Zee News: Chennai: Wednesday,
June 26, 2013.
The Nuclear
Power Corporation of India Ltd. (NPCIL) has clarified that the equipment orders
for the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project (KNPP) were placed with a Russian
company in 2001-02.
Replying to
an application under the Right to Information Act (RTI) on June 22, the company
said: "NPCIL has entered into a contract for design and supply of
equipment for KKNPP (KNPP) 1&2 with Russian company M/s Atomstroyexport in
the year 2001-2002."
The RTI
application was filed by S.P. Udayakumar, coordinator, People's Movement
Against Nuclear Energy (PMANE), with the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB)
May 8, 2013.
Udayakumar,
referring to a news report quoting Yevgency Sergeyev, general director at
Izhorskiye Zavody, had asked for information like the date of placing the
orders for equipment, their date of manufacture, and their arrival at KNPP.
Sergeyev was
quoted in a report which said that the company started producing the reactor
bodies four months ahead of signing the actual contract, and the reactor was
completed six months ahead of schedule.
According to
Udayakumar, Izhorskiye Zavody is part of United Machinery Plants that had
signed a contract with India for construction of two nuclear reactor units for
KNPP in 2002.
According to
NPCIL, the equipment was supplied to KNPP from the period 2002-2008,
progressively.
The
quality-checking of the equipment was carried out by many responsible agencies,
including NPCIL officials, during different stages of manufacturing, as per the
approved quality plan which is part of design document, the atomic power plant
operator said.
India's
atomic power plant operator NPCIL is setting up the KNPP in Kudankulam in
Tirunelveli district in Tamil Nadu, around 650 km from here, with two
Russian-made VVER 1,000-MW reactors.
KNPP is an
outcome of the inter-governmental agreement between India and the erstwhile
Soviet Union in 1988. However, construction began only in 2001.
Fearing for
their safety in the wake of nuclear plant accident in Fukushima in Japan in
March 2011, villagers in the vicinity of the Kudankulam plant, under the banner
of PMANE, have been opposing the project.
The project,
however, got delayed mainly due to non-sequential supplies of components from
Russian vendors.
For another
RTI application filed by Udayakumar, the NPCIL has said there are no villages
belonging to Kanyakumari district within the 16-km radius of KNPP.
Udayakumar
had sought details of the emergency plan from the authorities to check their
preparedness in evacuating people living within the 16-km radius of the KNPP.
According to
the atomic energy project norms, the 16-km radius from a nuclear power plant is
defined as evacuation zone or emergency planning zone. In case of any nuclear
accident, people living within that radius have to be evacuated.
Activists
belonging to PMANE told IANS that there were around 40-50 villages within a
16-km radius of KNPP.
PMANE
activists have filed several RTI applications to ferret out information from
the Indian nuclear establishment.
"The
officials take a minimum of 30 days (statutory limit) to provide us the
information, or at times, even more," Udayakumar said.