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Bangladesh starts building first
nuclear plant
By AFP
Published: October 3, 2013
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The plant will have two 1,000
megawatt reactors costing up to $4
billion. PHOTO: FILE
DHAKA:
Energy-starved Bangladesh on
Wednesday inaugurated the
opening phase of work for its first
ever nuclear power plant using
Russian technology.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina laid
the foundation stone of the Rooppur
nuclear power plant in the countrys
northwest, which will have two 1,000
megawatt reactors costing up to $4
billion.
The impoverished South Asian nation
signed a deal in November 2011 with
the Russian state-owned nuclear
giant Rosatom to build the power
station and has secured soft loans
from Moscow to finance 90 percent of
the project.
In building the plant, we have
given utmost importance on the
safety issues, Hasina said in a
televised speech after the
inauguration.
We are strictly following the
International Atomic Energy Agencys
guidelines in building the plant to
ensure 100-percent safety, she said.
The premier said that Russia would
manage the nuclear waste by taking
it back.
The first phase of work will include
conducting feasibility and
environmental and safety studies
which would be completed over the
next two years, ASM Firoz, head of
the Bangladesh Atomic Energy
Commission, told AFP.
The plant is expected to generate
power by 2018 and help ease chronic
power shortages that have hit
industry hard.
It will also diversify the countrys
energy mix as Bangladesh has been
overwhelmingly reliant on its fast
dwindling gas reserves from the Bay
of Bengal to produce electricity for
its booming economy.
In 2007, Bangladesh received
approval from the International
Atomic Energy Agency, the industrys
global watchdog, to set up a nuclear
power plant.
Many countries worldwide are
reconsidering their use of nuclear
power in the wake of Japans
ongoing struggle with its stricken
atomic plant in Fukushima which
was damaged in the 2011 earthquake
and tsunami disaster.
Germany decided to scrap its
nuclear power stations in favour of
renewables, while Japan has
switched off all its atomic reactors
nuclear plant
By AFP
Published: October 3, 2013
Share this article
Print this page
The plant will have two 1,000
megawatt reactors costing up to $4
billion. PHOTO: FILE
DHAKA:
Energy-starved Bangladesh on
Wednesday inaugurated the
opening phase of work for its first
ever nuclear power plant using
Russian technology.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina laid
the foundation stone of the Rooppur
nuclear power plant in the countrys
northwest, which will have two 1,000
megawatt reactors costing up to $4
billion.
The impoverished South Asian nation
signed a deal in November 2011 with
the Russian state-owned nuclear
giant Rosatom to build the power
station and has secured soft loans
from Moscow to finance 90 percent of
the project.
In building the plant, we have
given utmost importance on the
safety issues, Hasina said in a
televised speech after the
inauguration.
We are strictly following the
International Atomic Energy Agencys
guidelines in building the plant to
ensure 100-percent safety, she said.
The premier said that Russia would
manage the nuclear waste by taking
it back.
The first phase of work will include
conducting feasibility and
environmental and safety studies
which would be completed over the
next two years, ASM Firoz, head of
the Bangladesh Atomic Energy
Commission, told AFP.
The plant is expected to generate
power by 2018 and help ease chronic
power shortages that have hit
industry hard.
It will also diversify the countrys
energy mix as Bangladesh has been
overwhelmingly reliant on its fast
dwindling gas reserves from the Bay
of Bengal to produce electricity for
its booming economy.
In 2007, Bangladesh received
approval from the International
Atomic Energy Agency, the industrys
global watchdog, to set up a nuclear
power plant.
Many countries worldwide are
reconsidering their use of nuclear
power in the wake of Japans
ongoing struggle with its stricken
atomic plant in Fukushima which
was damaged in the 2011 earthquake
and tsunami disaster.
Germany decided to scrap its
nuclear power stations in favour of
renewables, while Japan has
switched off all its atomic reactors