ussian Environmental Digest (REDfiles) is a compilation of the week's major English-language press on environmental issues in Russia. 15 - 21 May 2000, Vol. 2, No. 20 1. V. Putin Signs Decree Abolishing State Committee for Environmental Protection (Goskomekologiia) 2. Europe's Wasted Aid 3. Russia Must Set Up National System To Keep Track of Nuclear Materials 4. Russia Draws Up Nuclear Submarine-Building Programme 5. Fires Near Chernobyl Could Pollute Atmosphere Again 6. Factory Makes Radioactive Waste Containers 7. Service Life of Russian Nuclear-powered Ice-breakers To Stretch 8. Russian, Norwegian Ministers Hold Talks on Nuclear Safety 9. Russian, Norwegian Foreign Ministers To Discuss Utilization of Russian Nuclear Subs 10. Estonia, Russia Restoring Fishery Resources in Narva River 11. Radioactive Container Stolen in Siberia 12. U.S. Planned Nuclear Attack on Moon To Scare Soviets 1 V. Putin Signs Decree Abolishing State Committee for Environmental Protection (Goskomekologiia) RIA OREANDA, May 19, 2000, Moscow The President of the Russian Federation V. Putin has signed the Decree "On the Structure of the Federal Bodies of the Executive Authority". The press-service of the President has published the full text of the decree: "With the view to form the effective structure of the federal bodies of the executive authority, according to Article 112 of the Constitution of the Russian Federation and the federal Constitutional law "On the government of the Russian Federation," I decree: 1. To confirm the enclosed structure of the federal bodies of the executive authority. 2. To abolish: The Ministry for the affairs of the Commonwealth of the Independent States; the Ministry for the science and technologies; the Ministry for Commerce; Economy Ministry; the State committee for the problems of the North; the State committee for land policy; the State committee for cinematography; the State committee for environmental protection; the State committee for the problems of youth; the federal service of the air transport of Russia; the federal Migration department; the federal department of Russia for the currency and export control; the Russian road agency. 3. To form: The Ministry for the economic development and commerce of Russia having delegated to it a part of the functions of the abolished Ministries for the affairs of CIS, Commerce, Economy, the State committee for the problems of the North; the federal service for the currency and export control and reformed Ministry for the physical training, sport and tourism; the Ministry of Industry, science and technologies having delegated to it the functions of the abolished Ministry of science and technologies and also a part of the functions of the abolished Ministries for Commerce and Economy; the federal service of the land-survey having delegated to it a part of the functions of the abolished State committee for the land policy. 4. To delegate: to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs a part of the functions of the abolished Ministry for the Affairs of CIS; to the Ministry of culture the functions of the abolished State committee for the cinematography; to the Ministry of Education the functions of the abolished State committee for the problems of youth; to the Ministry of natural resources the functions of the abolished State committee for environmental protection and federal service of the forestry; to the Transport Ministry the functions of the abolished federal service of the air transport and road agency; to the Finance Ministry a part of the functions of the abolished federal service for the currency and export control. 5. To reform: The Ministry of the state property to the Ministry privity having delegated to it a part of the functions of the abolished state committee for the land policy; the Ministry of physical training, sport and tourism to the State committee for the physical training, sport and tourism; the Ministry for the affairs of the federation and nationalities to the Ministry for the Affairs Federation, national and migration policy having delegated to it a part of the functions of the abolished federal migration service and a part of the functions of the abolished state committee for the problems of the North; the Agriculture and Food Ministry to the Ministry for Agriculture; the Ministry of fuel and energy to the Ministry of energetic. The state courier service attached to the government of Russia to the State courier service; the federal service for the special building attached to the government to the federal service of the special building. 6. To determine that the Chairman of government has 5 deputies including the deputy Chairman of the government - Minister of Agriculture and deputy Chairman of the government - Finance Minister. 