Publicatie Laka-bibliotheek:
The importance of energy issues in East-West cooperation - nuclear energy in central and eastern Europe (1996)
| Auteur | European Parliament |
| Datum | juni 1996 |
| Classificatie | 6.01.3.40/16 (VEILIGHEID - REACTOREN - OOSTEUROPEES ALGEMEEN) |
| Voorkant |
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Uit de publicatie:
0 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS The question of nuclear energy in the East has raised considerable attention since the Chernobyl disaster ten years ago. Unfortunately, the debate and analysis has mostly been limited to the questions of nuclear safety and has left aside the global energy context. If some Central and Eastern European Countries (CEECs) have developed extensive nuclear programs over the last 25 years, they are a minority of countries in the East. Of 27 CEECs only nine operate nuclear power plants. Of the twelve countries forming the CIS only Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan operate nuclear power plants and of the fifteen Central European countries only Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Slovak Republic and Slovenia operate reactors. In total 68 reactors (about 15% of the reactors in the world) are operating in CEECs and 16 are listed as under construction. While uranium mining and nuclear reactors concern various CEECs, the Russians control the fuel chain facilities (uranium conversion, enrichment, fuel fabrication, plutonium industry).
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