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FM Szijjártó: Good Progress Made in Preparations for Paks Nuclear Power Station Expansion

MTI-Hungary Today 2021.10.13.

Good progress has been made in preparations to expand Paks nuclear power station, with the main constructor to submit ten new plans and permission requests to the authorities in the upcoming period, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Tuesday.

Szijjártó was on his way to Moscow to meet Alexey Likhachev, the director general of Russia’s state atomic energy corporation Rosatom, to discuss the detailed schedule for the upcoming works.

It is important that progress is made according to preliminary plans so that Hungary can fulfil its obligations to meet European climate targets, The ministry said in a statement. Nuclear energy, it cited Szijjártó as saying, “is a clean, cheap and safe way to cover energy demands.”

Paks II Not Given Long-Awaited Permit
Paks II Not Given Long-Awaited Permit

"The National Atomic Energy Authority will order a further completion of the licensing procedure," stated the National Nuclear Energy Office (OAH).Continue reading

Szijjártó said preparations were progressing well, with 519 licences already acquired by the main contractor, including an environmental permit.

“A 300,000-page request for an implementation permit was completed last year, and recently the Hungarian Atomic Energy Authority requested additional information for this documentation,” he said. “This work will certainly be done in the next few months and, concurrently, we will submit ten new plans and requests for permissions, including for the foundation slab and the reactor tank,” he added.

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The issue of the Paks upgrade, the Russian loan, and, to a larger extent, the use of nuclear energy in Hungary, are topics which the opposition has promised to revise if it wins the next election.Continue reading

Hungary has been using nuclear energy for nearly forty years, and experiences in the recent period have been especially positive, he said. Nuclear contributes to protecting the environment, preserving the achievements of the public utility cost reduction scheme and to securing the country’s energy supplies, which is why the proportion of nuclear energy is being increased in Hungary’s energy mix, he added.

Szijjártó said he would also discuss with Likhachev ways to make training capacities developed in Hungary become part of an international network. This is needed so that whenever the construction of a nuclear power station gets off the ground, wherever that may be, some of the engineers and professionals are trained in Hungary, he added. Most recently, Hungary’s government signed a corresponding agreement with Bangladesh, and talks are under way with Egypt, he said.

Featured photo via Szijjártó’s Facebook page


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