The leaders of Turkey and Russia, calling nuclear energy safe, promised
on Wednesday to press ahead with the construction of a Russian atomic
power plant in Turkey despite Japan's nuclear crisis.
Turkish
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
spoke as Japan battled to contain radiation leaks from the Daiichi
complex in Fukushima that was stricken by last Friday's devastating
earthquake and ensuing tsunami.
"Our investments will continue in
the light of logic, science and experiment, we will take every possible
precaution," Erdogan said.
"But there are things that human
power is inadequate to prevent, like natural disasters. This will not
affect our plans and schedule for the nuclear power plant."
He
later told Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin he hoped work to lay
the foundation for the plant could begin in late April or early May.
Turkey
and Russia signed an agreement last May for Russian state nuclear
corporation Rosatom to build a $20 billion, four-reactor plant near the
coastal city of Mersin, some 25 km (15 miles) from an active fault line.
"Everyone
is asking a simple question: can atomic energy be safe?" Medvedev told a
news conference in Moscow after talks with Erdogan.
"The answer
is clear: it can be and is safe, but for this it is necessary to make
the right decisions about the location of the plant, about the design
and the operator."
Japan's nuclear crisis is developing according
to the "worst-case scenario" and that would have an effect on Rosatom's
plans for building nuclear power plants abroad, Rosatom head Sergei
Kiriyenko said.
No deal on gas
Erdogan's
Moscow visit was focused on energy affairs but the two sides failed to
achieve a breakthrough on gas cooperation on Wednesday.
Turkey,
which imports 64 percent of its gas from Russia, is looking for
discounts due to a slump in demand resulting from the recent global
recession, but met resistance from Medvedev.
The Kremlin leader
said Russia wanted to stick to the principle of 'take or pay' of gas
export monopoly Gazprom's long-term supply contracts, but did not rule
out some adjustments to take into account market conditions.
"We
intend to maintain our existing approach, but ... we have told our
Turkish partners that in certain cases, we are willing to consider other
approaches," Medvedev said.
"This is a question that should be
resolved on the basis of existing contracts and the goodwill of both
sides."
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin said separately
that no agreement has been reached with Turkey on the proposed South
Stream gas pipeline that would cross its Black Sea territorial waters.
Turkey
is a major player in the rival $10.8 billion Nabucco project, backed by
the European Union, to pipe gas from Caspian energy producers such as
Azerbaijan to Europe.
Visa-free
travel in April
Meanhwile, Turkish and Russian nationals
will be able travel between the two countries without obtaining a visa
starting next month.
Officials of the two countries exchanged
notes on Wednesday regarding a visa-free regime during Erdogan's visit
to Moscow.
Accordingly, visa-free travel will begin on April 16,
30 days after the exchange of notes, which paves the for 30 days of
visa-free travel within a 90-day period.
In May 2010, Turkey and
Russia signed a visa liberalization agreement during Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev's visit to Ankara. Earlier this year, officials of the
two countries signed a readmission agreement to take a step forward for
completing procedures of visa-free regime.
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Russian President Dmitry Medvedev described Turkey as a privileged
partner and said that relations between Turkey and Russia reached a
multidimensional level, Anadolu Agency reported.
At a joint press
conference with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan following
the High-Level Consultative Council meeting in Moscow, Medvedev said
that Turkey and Russia aimed at increasing trade volume to 100 billion
USD in the next five years.
Trade between Turkey and Russia was
25 billion USD in 2010.
"We want to further improve relations
between large companies and SMEs. We also focused on energy issues such
as South Stream natural gas pipeline and Samsun-Ceyhan oil pipeline,"
Medvedev said. "Turkey is our privileged partner. We also want to
further improve our relations especially on telecommunication, medicine,
space research, construction, agriculture and metallurgy."
Medvedev
said his meeting with Erdogan discussed also energy safety after the
disaster in Japan and Turkey's first nuclear power plant to be built by
Russia.
He said, "it is very important to make the right decision
on location of the power plant. Nuclear energy is a necessity for the
mankind."
Medvedev also called on Turkish companies to offer bids
for construction of sports facilities to be built in Sochi, the host
city of 2014 Winter Olympics.
*****
Turkey's prime minister said on Wednesday that energy had an important place in his meeting with the Russian leader, Anadolu Agency reported.
Turkish and Russian leaders met in the Russian capital of Moscow, and mainly discussed energy issues, particularly the nuclear power plant to be built in Akkuyu town of Turkey's southern province of Mersin.
"Every investment may have a negative result, however you cannot give up an investment just because it may have a negative result," Erdogan told a joint press conference with Medvedev.
Erdogan's remarks came after a nuclear disaster in Japan, caused by a devastating earthquake and tsunami. Erdogan said there were tube tunnels Turkey was constructing beneath the sea and those investments were quake-resistant and quake-resistance was important when preparing projects.
In May 2010, Turkey and Russia signed a deal for construction of Turkey's first nuclear power plant in Akkuyu, a small town on the Mediterranean coast, which is expected to cost about 20 billion USD. Russian state-owned atomic power company ROSATOM is likely to start building the Akkuyu nuclear power plant in 2013 and the first reactor is planned to generate electricity in 2018.
Russia will build four 1,200 megawatt units on Akkuyu site, and run the power plant for 60 years. Turkish state-owned electricity corporation has guaranteed to buy a fixed amount of the plant's output over the first 15 years starting from initial commercial operation at a reported price of 12.35 US cents per kWh, with the rest of the electricity to be sold on the open market by the project company.
Erdogan said two countries were also working on the South Stream Natural Gas Pipeline Project and Samsun-Ceyhan Oil Pipeline Project, and they were willing to complete the projects.
A Turkish-Russian partnership, opened in the southern Turkish town of Iskenderun, ensured employment for 1,500 people, he added.
/Trend, Hurriyet Daily News/