SMALLER EASTERN EUROPE COUNTRIES PREPARED TO CLUB TOGETHER TO ASSURE THEIR NUCLEAR FUTURES

BY MARK ROWE NUCLEAR energy production costs a lot of money and so it makes some economic sense for smaller countries interested in this climate-change friendly power supply to combine forces on major projects. So it is in eastern Europe, where in February 2007, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, and Poland provisionally agreed to build a new nuclear plant at Lithuania's existing Ignalina site, initially with 3,200 MWe. Lithuania as host will be responsible for 34% of the project and Poland, Latvia and Estonia 22% each. At least one unit of the project is expected to ...


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