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SZIJJÁRTÓ: CONSTRUCTION WORKS AT PAKS NUCLEAR PLANT EXPECTED TO START IN SEPT

 

The construction phase of the Paks 2 nuclear plant may start in September, Péter Szijjártó, the minister for foreign affairs and trade, said on Friday, after talks with Rosatom head Alexey Likhachev in Istanbul, where he said all pending issues had been cleared in advance of the new phase. The foreign ministry said in a statement that Rosatom was providing the documentation necessary for another four permits from the National Nuclear Energy Office (OAH) before construction can start. “If all goes according to today’s agreement, it is entirely possible that the next phase will start in September,” the foreign ministry quoted Szijjártó as saying.
The aim is for the two new blocks to start operating in 2030, raising the plant’s capacity from 2,000MW to 4,400MW, he said. “Hungary will take a big leap towards electricity independence; an enormous advantage at a time of irrationally growing prices in the global market,” Szijjártó said. “We won’t be as vulnerable to the hitches and crises of the international market as we are now, and much less than many other countries are,” he said.
European Union sanctions against Russia specifically exempt the peaceful use of nuclear energy from all restrictions, Szijjártó said. Accordingly, Rosatom is not on the EU’s sanctions list, he noted. Szijjarto also announced that Gergely Jákli, the former head of the Hungarian Eximbank, will take over as head of the Paks 2 company.
Late on Thursday, Szijjártó announced that the OAH had approved the application for the manufacturing authorisation for the melt trap of the plant. Szijjártó called the permit “essentially the most important for nuclear safety”, adding that the melt trap is one of the critical components of the reactors. In the event of an emergency, the melt trap is designed to hold the melt of a reactor’s core and to prevent radioactive substances from leaving the containment of the reactor. The development is important in light of the war in Ukraine and geopolitical shifts which are creating serious global energy supply challenges, the minister said. “In the coming years, those countries that can produce as much of their own energy as possible will feel secure,” he said. “The Paks plant has a key role to play in this.”