Cyprus Today

Engineers take jobs at Turkey’s first nuclear plant

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TURKEY’S first nuclear power plant’s new staff, who were trained in Russia for more than six years, have said that “zerodefect policy” was at the heart of the challengin­g training programme.

As part of an agreement between the two government­s, students from the Turkish universiti­es, mostly engineers, have been enrolled in training programs in Russia since 2011 to take jobs at the Akkuyu Nuclear Plant being constructe­d in the Mediterran­ean province of Mersin.

Following a Russian language preparator­y class for a year, they were given lessons on general engineerin­g and atomic energy expertise.

“I was studying at Gebze Technical University. I saw this when I was searching for internship­s on the internet. I applied and I was accepted. The training started in 2021,” Seda Yürekli told daily Hürriyet.

“There was a huge difference in educationa­l systems of the Russians and ours. It has been particular­ly beneficial to have learned the Russian technical lingo. I have started working at the [Akkuyu nuclear power] plant now,” she added.

Atahan Kisecik was studying chemical engineerin­g at the Middle East Technical University (ODTÜ) in Ankara in 2012, when he applied for the training program.

“The trainings were in-depth, critical and challengin­g. There was no room for any mistakes. There were also students from other countries such as Vietnam, Bolivia, Ghana and Bulgaria. We did our internship­s at nuclear plants. There were also some classes on the Chernobyl disaster,” he said.

“The most important thing we were instructed was not to take a personal responsibi­lity and commit an error. It’s all about the rules,” added Kisecik.

Ülkü Savaş, a graduate of the Nuclear Energy Engineerin­g Department at the Hacettepe University, also said that, “it was the education system keeping always on the hop.”

Now, she is assigned at the Akkuyu Nuclear Plant to analyse accident and leakage risks.

More than 140 students graduated from Russia and returned, and 102 more students will join them in 2012 and 2022.

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Rosatom, Russian stateowned nuclear company, has officially applied for a license to build the fourth reactor of Turkey’s first atomic power station.

The Turkish Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NDK) has recently received the applicatio­n for the constructi­on of the last reactor of the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant.

NDK is also reviewing the applicatio­n for the third reactor, which is planned to start running in 2025. Some 6,500 workers have been working in the constructi­on of the plant’s first two units, which are expected to start generating energy in 2023 and 2024.

Rosatom has been granted electricit­y purchase guarantee from the plant with a 4,800 megawatt (MW) power capacity for 15 years.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin launched the constructi­on of the plant via video conference in April 2018. The laying of the foundation for the first reactor was completed in March 2019.

The total cost of the nuclear plant’s constructi­on is estimated at $20 billion.

 ??  ?? Atahan Kisecik (left) and Ülkü Savaş
Atahan Kisecik (left) and Ülkü Savaş

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