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Russia reasserts bid for post-Fukushima atomic lead by Germain Moyon, Tatiana Kalinovskaya in Minsk Novovoronezh (Russia) (AFP) | 6 July 2016 The new No. 6 reactor at Russia’s Novovoronezh atomic power station is not just about generating power, but relaunching Russia’s ambitions to become a major player in the nuclear industry.
Russia unveiled a model of its VVER-1200 reactor at a 2012 nuclear power exhibition in Hanoi | © AFP/File | Hoang Dinh Nam The new design comes 30 years after the Chernobyl disaster in the Soviet republic of Ukraine dealt a body blow to reputation of the Soviet Union’s nuclear industry and five years after the Fukushima disaster in Japan sowed fresh doubts over safety. Russia’s nuclear power corporation Rosatom is presenting the new VVER-1200 reactor that is entering service here as not only the most powerful in the world, but the safest. The 1,200 megawatt reactor with a service life of 60 years includes innovative security features that operate equally well on commands from the staff or without human action, including cooling systems that work without electricity, it says. “With these reactors, the Fukushima accident would not have happened,” said Vladimir Lobanov, director of the training centre at the Novovoronezh power station, where staff rehearse disaster scenarios. 1