Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe signed on Oct. 29 the official agreement for building Turkey’s second nuclear plant in the Black Sea province of Sinop.
The two countries signed a $22 billion deal in May for the construction of a plant with a total capacity of 4,800 megawatts (mW), by a Japanese-French alliance of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and French firm Areva.
Abe came to Istanbul to attend the official opening ceremony of the Marmaray tunnel, which has also been built by a Japanese firm.
Erdoğan told reporters during a joint press conference after the Marmaray’s opening ceremony that the nuclear plant would be built with the most developed technology.
“We know that it is impossible to say something like ‘accidents will never happen.’ Even if it is one in a million, such a danger, such an accident, might occur, and it is impossible to ignore this,” Erdoğan said, commenting on the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.
“There is no investment without risks, in any field. But every firm, every company should take 100 percent security measures. The ideal thing is without a doubt to minimize the margin of error,” he added.
“Moreover, I believe that Japan will put forward the most developed technology in the works that we will undertake together at the Sinop nuclear plant. This is necessary for both Japan and Turkey,” the prime minister said.
The first unit of the nuclear plant is set to be active by 2023, while the last unit will come online by 2028.
Turkey’s first nuclear plant is being constructed in Akkuyu in the southern province of Mersin by the Russian state atomic energy corporation. The plant will be made with four reactors and will have a total installed power of 4,800 mW.
HDN