Data collected in the controversial environmental impact assessment
report (ÇED) regarding Turkey’s prospective first nuclear plant in
Akkuyu in Mersin has provided serious warnings that the plant could hurt
the region’s ecosystem once it comes operational.
A leading expert on marine sciences who spoke to Doğan News Agency said the data was not interpreted in the light of its potential ecological damage.
“When you look at the data, the report yells, ‘This shouldn’t be built here,’” said Ali Cemal Gücü, a professor at the Marine Sciences Institute at Middle Eastern Technical University (ODTÜ) in Ankara.
Gücü said it was impossible to suggest there would be no environmental impact after the release of a million cubic meters of 35-degree water into the sea each hour for the next 60 years.
Coastal nuclear plants mostly in cold seas
According to Gücü, the assurances regarding sea life in the zone are not credible when confronted with the data provided by the report.
Gücü said similar nuclear plants designed to discharge hot water into the sea were usually build in areas such as the Baltic states, Russia or Finland.
“So the same interpretations that could be made for a sea at 17 degrees are made for the northeastern Mediterranean, whose waters are at 31 degrees and can almost be considered tropical,” Gücü said.
The professor said the bays between Mersin and İskenderun in the eastern Mediterranean had been invaded by species that poured into the Mediterranean from the Red Sea following the opening of the Suez Canal, resulting in the deaths of local species. The increase in the temperatures in the bay would only accelerate the process, Gücü said, threatening the whole fish population.
Gücü also claimed that monk seals will have to abandon the area as soon as the construction starts.
“[At a time] when monkey seals are disappearing in the whole Mediterranean, they are building a nuclear plant, instead of protecting this area. They chose that area for its untouched nature, but won’t care at all if they lose all those species,” he said.
Officials have solemnly vowed that those who will work at Akkuyu NGS, the company established by Rosatom to operate the plant, will be trained to increase awareness about the protection of marine fauna.
The start of construction for the plant is scheduled for mid-2015, as pressure by the government has already increased as the project still has to obtain a construction license. By 2023, all four planned reactors are slated to have started generating power.
[hurriyetdailynews.com]
18/7/14
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A leading expert on marine sciences who spoke to Doğan News Agency said the data was not interpreted in the light of its potential ecological damage.
“When you look at the data, the report yells, ‘This shouldn’t be built here,’” said Ali Cemal Gücü, a professor at the Marine Sciences Institute at Middle Eastern Technical University (ODTÜ) in Ankara.
Gücü said it was impossible to suggest there would be no environmental impact after the release of a million cubic meters of 35-degree water into the sea each hour for the next 60 years.
- According to the 3,600-page report, which had to be revised after being returned three times over the past two years, the water needed to cool the four-reactor plant will be supplied from Mediterranean Sea and will be poured back into the sea at 35 degrees. Although the report admits the discharge will cause a rise in the water temperature, it argues that this would not exceed 0.5 degrees and poses no danger to any species living in the habitat, including loggerhead turtles and monk seals.
Coastal nuclear plants mostly in cold seas
According to Gücü, the assurances regarding sea life in the zone are not credible when confronted with the data provided by the report.
Gücü said similar nuclear plants designed to discharge hot water into the sea were usually build in areas such as the Baltic states, Russia or Finland.
“So the same interpretations that could be made for a sea at 17 degrees are made for the northeastern Mediterranean, whose waters are at 31 degrees and can almost be considered tropical,” Gücü said.
The professor said the bays between Mersin and İskenderun in the eastern Mediterranean had been invaded by species that poured into the Mediterranean from the Red Sea following the opening of the Suez Canal, resulting in the deaths of local species. The increase in the temperatures in the bay would only accelerate the process, Gücü said, threatening the whole fish population.
Gücü also claimed that monk seals will have to abandon the area as soon as the construction starts.
“[At a time] when monkey seals are disappearing in the whole Mediterranean, they are building a nuclear plant, instead of protecting this area. They chose that area for its untouched nature, but won’t care at all if they lose all those species,” he said.
Officials have solemnly vowed that those who will work at Akkuyu NGS, the company established by Rosatom to operate the plant, will be trained to increase awareness about the protection of marine fauna.
The start of construction for the plant is scheduled for mid-2015, as pressure by the government has already increased as the project still has to obtain a construction license. By 2023, all four planned reactors are slated to have started generating power.
[hurriyetdailynews.com]
18/7/14
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Related:
Σιγή ιχθύος από την Κομισιόν, για το πυρηνικό στο Ακουγιού
Τα σχέδια του Άκουγιου: Του χρόνου ξεκινά η κατασκευή του πρώτου πυρηνικού σταθμού της Τουρκίας
He also stated that no construction work for the power plant to be built in Akkuyu, southern Mersin province, had started. (2013)
Πλαστογραφημένες φαίνεται ότι είναι οι υπογραφές των μηχανικών που συνέταξαν την έκθεση για την περιβαλλοντική ασφάλεια του πυρηνικού εργοστασίου στο Ακούγιου της Τουρκίας, απέναντι από την Κύπρο....
ReplyDeleteΟι υπεύθυνοι μηχανικοί για την κατασκευή του πυρηνικού σταθμού, η κατασκευή του οποίου έχει ξεσηκώσει πληθώρα αντιδράσεων λόγω των πιθανών περιβαλλοντικών επιπτώσεων στο θαλάσσιο περιβάλλον της περιοχής, παραιτήθηκαν από τις θέσεις τους έξι μήνες πριν παραδώσουν στις Αρχές τις σχετικές μελέτες για την ασφάλειά του, σύμφωνα με το vima.gr, το οποίο επικαλείται δημοσιεύματα στον τουρκικό Τύπο.
Οι παραιτήσεις πριν την παράδοση της μελέτης εγείρουν υποψίες ότι οι μελέτες συντάχθηκαν χωρίς την επιτήρηση ειδικών. Η Ένωση Επιμελητηρίων Τούρκων Μηχανικών και Αρχιτεκτόνων (TMMOB) ζήτησε τη διενέργεια ποινικών ερευνών, αποκαλύπτοντας ότι δύο υπογραφές πυρηνικών επιστημόνων έχουν πλαστογραφηθεί. Επιπλέον, όπως γράφει η τουρκική εφημερίδα Today's Zaman επικαλούμενη προγενέστερο δημοσίευμα της BirGun, η έκθεση για τις περιβαλλοντικές επιπτώσεις από τη λειτουργία του σταθμού αναθεωρήθηκε από την ανάδοχο εταιρεία Akkuyu NPP, θυγατρική της ενεργειακής ρωσικής εταιρείας Rosatom, χωρίς να ειδοποιηθούν οι μηχανικοί..................http://www.energia.gr/article.asp?art_id=89479
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