Russia to build nuclear power plant in Venezuela

MOSCOW, (Reuters) – Russia agreed yesterday to help  build Venezuela’s first nuclear power plant, sell it tanks and  buy $1.6 billion of oil assets, reinforcing ties with President  Hugo Chavez who shares Russian opposition to US global dominance

Chavez presided over the deals at a Kremlin ceremony with  Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who said the two countries  shared a “strategic partnership” and a vision of a world free of  overwhelming U.S. influence.

“Both Russia and Venezuela favour the development of a  modern and just world order — a world order in which our future  does not depend on the will or desire of any one country, its  well-being or its mood,” Medvedev said.

After the presidents’ talks, Russian nuclear agency chief  Sergei Kiriyenko and Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro  signed a deal on “the construction and use of an atomic power  station on the territory of Venezuela”.

The deal foresees the construction of a power plant with two  1,200-megawatt nuclear reactors as well as a separate research  reactor, Russia’s state nuclear energy company Rosatom said.

Chavez later met Prime Minister Vladimir Putin who announced  that Russia will soon ship 35 tanks to Venezuela. Chavez told  Putin he wants Russian carmaker Avtovaz to assemble cars in  Venezuela for the Latin American market.

Russia, which recently finished Iran’s first nuclear power  plant, has pushed to expand its presence on the global atomic  energy market, and stresses other nations’ right to peaceful  nuclear energy.

Medvedev hinted that Chavez’s foe, the United States, might  not like the deal, but said it was peaceful.

“A deal in the atomic sphere has just been signed. I already  know that it will make someone shudder. The president (of  Venezuela) told me that there will be states that will have  different types of emotions about this,” Medvedev said.

“I would like to underline that our intentions are clean and  open: we want our partner the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela  to have a full range of energy choices, to have energy  independence,” he said.

Chavez says Venezuela, South America’s biggest oil producer,  needs nuclear power to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels. He  slammed the United States, blaming Washington for his country’s  excessive dependence on natural resources.

“We are still too dependent on oil because the Yankee empire  imposed this model on us,” he said.

He has also cast Venezuela’s decision to build nuclear  reactors as defying U.S. concerns. He said on Thursday in Moscow  that “nothing will stop us” from developing nuclear power.