Swedish aid keeps Ignalina nuclear plant alive
As reported in DT 22/93, Swedish support is being channelled via the Swedish Nuclear Power Inspectorate (SKI), which is assisting Lithuanian authorities to manage an international tender for an intermediate-term storage facility for spent fuel for Ignalina 1.
Sweden argues that Lithuania needs the reactors to provide electricity over the coming decade.
Lithuania cannot afford to build a long-term storage facility, estimated to cost some USD 136 million. Swedish support thus ensures continued operation of Ignalina 1, whose existing pool is almost full, without addressing the long-term issue.
Swedish aid to Ignalina has amounted to SEK 70 million from 1991 to mid-1993, with an additional SEK 48 million budgetted up to 1994.
The Ignalina 1 and 2 are plants, like Chernobyl, classified by the G-7 as being among the 25 “unsafe" reactors in the ex-Soviet bloc. But Ignalina is more dangerous than Chernobyl because it is bigger, it is built on a geological fault, and the radiation protection agency VATESI is weaker than it was before the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

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