7. To determine that the co-ordination of the work of the federal Ministers, heads of other federal bodies of the executive authority and the control over their activity are realized by the Chairman of the government and his deputies according to the allocation of the responsibilities between the deputies Chairman of the government. To determine that in case the Chairman of the government is absent temporally, the fulfilment of his responsibilities is laid upon one of his deputies according to the allocation of the responsibilities. 8. The government of Russia is to allocate the functions of the abolished federal bodies of the executive authority depending on the Clauses of the present decree within a month; to confirm the instructions about the newly formed and reformed federal bodies of the executive authority within 2 months; to confirm the ultimate number and the wage fund of the members of the central staff of the federal bodies of the executive authority within a month; to provide for the holding of the liquidation procedures and rendering the facilities and compensations to the dismissed members according to the legislation of Russia; to submit the proposals on the introduction of the corresponding alterations to the acts of the President about the federal bodies of the executive authority within a month; to bring the acts into accord with the present decree. 9. The Chief state and legal department of the President is to submit the proposals on bringing the acts of the President into accord with the present decree within 2 months. 10. The present decree comes into effect from the date of its publishing. Decree no. 867, signed on 17 May 2000 (back to top) 2 Europe's Wasted Aid The Economist, May 20, 2000 Two cheers for Chris Patten, the European commissioner for external relations. One cheer is for saying out loud this week what a shambles the European Union's aid programmes have become. The second is for proposing a plausible scheme for improving matters. It will be time for the third and biggest cheer, if and when the plan brings the intended results. When Mr Patten moved to Brussels last year, he inherited an aid budget of 10 billion a year (then worth $10.5 billion) that had all but spun out of control. It had tripled in size over the previous ten years, but the European Commission had not added the staff to manage it properly. Money was paid out too late to be of use, or to the wrong place, or never paid at all. Celebrated black spots included: Russia and the former Soviet Union, where EU money has often benefited only consultants and middlemen. From 1990 to 1997, the EU dished out 355m for nuclear safety programmes. Auditors said last year it was "not possible to quantify the scale of these programmes or how far they had been implemented". The southern Mediterranean, where the commission seems to have promised money almost at random. If the EU stopped approving new money today, it would still need almost nine years, at the present rate, to pay out the sums it has already pledged. Gaza, where the EU paid 32m towards a showpiece hospital, which has stood empty for a year because nobody thought to budget for staff and equipment. Mr Patten's plan consists mainly of demanding the additional staff needed to do the job properly. If governments and the European Parliament refuse him, he will propose cutting aid programmes to fit the staff available. And he wants to hand overall management of aid to a new "office", which might one day be "floated out" of the commission itself. Good luck to him. And if it works? Then put him in charge of the common agricultural policy next. (back to top) 3 Russia Must Set Up National System To Keep Track of Nuclear Materials Interfax News Agency, May 17, 2000 Russia will eventually have to set up a national system to report, control and physically protect nuclear materials at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars, First Deputy Atomic Energy Minister Valentin Ivanov told a briefing in Moscow on Wednesday. At the moment, not even plans for such a system exist, but when the necessary funds are available it will be created, he said. The ministry has been spending $5 million to $10 million annually on improving reporting, control and protection of nuclear materials, Ivanov said. (back to top) 4 Russia Draws Up Nuclear Submarine-Building Programme BBC Summary of World Broadcasts, May 20, 2000 In the next few days the Russian government is expected to issue a resolution on developing Russia's marine strategic nuclear-missile forces that will allow it to draft projects for the main classes of missile submarines, some of which will be built at Russian shipyards [as received], and start serial production after the year 2005. Russian navy Chief of Main Staff Adm Viktor Kravchenko told RIA this today. He said work currently continues to build a new generation of missile subs. In particular, the Yuriy Dolgorukiy sub under construction at the Severodvinskiy yard is 47 per cent ready. Kravchenko said all problems related to building missile