Bulgaria Gets EUR73.8 Million Aid For Shut Nuclear Units

The Balkan country had already received a total of EUR575 million as compensation from an European Bank for Reconstruction and Development-operated international decommissioning support fund for Kozloduy as the plant's partial closure cost the country its position as a top electricity exporter in the region.
DJ
Τρι, 28 Ιουνίου 2011 - 18:56
Bulgaria signed grant agreements Tuesday to receive 73.8 million euros ($105.3 million) for energy projects as compensation for shutting down four units at its Kozloduy nuclear plant ahead of joining the European Union in 2007.

The Balkan country had already received a total of EUR575 million as compensation from an European Bank for Reconstruction and Development-operated international decommissioning support fund for Kozloduy as the plant's partial closure cost the country its position as a top electricity exporter in the region.

"Some people see this money as the cost of the shut nuclear reactors but for us it is funds to use for restructuring, rehabilitation and modernization of Bulgaria's energy sector," Economy and Energy Minister Traicho Traikov said Tuesday.

Bulgaria will spend the additional EUR73.8 million donated Tuesday to build new electricity transmission lines, rehabilitate Sofia's aging heating network and continue decommissioning of the four shut Kozloduy reactors.

"I am convinced that the joint success in implementing these programs will help greatly in achieving the important goal of securing additional funding in the EU budget beyond 2013," said Vince Novak, director of EBRD's Nuclear Safety Department that manages the Kozloduy decomissioning fund.

Bulgaria's government has applied to get EUR450 million more after 2013, Traikov said.

Only two Soviet-built 1,000-megawatt reactors remain operational at Kozloduy, while another project for a 2,000-megawatt nuclear power plant at Belene has been stalled over safety concerns and cost haggling with its Russian builder Atomstroyexport.