Nuclear interdependence
2006-07-17
In an internet interview, Vladimir Putin asked the host if she'd
sell him her pearl necklace for 5 kopecks or a ruble. Of course
not, he added. So why should Russia sell its oil or gas cheaply,
he asked? What now applies to oil and gas doesn't yet apply to
nuclear power, because Russia still hasn't hooked the world on
its technology and fuel. It's working on it, though. Tvel won the
contract at Temelín by using state subsidies for the fuel
development, giving it an unbeatable edge over Westinghouse.
Editor-in-chief Natallia Sudliankova of "Rusko v globální politice"
said that Russia can only play first fiddle in world energy if it has
a clear nuclear policy. "A nuclear-power alternative must be
accessible to all countries willing to use it," Putin said in voicing
his policy on the eve of the G-8 meeting. Putin's Orwellian
buzzword is energy interdependence. A model for it in the
nuclear sector is what Tvel and Gazprom are aggressively
accomplishing in the CR.
[Czech Republic Group of Eight G8 "Russia in Global Politics"
TVEL natural gas ČEZ]
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