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Nuclear Power Industry News is a blog about utilities, companies, suppliers in the nuclear energy market.

Turkey To Build Nuclear Plant Despite Russian Tender Failure

Turkey recently cancelled a 2008 tender won by a Russian-led consortium to build Turkey's first nuclear power plant after a top administrative court suspended parts of the regulation governing the process

 - By April Murelio -

According to a report by the AFP, Turkey is determined to build a nuclear power plant and will launch a new project to replace a failed tender, Energy Minister Taner Yildiz was quoted as saying Saturday.

"The fact that the tender was scrapped does not mean that the process is scrapped. Our determination on nuclear power plants is persisting," Yildiz said in Kizilcahamam town, near Ankara, Anatolia news agency reported.

Energy authorities last week cancelled a 2008 tender won by a Russian-led consortium to build Turkey's first nuclear power plant after a top administrative court suspended parts of the regulation governing the process.

Yildiz said officials were working on a new model of realizing the project through shorter procedures, adding that the involvement of the public sector may be also considered.

A consortium led by Atomstroyexport, Russia's state nuclear company, was the only bidder in the scrapped tender to build four nuclear reactors with a total capacity of 4,800-megawatts at the Mediterranean town of Akkuyu.

The tender had been criticzed since it emerged that the consortium was the sole bidder and offered above-market prices for supplying electricity to the Turkish grid.

The auction was held in September of last year, amid global financial turbulence, with Ankara rejecting requests by interested companies for a postponement.

Turkey plans to build three nuclear power plants in hopes of preventing a possible energy shortage and reducing dependence on foreign supplies but the project is strongly opposed by environmentalists.

Ankara dropped an earlier plan to build a nuclear plant at Akkuyu in 2000 amid a severe financial crisis and protests from environmentalists in Turkey, Greece, and Cyprus.

Critics say Akkuyu is close to a seismic fault line, noting a powerful earthquake that killed more than 140 people in the neighbouring province of Adana in 1998. 

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About steveheiser

Stephen graduated from Emerson College in January 1989 with a B.F.A. in Professional Writing. He started as an energy writer and editor shortly after. Since then he has been writing and editing energy news for a variety of publications including: Wilson's Business Abstracts, Individual Inc., Newspage, Newsedge, Andover News Network, VerticalNet, PowerOnline, ElectricNet, and Live Power News. In December of 2008, Stephen was hired by industry veteran and Nuclear Street Publisher Cam Abernethy to become Nuclear Street’s Managing Editor. Stephen is a member of AEE, ASME, and NEM.
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