Mexico to revive
mothballed nuclear power program
Mar 15, 2006 - Xinhua English Newswire
Mexico to revive mothballed nuclear power program
MEXICO CITY, March 14 (Xinhua) -- Mexico plans to build a new nuclear
power plant and spend 150 million U.S. dollars upgrading an existing
plant in its efforts to revive a nuclear power program ignored since
1990, Mexico's state Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) said on
Tuesday.
"We have to think in the long term. In the next 20 years, nuclear
power is an energy source we, and many other countries, will need," CFE
head Alfredo Elias Ayub said, adding that the new plant would be
completed before 2020, and is expected to cost between 3 and 4 billion
dollars.
Because of the high construction costs, Mexico is unlikely to build
more than one such plant, he added.
The plant to be upgraded was completed in 1990 by GE Energy and is
based in Laguna Verde in the eastern Mexican state of Veracruz. It
generates 5 percent of Mexico's electricity, but had to be shut down
last week when a cable burned out.
"If operators follow the procedures, then nuclear plants are
completely safe," Ayub said in response to a question about the Veracruz
plant's safety.
Human error caused high-profile atomic accidents in the past such as
that in Chernobyl in the former Soviet Union in 1986 when a reactor
exploded and leaked massive radioactive material.
According to the CFE, Mexico's electricity demand would grow by 4
percent this year.
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