Last Soviet nuclear submarine to be scrapped
BY Agencies4 April 2013 8:33 AM IST
Agencies4 April 2013 8:33 AM IST
Russia’s Nerpa shipyard is to dismantle the last Soviet-era nuclear submarine by 2014, the yard said. The Project 949A (NATO: Oscar II class) cruise-missile submarine Krasnodar was launched in 1985 and retired from the Russian Navy in 2012, according to rusnavy.com.
The boat will be the last submarine to be dismantled at the shipyard, Nerpa press secretary Irina Anzulatova said. Work is currently underway to remove spent nuclear fuel from it, she said.
During the scrapping process, spent nuclear fuel is removed from the submarine’s reactors and put into storage, while the hull is cut into three sections, with the bow and stern sections being removed and destroyed. The hull’s reactor compartment is sealed and put into storage.
According to Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom, a total of 199 nuclear submarines have been decommissioned from the navy since the late 1980s, including 120 in northwestern Russia and 79 in the far east.
Russia has three nuclear submarine disposal enter-prises: Zvyozdochka in Severodvinsk (Arkhangelsk region), Nerpa in Snezhnogorsk (Murmansk region) and Zvezda in Bolshoi Kamen (Far East).
Nerpa has dismantled over 50 submarines since 1998. Zvyozdochka completed its submarine dismantling programme in 2011.
ONLINE PUBLIC PETITIONS WEBSITE LAUNCHED IN RUSSIA
An online portal to promote public petitions has been launched by the Foundation for Information Democracy in Russia. The non-profit organisation that launched the roi.ru portal is headed by Deputy Communications Minister Ilya Massukh. The foundation brings together experts in mass communications, political science and public administration to ‘develop the civil society and promote information technologies for state and public administration’. ROI is the Russian abbreviation for ‘Russian Public Initiative’. The website provides citizens who are at least 18 years old with a forum to publish and promote legal initiatives. In order to prevent voting from fake accounts, registration with the state-run Government Services Portal (gosuslugi.ru) is required. The government services portal already has 17 million registered users. A petition must gather at least 100,000 signatures in one year in order to be submitted to the government for consideration.
The boat will be the last submarine to be dismantled at the shipyard, Nerpa press secretary Irina Anzulatova said. Work is currently underway to remove spent nuclear fuel from it, she said.
During the scrapping process, spent nuclear fuel is removed from the submarine’s reactors and put into storage, while the hull is cut into three sections, with the bow and stern sections being removed and destroyed. The hull’s reactor compartment is sealed and put into storage.
According to Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom, a total of 199 nuclear submarines have been decommissioned from the navy since the late 1980s, including 120 in northwestern Russia and 79 in the far east.
Russia has three nuclear submarine disposal enter-prises: Zvyozdochka in Severodvinsk (Arkhangelsk region), Nerpa in Snezhnogorsk (Murmansk region) and Zvezda in Bolshoi Kamen (Far East).
Nerpa has dismantled over 50 submarines since 1998. Zvyozdochka completed its submarine dismantling programme in 2011.
ONLINE PUBLIC PETITIONS WEBSITE LAUNCHED IN RUSSIA
An online portal to promote public petitions has been launched by the Foundation for Information Democracy in Russia. The non-profit organisation that launched the roi.ru portal is headed by Deputy Communications Minister Ilya Massukh. The foundation brings together experts in mass communications, political science and public administration to ‘develop the civil society and promote information technologies for state and public administration’. ROI is the Russian abbreviation for ‘Russian Public Initiative’. The website provides citizens who are at least 18 years old with a forum to publish and promote legal initiatives. In order to prevent voting from fake accounts, registration with the state-run Government Services Portal (gosuslugi.ru) is required. The government services portal already has 17 million registered users. A petition must gather at least 100,000 signatures in one year in order to be submitted to the government for consideration.
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