The issue of nuclear safety received particular attention in the context of EU
enlargement, when candidate countries agreed to the early closure of their
first generation reactors in preparation for EU accession. The respective
governments declared their intention to close the soviet-designed
first-generation units as follows:
-
Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant (Bulgaria): units 1 and 2 to be shut down
by year end 2002 and units 3 and 4 in 2006
-
Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant (Lithuania): unit 1 to be closed before
2005 and unit 2 by 2009
-
Bohunice Nuclear Power Plant (Slovak Republic): unit 1 to be closed by
2006 and unit 2 in 2008
International support
The European Community undertook to support these countries in the effort to
decommission the reactors according to the agreed timetable. As a result, the
EBRD have set up three separate International Decommissioning Support Funds:
Since their establishment in 2001, the IDSFs have been supported by the
European Community and the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands,
Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Pledges to
the three funds exceed EUR 630 million and a further increase is currently
being considered by donors, particularly the EU.
The
objective of each IDSF is to facilitate the decommissioning works at
designated reactors in the respective country, prioritising two areas of
assistance:
-
In the decommissioning process - construction of special installations,
such as facilities for storing spent nuclear fuel, for treatment and storage
of radioactive waste and, in certain cases, replacement steam-and-heat sources
and other decommissionning related projects;
-
In conjunction with the closure of nuclear power plants - energy sector
transformation via projects designed to demonstrate the potential of energy
efficiency measures and other necessary interventions in the energy sector.
Related projects
In addition to the IDSFs, the EBRD manages two other multilateral funds which
also provide decommissioning assistance to Ukraine and Russia in the areas of:
-
Decommissioning of closed units at Chernobyl, Ukraine: In support of
the decommissioning of units 1, 2 and 3 of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant,
the Nuclear Safety Account (NSA) finances the construction of an interim
storage facility for spent nuclear fuel and a facility to treat liquid
radioactive waste.
-
Decommissioning of nuclear naval vessels in northwest Russia: One of
the key objectives of the recently-launched “nuclear window” of the Northern
Dimension Environmental Partnership (NDEP) is to assist the Russian government
with the decommissioning of Soviet-built nuclear-powered ships and submarines
as well as with the rehabiltation of their supporting infrastructure