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Turkey to scrap tender for nuclear power plant - paper

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The Turkish government is likely to cancel a tender for the construction of the country's first nuclear power plant by rejecting a bid from a Russian reactor builder, a Turkish paper said on Wednesday.
ANKARA, January 21 (RIA Novosti) - The Turkish government is likely to cancel a tender for the construction of the country's first nuclear power plant by rejecting a bid from a Russian reactor builder, a Turkish paper said on Wednesday.

Atomstroyexport, acting through a consortium with Russian power producer Inter RAO UES and Turkey's Park Teknik, is competing in a tender to build four nuclear reactors with a capacity of 1,200 MW each in Turkey.

According to the Milliyet newspaper, the Turkish side is dissatisfied with the high price of electricity generation offered by Atomstroyexport.

Last Monday, the Turkish energy company Tetas opened an envelope containing Atomstroyexport's bid, which offered a rate of 21.16 U.S. cents per kW/hr of electricity generation. It was also announced at the time that Atomstroyexport had submitted an adjusted bid, taking into account the current global financial crisis. However, the bid was returned to the Russian company, the paper said.

The tender will now almost certainly be scrapped. In this case, new tenders for the construction of the nuclear power plant will be held, the paper said.

According to the paper, initially about 10 international companies had displayed an interest in the tender, which had earlier been cancelled four times. But the terms of the tender eliminated all the bidders, except for the Russian-Turkish consortium, the paper said.

The Turkish authorities are planning to build the country's first nuclear power plant at Akkuyu, on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. By 2016, three nuclear power plants with total capacity of about 5,000 MW and worth a total of $7-8 billion are expected to appear in Turkey. The nuclear power plants are expected to use heavy-water reactors.

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