All news

Rejection of Belene NPP project stops development in Bulgarian regions, Belene community Mayor Petar Dulev said

In his opinion, Bulgarian young people understand the need for atomic power better than anyone else

SOFIA, November 17 (Itar-Tass) — The rejection of the Belene nuclear power plant project had halted socioeconomic development in northern regions of Bulgaria, Belene community Mayor Petar Dulev said.

“The Belene community in cooperation with the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences will organise a forum on January 15 and invite foreign experts to attend it in order to prove that nuclear power engineering can develop in Bulgaria,” Dulev said on Saturday, November 17.

“The consequences of the project call-off will affect the whole country,” he stressed. “The Belene community has already stopped its social and economic development that was connected with the nuclear power plant,”

In his opinion, Bulgarian young people understand the need for atomic power better than anyone else. “Young specialists seek to realise themselves here in Bulgaria, not abroad. We have made the Belene NPP a national idea and must defend it on January 27 [when a nationwide referendum is to be held],” Dulev added.

A national referendum on January 27, 2013 will decide the fate of nuclear power engineering in Bulgaria.

People will be asked to say during the plebiscite whether the development of the nuclear power industry in Bulgaria by building a new nuclear power plant would be acceptable to them. There will be no mention of the Belene nuclear power plant, disputes over which has prompted the referendum.

In late October, the Bulgarian parliament voted for the referendum. Of 113 MPs who voted on the matter, 106 supported the referendum and 7 objected. Debates continued for more than three hours.

The Bulgarian Socialist Party that initiated the referendum proposed a different question for the plebiscite: will the development of the nuclear power industry in Bulgaria by building a nuclear power plant at the Belene site be acceptable? However members of the ruling party “Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria” approved a new version of the question last week, removing the mention of Belene.

Prime Minister Boyko Borisov suggested holding a referendum in the summer of next year simultaneously with parliamentary elections. “It [the nuclear power plant] started to be built 30 years ago and therefore can wait for several months until the referendum takes place. If we hold it now, we will spend 15-20 million euros on it. If we organise it simultaneously with the parliamentary elections, it will cost us nothing,” the prime minister said.

“If the referendum gives the result [sought by the opposition], the state will bind itself by bank loan commitments on the next day and we will start building,” Borisov said.

Russia and Bulgaria signed a memorandum on late November 2010 that lays out the principles of establishing a project company to build the Belene nuclear power plant.

Bulgaria started experiencing problems with the project after the outbreak of the global financial crisis. The situation deteriorated after the investor - Germany's RWE concern that was bidding for 49 percent of the NPP shares -- had withdrawn from the project.

The Belene site was approved for the construction of a second Bulgarian NPP by a Council of Ministers decree on March 20, 1981. The site was handed to the Ministry of Economics on December 31, 1981.

The foundations of the future power plant were laid in 1987 according to the design of Atomenergoproekt Kiev from the USSR and Energoproekt Sofia. The design suggested the construction of four VVER-1000/V 320 reactors. Between 1988 and 1990 40 percent of the construction work of reactor 1 was finished and 80 percent of the equipment was supplied. The project was abandoned in 1990 due to the democratic changes in Bulgaria. In 2002, the government decided to restart the Belene project. The tender for the construction of the nuclear power plant was announced in 2005 and was won by Russian Atomstroyexport. The National Electric Company launched a procedure for selection of a contractor for the engineering, procurement, and commissioning of Belene Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2.

Bulgaria withdrew from the project in March 2012.