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To: yard_man who wrote (17360)9/11/2000 5:58:10 PM
From: patron_anejo_por_favor  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
I guess this won't help the Ruskies oil export prospects anytime soon:

dailynews.yahoo.com

Monday September 11 10:34 AM ET
Power Grid Failure Shuts Russian Nuclear
Plants

By Peter Graff

MOSCOW (Reuters) - A failure in its crumbling electric grid forced Russia
to shut down several nuclear reactors over the weekend, including those at a
gargantuan top-secret fuel reprocessing plant, officials said on Monday.

Officials assured the public there was no danger, but the head of the huge,
secret Mayak reprocessing plant, in the remote Ural mountains, said only his
staff's ``near-military'' vigilance, had prevented serious trouble.

The incident follows a catastrophic accident on a nuclear submarine last
month that killed all 118 crew and a fire that gutted Moscow's television
tower, and draws further attention to the dangerously decrepit state of
Russian infrastructure.

``Everything is fine,'' an employee in the press office of the Atomic Energy
Ministry said, adding that there was no danger.

Reactors at Mayak were shut down on Saturday after the power grid failure
cut off the plant's outside electricity supply for 45 minutes, its director Vitaly
Sadovnikov told Itar-Tass news agency. He said no dangerous materials had
been emitted.

Workers were restarting the first of the reactors on Monday. Reports did not
say how many reactors had been affected in all.

A reactor at the Beloyarsk civilian nuclear power plant in nearby Sverdlovsk
province was also shut down, provincial power company Sverdlovenergo
said in a statement received by Reuters. It also reported no leaks of radiation.

Sverdlovenergo said the power cuts were probably caused by a short circuit
on a high voltage line in its grid, but that an investigation was underway.

Questions About Nuclear Safety

The shutdowns, especially those at the Mayak plant, go to the heart of
questions about nuclear safety in Russia.

Mayak -- in Ozyorsk, a closed town of 86,000 people surrounded by a
double wire fence -- is the biggest nuclear fuel reprocessing plant in the
world, handling radioactive material from all across Russia.

It was here that the plutonium for the first Soviet nuclear bomb was produced
in 1949. The town's very existence was once a secret.

It is now also the site of a cavernous depot, being built with U.S. help, to
keep 6,000 bombs' worth of plutonium and weapons-grade uranium from
falling into the wrong hands.

``We were saved from major trouble by the near-military discipline which we
still retain at the plant,'' Sadovnikov told Tass. ``The staff responded well,
demonstrating the knowledge of their equipment and not permitting any
harmful emissions.''

The U.S. embassy said it could not immediately comment on whether
American projects at Mayak were affected.

Tass quoted the head of the Beloyarsk civilian power plant as saying workers
were also attempting to restart their reactor.

``None of the station's employees can remember such sharp fluctuations in
the power and frequency of the charge in the Sverdlovenergo grid,'' Oleg
Sarayev said.

``Thanks to the precise safety system of the nuclear power station and the
flawless discipline of its workers, the block was shut down according to
procedure.''

Two non-nuclear power plants in the region were shut down as well,
Sverlovenergo's statement said.


Nice prelude for a Chernobylesque meltdown in the U.S. equity market, methinks....