subs would be eliminated if the navy is given 25-27 per cent of the Defence Ministry budget. However, he said, only 12 per cent of what is needed to build the marine strategic nuclear-missile forces has been set aside, which is causing major problems. Kravchenko said work is also under way to repair and refit nuclear-missile cruiser submarines due for an intermediate servicing. The Delfin BDRM-class submarine has been brought back into service. The navy command intends to use this class, of which there are six, as the basis of navy strategy up to the year 2015. Kravchenko said claims that the dismantling of Russian nuclear sub-marines is being financed by the American Nunn-Lugar programme do not correspond to reality. So far 41 subs have been dismantled and only three were destroyed using American money. The other missile and multi-purpose subs were all taken apart using Russian budget money. Since the start of the 1980s, the navy has taken 168 nuclear submarines out of service. The Russian navy is currently carrying out the tasks set in line with the approved basis of Russian policy in the field of navy activity to the year 2010, which was put into force 4th May this year by Russian President Vladimir Putin's decree On the Russian Federation's modern marine activity. (back to top) 5 Fires Near Chernobyl Could Pollute Atmosphere Again Agence France Presse, May 19, 2000 Forest and peat fires are threatening to creep close to the stricken Chernobyl power station and drive dangerous radioactive elements in the contaminated area around it back into the atmosphere, authorities said Friday. At least three forest and peat fires have ravaged slightly radioactive areas south and east of Chernobyl, scene of the world's worst civilian nuclear disaster,they said. Any fire inside the heavily contaminated area around the stricken plant could propel radioactive elements into the air and cause a new threat to the environment and nearby inhabitants. Firefighters have been struggling near Ivankiv, some 60 kilometres (approx 30 miles) south of Chernobyl, to prevent a peat fire reaching the off-limits, highly radioactive area around the power station. Areas with a radius of 30 kilometres around Chernobyl were evacuated after the catastrophe in which number four reactor exploded in April 1986. A further peat fire has been burning since May 11 near Vishgorod, 100 kilometres away. Firefighters have isolated the area, reducing the fire zone from 15 to five hectares (37 to 12 acres.) "We're in control of the situation and there is no cause for concern," said an emergencies ministry spokeswoman. Fire has ravaged more than 428,000 hectares (about one million acres) of forest in Russia's far east, including Siberia, according to the national emergencies ministry. The situation is particularly bad in eastern Siberia, in the Irkutsk and Chita regions, where more than 50 fires have swept across 93,000 hectares. (back to top) 6 Factory Makes Radioactive Waste Containers BBC Summary of World Broadcasts, May 19, 2000 Severodvinsk, Northern Russia, 11th May: The local Zvezdochka machine-building plant has made the first 1,000 containers for storing and transporting slow-acting solid radioactive waste, a spokesman for the plant administration said on Thursday [11th May]. The containers, with a capacity of 6.5 t each, will be transported to the Northern Fleet in the near future, the spokesman told the Military News Agency. The containers are built in accordance with the Arctic military environmental cooperation (AMEC), a Russian-US-Norwegian programme which envisages, among other issues, the reduction of environmental threats in the Arctic region by means of storing safely and salvaging radioactive waste produced by combat ships of the Northern Fleet. The project is financed by the United States, the spokesman noted. Zvezdochka, which specializes in repairing nuclear submarines of the Russian Navy, had to win an international tender to receive the order for containers. A US-Norwegian delegation that visited the plant earlier this week confirmed the high quality of its products, the spokesman said. According to foreign experts, the containers built by Zvezdochka fully correspond to the norms of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The AMEC envisages construction of 1,300 containers for slow-acting solid radioactive waste. (back to top) 7 Service Life of Russian Nuclear-powered Ice-breakers To Stretch ITAR-TASS News Agency, May 19, 2000 Russian nuclear-powered ice- breakers can be used for 30-35 years instead of the initially planned 25, said speakers at a scientific conference in Murmansk that marked a jubilee of the Arktika vessel. The Arktika, the first vessel of a new series of nuclear- powered ice-breakers, has proven to have a high technical class and a durable nuclear reactor over the 25 years of its existence. The reactor has been used for about 100,000 hours and