Moscow (AFP) - Russia's world first floating nuclear power station on Saturday completed a 5,000-kilometre (3,100-mile) Arctic transfer to the country's far east, the Rosatom nuclear agency said.
"The
Akademik Lomonosov floating nuclear plant arrived ... at Pevek, in the
autonomous district of Chukotka," where it is to start operating by year
end once connected to the local electricity grid, Rosatom said.
What will
be the world's northernmost nuclear power plant left Murmansk in Russia's far
north on August 23 after being loaded with combustible nuclear fuel.
The 21-ton,
144-metre (470 feet) long and 30-metre wide platform, which is designed to meet
the energy needs of remote communities, was towed into Pevek by a clutch of
vessels.
The station
houses two 35-megawatt reactors, more in line with the power of nuclear-powered
ice breakers than typical new generation nuclear plants boasting nearer 1,000
MW capacity.
The
Akademik Lomonosov is to provide energy for around 100,000 people and also
power oil platforms as Russia develops extraction of natural resources in a
mineral-rich area whose eastern tip is a few dozen kilometres from Alaska.
"It is
perhaps a small step towards sustainable development in the Arctic -- but it's
a giant step towards decarbonisation of remote, off-grid zones and a turning
point in the global development of small modular nuclear plants," Rosatom
head Alexei Likhachev said in a statement.
Environmental
groups led by Greenpeace Russia have, however, long criticised the project
warning it will have "serious consequences" for a fragile ecosystem
in case of storms or accidents.
Greenpeace
has warned of the risk of a "nuclear Titanic" and "Chernobyl on
ice" and environmental fears were heightened following an August explosion
at a nuclear research facility in Russia's far north which saw local radiation
levels briefly spike.
The nuclear
industry generally has been looking to reinvent itself in a depressed market,
notably by producing small-scale, modular reactors with attractive price tags
to win over potential new clients.
The
industry has been cheered by strong demand notably for nuclear-powered
submarines as well as ice-breakers and aircraft carriers, increasingly destined
for isolated and infrastructure-poor regions.

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