• Home
  • AeroFacts
  • Forum
  • Photos
  • Archive
  • About
  • Disclaimer
  • Copyright
Subscribe: | |
  • ComputersOur overlords
  • DefenseThe Russians are coming
  • EconomyWhy you don't have money
  • PersonalThings you don't wanna know
  • PoliticsOur fantasy world
  • SocietyYou and your mother-in-law

Let Me Tell You…

Posted on October 15, 2010 - by Venik

Russia and Venezuela strike nuclear power station deal

News from Britain

Hugo Chávez says he wants to cut oil reliance, while Moscow asserts Venezuela’s right to ‘full range of energy choices’

Russia has agreed to help Venezuela build its first nuclear power station in a move likely to raise concerns in Washington about increasingly close cooperation between Moscow and Caracas.

President Dmitry Medvedev announced the move at the end of a two-day visit to Moscow by Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chávez. The Venezuelan economy is overwhelmingly reliant on oil and Chávez has said he wants nuclear power to diversify energy supply.

Medvedev has implicitly acknowledged the deal is likely to be unpopular with the US but defended Venezuela’s right to seek access to peaceful nuclear technology. The station is likely to be built over the next 10-15 years. Its cost has not yet been revealed.

“An agreement has just been signed on co-operation in the atomic sphere. I don’t know who will shudder at this,” Medvedev told a press conference after his talks with Chávez. “The president [of Venezuela] said there will be countries in which this will provoke different emotions. But I want to say specially that our intentions are absolutely pure and open.” Russia wanted Venezuela to have a “full range of energy choices”.

Chávez’s visit is his ninth to Moscow and the first stop on a 12-day European tour that includes visits to Belarus and, for the first time, Ukraine – now once again within Moscow’s sphere of influence. On previous occasions, Chávez has bought billions of dollars worth of military hardware from Russia including submarines, helicopters and attack aircraft. Both leaders have reaffirmed their plans to continue military-technical co-operation.

Viktor Semyonov, an economist at Moscow’s Institute of Latin American Studies, said it was logical for Venezuela to seek civilian nuclear technology since its economy was even more dependent on oil than Russia’s. Russia was already building a nuclear power station in Iran and holding talks with other Latin American countries, including Brazil and Argentina.

“We are a country that exports nuclear technology around the world. Venezuela’s economy is 94 or even 95% made up of oil. Russia’s is 65%, which is already a lot. They (the Venezuelans) want to widen their sources of energy so they are less dependent on it,” Semyonov said.

Speaking in Moscow on Thursday night, Chávez offered assurances that Venezuela had no interest in building a nuclear weapon and only wanted peaceful nuclear technology. He described the collapse of the Soviet Union as a “catastrophe” and launched a familiar attack on the United States, denigrating it as a “Yankee empire”.

Chávez went for a spin in a Lada car, causing miles of gridlock on Moscow’s traffic-clogged streets. Before heading to the airport Chávez handed Medevedev several gifts. They included three bars of chocolate, banana jam and a tin of cocoa.

  • Venezuela
  • Russia
  • US foreign policy
  • United States
  • Nuclear power
  • Energy
Luke Harding

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions |

Popularity: 1% [?]

Related posts:

  1. Russia agrees to help Venezuela build first nuclear power station
  2. Iran to gain nuclear power as Russia loads fuel into Bushehr reactor
  3. Syria and Russia in talks on nuclear power
  4. US-Russia nuclear deal: Two tribes don’t go to war | Editorial
  5. Video: US and Russia announce deal to cut nuclear weapons

This entry was posted on Friday, October 15th, 2010 at 11:40 am and is filed under News from Britain. You can follow any responses to this entry through the feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

0 Comments

We'd love to hear yours!



Leave a Comment

Here's your chance to speak.

  • Grozny in 2010

    Photos of Grozny in 2010 by photographer Ilya Varlamov
  • Get the Flash Player to see the slideshow.
  • Grozny Today

    Over the past decade Russia spent billions rebuilding Grozny following the two wars against Chechen separatists. Today the city looks far better than it did at any time in its troubled past.
  • Latest News

    • Faces of Russia’s protest movement – interactive
    • Dimitry Medvedev proposes electoral reforms to appease Russian protesters
    • Vladimir Putin: have a care, manling
    • Russian protest mood sweeps into Duma
    • Russian opposition leader released from prison – video
    • Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny freed from jail
    • Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny freed from jail
    • Iran’s New Stealth UAV
    • Jailed Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny to be released
    • Syria says signing Arab League deal was on Russia’s advice – video
    • Bhagavad Gita trial in Russia closes Indian parliament
    • Russian journalist shot 14 times
  • Recent Comments

    • kvs: Navalny is a street hoodlum. There are plenty of youtube videos of this punk and his rants. And the west expects...
    • kvs: Simply incredible. In a country of 142 million people we have the western media monkeys jumping up and down,...
    • Shotiko: Ok! You think that our soldiers were fighting bad and they are ODD, than don’t forget that your lovely...
    • kvs: Since when did Russia sell its oil fields to two bit, shady foreign oil companies like Norex. Norex are the...
    • kvs: Funny how Berezovsky is deemed a renegade by these propagandists and not a mafioso. Laundering criminals into...
  • Abkhazia assange Black Sea Bush Defense department of state European Union Georgia Gordon Brown interview julian assange kremlin Lavrov leak London Medvedev missile Moscow NATO obama Putin Rice Russia russian air force russians Saakashvili SAM Sarkozy soldiers South Ossetia sukhoi t-50 tanks Tbilisi Timoshenko troops Tskhinvali Ukraine US us department of state war Washington WikiLeaks Yanukovich Yushchenko

    WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.

    • December 22, 2011
      MOSCOW – The deathtoll from Sunday's oil rig accident off Russia's east coast has risen to 17 people. A spokeswoman for the Emergencies Ministry said rescue teams on Thursday recovered six bodies from the Sea of Okhotsk where the floating oil rig capsized and sank Sunday. Of the 67 men aboard, 14 were rescued from the icy water; 36 men are still mi […]
    • December 21, 2011
      MOSCOW (Reuters) – In 2010, President Dmitry Medvedev said heroin was a threat to Russia's national security. This year, Russia pledged to finance programs to reduce the harm done by drug use, including an HIV crisis that is one of the most severe in the world. But even though the number of new HIV infections in Russia jumped 10 percent over 2011, healt […]
    • December 21, 2011
      SANAA, Yemen – Nearly 200 people, among them 15 foreigners, have been killed in clashes over the past few weeks between an ultraconservative Islamist group and former Shiite rebels in northern Yemen, a military official and the leader of the Islamist faction said Wednesday. In Moscow, Russia's Foreign Minister said four Russian citizens were among those […]
    • December 21, 2011
      MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia's presidential human rights council on Wednesday recommended to investigators that jailed ex-tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky's second sentence, which will keep him in prison until 2016, be reviewed. The recommendation is the strongest sign of support from the authorities since Khodorkovsky, once Russia's richest man and e […]
    • December 21, 2011
      GROZNY, Russia (Reuters) – Dagmein Khaseinova beams with pride recalling the day her Chechen village, devastated a decade ago in a war launched by Vladimir Putin, gave the Russian ruler's party nearly 100 percent support in a parliamentary vote this month. Her little village of Mekhketi, she said, is even on the way to winning the cash prize she says au […]
  • Site stats



    Blog Ratings
© 2008 Let Me Tell You… - World politics: gripes, grumbles, and occasional analysis
  • follow:follow: