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Finland seeks details on nuclear safety checks

Greenpeace has criticised STUK's supervision of welding work at Olkiluoto and last week demanded an immediate halt to construction based on confidential documents it had obtained showing safety procedures were not being respected.
by Staff Writers
Helsinki (AFP) Aug 21, 2008
The Finnish government said Thursday it wanted the country's Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (STUK) to clarify its inspection principles, following criticism of its work at a nuclear reactor building site.

"The (economy) ministry wants further reports from STUK on its inspection principles and precision, and how these compare to practices in other countries," the Finnish employment and economy ministry, in charge of energy industry issues, said in a statement.

It added it also wanted to know STUK's policy on publishing its inspection results.

STUK said Wednesday in a report submitted to the ministry that it had found no evidence welding work was substandard at a nuclear reactor under construction at the Olkiluoto plant in southwestern Finland and said it had inspected all welds important to safety.

Greenpeace has criticised STUK's supervision of welding work at Olkiluoto and last week demanded an immediate halt to construction based on confidential documents it had obtained showing safety procedures were not being respected.

It also said it wanted an independent inspection to be carried out at the building site.

A consortium led by French group Areva is building the world's first next-generation pressurised water reactor at the Olkiluoto plant, which will be Finland's fifth nuclear reactor, for energy group Teollisuuden Voima (TVO).

Areva's main subcontractor is French building firm Bouygues Construction.

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Iran picks firms to hunt for new nuclear plant sites
Tehran (AFP) Aug 19, 2008
Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation on Tuesday tasked six local companies to hunt for potential sites for new nuclear power plants, the official news agency IRNA reported.







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