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Lithuania shuts nuclear generator | Lithuania shuts nuclear generator |
(about 19 hours later) | |
Lithuania has shut down its one and only nuclear power station in Visaginas. | |
The Ignalina plant, the only nuclear reactor in the Baltic states, stopped producing electricity at 2300 local time (2100 GMT). | |
The closure of the Soviet-era plant was a condition of Lithuania's membership of the European Union. | The closure of the Soviet-era plant was a condition of Lithuania's membership of the European Union. |
The move will mean an increase in power prices for Lithuanians and more reliance on Russia for energy supplies. | The move will mean an increase in power prices for Lithuanians and more reliance on Russia for energy supplies. |
Just before the shutdown, Energy Minister Arvydas Sekmoka said: "We are keeping our word to our European partners." | |
'Minute risk' | 'Minute risk' |
The facility was opened 26 years ago, when Lithuania was still part of the former Soviet Union. | The facility was opened 26 years ago, when Lithuania was still part of the former Soviet Union. |
It was built to the same design as Chernobyl, which was behind the worst civil nuclear disaster in history when one of its reactors overheated in 1986. | It was built to the same design as Chernobyl, which was behind the worst civil nuclear disaster in history when one of its reactors overheated in 1986. |
BBC correspondent Gabriel Gatehouse says Brussels insisted the place be closed down, and allocated around 820m euro (£731m) to cover part of the costs of decommissioning the plant. | |
But critics said that Ignalina still has another 10 to 15 years of life in it and that the risks of an accident are minute. | |
Aleksei Tichomirov, a resident of Visaginas and an engineer at the plant, said he was unable to understand why the energy source had to close. | |
"Why throw away a good thing that could still serve for years", he said. | |
The plant supplied up to 80% of Lithuania's electric power. | |
Our correspondent says the shut-down will mean higher electricity bills at a time when the country's economy is shrinking rapidly. | |
It will also mean that, fewer than 20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Lithuania will once again become dependent on Moscow for much of its energy supply. | It will also mean that, fewer than 20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Lithuania will once again become dependent on Moscow for much of its energy supply. |
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