dependence on foreign supplies, a process that is fiercely opposed by environmentalists.
Ankara had to scrap an earlier plan to build a nuclear plant at Akkuyu in 2000 under a crushing financial crisis and mounting protests from environmentalists in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus.
The critics of the plan argue that Akkuyu is close to a seismic faultline, recalling a powerful earthquake that killed more than 140 people in the neighboring province of Adana in 1998.
MRS/HGH
Ευχαριστούμε την Αλεξάνδρα Σαλαμανούδη για το e-mail
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 19:20:30 GMT
Turkey revokes a tender won by a Russian-led consortium to build the country's first nuclear power plant following a year of constant pressure to cancel the process.
The Turkish Electricity Trading and Contracting Inc. (TETAS) released a brief statement on Friday, announcing its decision to cancel the tender, citing an article in the bid specification that allowed the firm to scrap the process without any liability.
A consortium led by Russia's state nuclear giant Atomstroyexport had won the tender to construct four nuclear reactors with a total capacity of 4,800-megawatts at Akkuyu, in Turkey's Mersin Province.
The cancellation came ten days after a top administrative court suspended parts of the regulation governing the tender and launched a review of a demand by a civil society of engineers to stop the process.
The tender faced strong opposition in Turkey after it came into light that only one consortium had been the only bidder for the project and offered an above-market price for supplying electricity to the Eurasian nation.
The consortium, which also includes Russia's Inter Rao and Turkey's Park Teknik, failed to persuade Ankara even after revising its unit price of 21.16 cents per kilowatt per hour down to about 15 cents, a price Moscow described as below international market levels.
Turkey has been making efforts to build three nuclear power plants in a bid to forestall a possible energy shortage and reduce dependence on foreign supplies, a process that is fiercely opposed by environmentalists.
Ankara had to scrap an earlier plan to build a nuclear plant at Akkuyu in 2000 under a crushing financial crisis and mounting protests from environmentalists in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus.
The critics of the plan argue that Akkuyu is close to a seismic faultline, recalling a powerful earthquake that killed more than 140 people in the neighboring province of Adana in 1998.
MRS/HGH
Ευχαριστούμε την Αλεξάνδρα Σαλαμανούδη για το e-mail
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου