Turkey has received $1.39 billion from Russia for the construction of Turkey’s first nuclear power plant in Akkuyu for the first quarter of 2014.
Akkuyu
NGS, Russia’s state-run nuclear company Rosatom’s subsidiary in Turkey,
has started increasing its investments. According to company officials,
once the environmental evaluation report (ÇED) is approved, ground
preparations and infrastructural investments will speed up in the
construction of Turkey’s first nuclear plant.
The Akkuyu NPP
project is estimated to cost around $20 billion and total of $3.5
billion worth of equipment is expected to be used in the construction
process, of which $1.8 billion will be spent this year alone.
Funds received from Russia
are expected to be used, particularly in building the infrastructure
for the plant, in constructing roads, power lines, water pipelines,
temporary housing and cranes.
If the project license is approved,
the reactor’s construction is estimated to begin in 2016, and to be
operational by 2020 with the entire plant being fully operational by
2023.
The Russian
energy company Rosatom signed an agreement in 2011 to build and operate
a four reactor nuclear power plant in the province of Mersin on
Turkey’s Mediterranean coast, with the aim of having the plant
fully-operational by the Turkish republic’s 100-year anniversary in
2023.
(www.hurriyetdailynews.com, April 11, 2014)