ANKARA (Thomson Financial) - Turkey's energy minister today invited bids for
the construction of the country's first nuclear power plant, which is to be
built on the Mediterranean coast despite strong opposition from
environmentalists.
"I have officially launched the tender process today. This is the start of a
very important and positive process for our country's future,", the Anatolia
news agency quoted Energy Minister Hilmi Guler as saying.
TETAS, the state-run company that will eventually market the plant's power
production, said it will accept bids for the construction and operation of a
4,000-megawatt plant, at Akkuyu, in the southern province of Mersin, until Sept
24, Anatolia reported.
Guler said the nuclear plant would be built by the private sector at no cost
to the state.
An earlier plan for a reactor at Akkuyu was scrapped in July 2000 amid
financial difficulties and protests from environmentalists in Turkey, Greece and
Cyprus.
Opponents raised safety concerns, arguing that the proposed site was only 25
kilometres from an earthquake fault line.
The government plans to commission three nuclear plants in a bid to prevent
possible energy shortages and reduce its dependence on foreign suppliers.
Parliament passed a bill last year setting the legal framework for the
nuclear plants and authorising the energy ministry to run and finalise
construction tenders and decide on the plants' capacity and location.
The law guarantees that the state will buy the plants' production for 15
years.
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