Posted on 05/13/2010 12:02:01 AM PDT by bruinbirdman
Dmitri Medvedev on Wednesday sealed a $20bn deal for Russia to build Turkeys first nuclear power plant, furthering Moscows ambition of carving out a bigger role in the renascent international market for nuclear energy.
Energy cooperation is the core of a rapidly developing partnership between Moscow and Ankara, former cold war rivals who say bilateral trade could reach $100bn in the next five years half the value of Russias trade now with the entire European Union.
Turkey and Russia are strategic partners, not just in words but in reality, the Russian president told reporters on Wednesday during a trip to Ankara, where he also discussed Moscows involvement in an oil pipeline that will cut tanker traffic through the Bosphorus straits and struck a deal to scrap visa requirements for short visits.
Russia, which already sells Turkey 70 per cent of its imported energy, has overcome Turkish criticism of cost and over-dependence on its neighbour to win the nuclear deal, after making the only bid in a 2008 tender that was later cancelled.
Sergei Kirienko, head of the countrys nuclear agency, said the deal was a breakthrough because Russia would keep a controlling stake in the project. It will own 100 per cent at first and may later sell 49 per cent to another investor.
We have been striving for this for a long time it is much more interesting for us to be co-investors in such projects, he said.
This arrangement might also allow Turkeys government to take a stake in the project at a later stage. It had considered doing so upfront in order to give the plants operator greater guarantees and so bring down the cost of the project.
Mr Kirienko said state-owned Rosatom would finance construction of the plant on Turkeys Black Sea coast, with four reactors and a generating capacity of 4,800MW.
Tetas, Turkeys state electricity company, has pledged to buy up to 70 per cent of power when the plant begins generating in 7 years time, with some sold on the open market.
The deal illustrates Russias appetite to cement its position in Turkeys domestic energy market, one of the fastest growing in the region, as Ankara proceeds with privatisations of power distribution grids and generating assets.
Mr Medvedev and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish prime minister, both noted that they had also discussed future co-operation on Russias planned South Stream gas pipeline, and plans to build a refinery at the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.
Israel to bomb Turkey’s nuclear plant.
This is not good. Turkey just changed over to the extremist in the last few months.
We need to build some more of those here. You want clean? They represent clean power. Clean & green.
I want cheap. Clean, green is a communist plot.
yitbos
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