Iran to Seek Bids for 19 Atomic Power Plants - MP
IRAN: December 27, 2007
TEHRAN - Iran will soon announce an international tender for building 19
nuclear power plants, an MP was quoted as saying, a week after Russia said
it had begun fuel deliveries to the Islamic state's first such facility.
Kazem Jalali, a spokesman for parliament's national security and foreign
policy committee, said each power plant would have a capacity of 1,000
megawatt of electricity, the Iran News daily reported on Monday, without
giving further details.
Iran, the world's fourth-largest oil exporter, is embroiled in a dispute
with Western powers who fear its nuclear programme could be used to build an
atomic bomb. Tehran says it is aimed at generating electricity.
The UN Security Council is discussing a possible third round of sanctions
against Iran over its refusal to suspend its sensitive atomic work.
Russia said on Dec. 17 it had delivered the first shipment of nuclear fuel
to the Bushehr power plant in southern Iran, a step Moscow and Washington
said should convince Tehran to shut down its own disputed uranium enrichment
activities.
Iran, however, said it would not halt its efforts to enrich uranium, a
process to make fuel for power plants that can also provide material for
atomic weapons, if refined much further.
Iranian officials say domestically-produced fuel is needed for other power
plants it wants to build as part of a planned network with a capacity for
20,000 MW by 2020.
Jalali, whose comments were initially carried by the official IRNA news
agency on Sunday, suggested the tenders were in line with these plans. "The
contract for building 19 power plants ... will in the near future be put on
an international tender," IRNA quoted him as saying.
Another Iranian official said in April Tehran would launch tenders for two
new nuclear plants, but it has yet to announce any outcome.
The Russian company building Bushehrsaid alst week it would not be
operational until at least the end of 2008.
Atomstroiexport is building the Bushehr nuclear reactors, with the fuel
supplied from Russia's state atomic energy agency, under a US$1 billion
contract.
Russia says Bushehr is being built under the supervision of the United
Nations' nuclear watchdog, ruling out any military use for the fuel or
technology. (Writing by Fredrik Dahl; Editing by Diana Abdallah)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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