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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (4813)10/1/2002 3:29:34 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Russia says its rusting fleet could poison Arctic
Nick Paton Walsh in Moscow
Wednesday September 18, 2002
The Guardian

Russia issued a stark warning yesterday about the "dilapidated"
condition of dozens of navy ships along its eastern and Arctic
coasts, where tons of spent fuel from the ageing submarine fleet
is stored.

In a rare insight into the Russian administration's own fears
about the condition of its fleet, Viktor Akhunov, head of the
department of ecology and decommissioning at Minatom, the
Russian atomic energy ministry, said yesterday that corrosion
on the hulls of 39 ships posed the "greatest danger" to the
environment and security of the region.

Mr Akhunov told an international conference on nuclear security
in the eastern port of Vladivostok that the level of security
around the nuclear material was frighteningly lax, given that it
could be used to make a dirty bomb, or treated to provide fuel for
a nuclear device.


He declined to say which ships he was talking about or disclose
their bases but he revealed that one of the ships - part of a fleet
of tankers storing spent nuclear fuel - was already six years
past the date when it should have been decommissioned.

According to Mr Akhunov, only 71 of the 190 submarines that
have been decommissioned since the collapse of the Soviet
Union have had their fuel removed, leaving more than a hundred
docked and rotting along the northern Russian coast,
threatening the Arctic with ecological disaster.

Two reactors have already leaked, and salvaging them could
prove dangerous.


Vladimir Shishkin, chief designer of Minatom's institute for
energy equipment research and design who was also at the
conference, said the government planned to build a shelter to
store the submarines until the fission capability in their nuclear
reactors ended in about 300 years.

Russia is struggling to finance the decommissioning of its
nuclear behemoths. Yesterday's warning was accompanied by
the announcement that $70m (£45m) is to be allocated each
year to try to improve nuclear security in the country. Yet the
Russian military sees this sum as paltry.

Russia hopes to salvage 131 submarines by 2010 at a cost of
$3.9bn, Mr Akhunov said, but its projects are hampered by
Moscow's limited budget.

In 1997 and 1999, submarines sank due to corrosion in their
hulls, but were quickly raised before environmental damage
could occur.

The alarming announcement coincides with a meeting in Vienna
between the US energy secretary, Spencer Abraham, and his
Russian counterpart, Aleksandr Rumiantsev, to discuss nuclear
cooperation. The US financing of the Russian nuclear clean-up
is high on the agenda.

Minatom, which has responsibility for the clean-up, says the US
would rather finance the decommissioning of Russia's more
modern submarines, which could still operate, than remove the
older more dangerous ones.

A senior Minatom source said: "They are thinking about
reducing the military threat and not the ecological threat, and so
the money is spent on the modern, third-generation nuclear
missile submarines.

"It is a really serious situation now, and we need $4bn to clean
up all our decommissioned submarines."


A cash-strapped Minatom is pursuing projects abroad to boost
its annual budget. One involves the construction of a series of
nuclear reactors in Bushehr, Iran. Russia's export of nuclear
technology to a state that the US has dubbed part of an "axis of
evil" has enraged the Bush administration.

Mr Abraham is likely to spend some of his time in Vienna
convincing Moscow to withdraw from Bushehr, perhaps by
compensating Russia for its financial loss.

guardian.co.uk