remains in a perfect technical condition. Academician Nikolai Khlopkin believes that the service life of the Arktika can be extended for five years minimum without assigning large funds for the modernization. Mechanisms of nuclear-powered ice-breakers are reliable and capable of further smooth operation and radiation safety, speakers at the conference said. (back to top) 8 Russian, Norwegian Ministers Hold Talks on Nuclear Safety BBC Summary of World Broadcasts, May 20, 2000 The Russian and Norwegian foreign ministers, Igor Ivanov and Thorbjoern Jagland, held talks today during which they discussed nuclear safety. The latter said "these issues are very important to Norway, especially in the context of the signing of the intergovernmental agreement on environmental protection connected to the scrapping of Russian nuclear submarines, and the tripartite agreement on military cooperation between Russia, Norway and the USA". The ministers discussed cooperation in the sphere of oil and gas, as well as fisheries. Igor Ivanov said the accent had been placed on cooperation in trade. Relations with Russia are one of the main priorities in Norway's foreign policy, Thorbjoern Jagland said, adding that specific steps had already been taken in this direction and extra funding had been allocated for cooperation with Russia. (back to top) 9 Russian, Norwegian Foreign Ministers To Discuss Utilization of Russian Nuclear Subs Interfax News Agency, May 17, 2000 The Russian and Norwegian foreign ministers will meet in Moscow on Thursday to discuss ways to put the decommissioned Russian nuclear submarines based off the Kola peninsula to use. This issue is especially important for all of Europe, as well as for Russia and Norway, Norwegian Foreign Minister Thorbjorn Jagland said at a Wednesday news conference in Murmansk, in response to an Interfax question. Jagland has raised these issues during his meetings with EU officials and U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, the foreign minister said. Jagland also spoke about issues that worry Russia: notably, the construction of the Globus radar station at Vardo for early detection of ballistic missile launches, and that of a runway on Svalbard Island that can be used by military transport planes. The radar station will be manned entirely by Norwegians and will not be part of any U.S. missile attack early warning system, he stressed. (back to top) 10 Estonia, Russia Restoring Fishery Resources in Narva River Baltic News Service, May 15, 2000 A meeting of the Estonian-Russian fisheries working group will take place in St. Petersburg from Monday to Wednesday, to discuss organization of salmon fishing in the Narva River and joint restoration of salmon resources. Over the past year, about 140,000 salmon fry have been released in the Narva River - 40,000 by Estonia and 100,000 by Russia, Enno Kobakene from the Environment Ministry fishing department told BNS. It is impossible to say how many salmon there are in the river at present, as most of the salmon cannot spawn in the river because of the hydroelectic power plant dam. "Maybe ten percent of the salmon released into the river have been able to spawn, at any rate, there should be enough salmon in the Narva at present," Kobakene said. "The possibilities are small that the released fry will multiply naturally, so it would be expedient to fish them out of the river," Kobakene said. The Russian side has banned salmon fishing in the Narva River. The Estonian Environment Ministry is trying to convince the Russians that salmon fishing in the river should be permitted. He said fishing in a border river must be internationally regulated. Poachers fish for salmon in the Narva River anyway and so it would be more expedient to issue official licenses to amateur fishermen. (back to top) 11 Radioactive Container Stolen in Siberia Agence France Presse, May 20, 2000 A radioactive container of caesium-137 was stolen by unknown thiefs from a factory in Siberia, the AVN military news agency reported Friday, citing the Russian emergency situations ministry. The container weighed some 85 kilos (187 pounds) and the Federal Security Service (FSB, ex-KGB) and interior ministry have opened an inquiry. (back to top) 12 U.S. Planned Nuclear Attack on Moon To Scare Soviets The Ottawa Citizen, May 18, 2000 The United States considered detonating an atom bomb on the moon during the late 1950s as a demonstration of the nation's Cold War might, a Chicago physicist says. The secret project, innocuously titled A Study of Lunar Research Flights, was never carried out. But its planning included calculations by famed astronomer Carl Sagan -- then a young graduate student -- of the behaviour of the dust and gas generated by the blast. Viewing the nuclear flash from Earth might have intimidated the Soviet Union and boosted Americans' confidence after the launch of Sputnik, physicist Leonard Reiffel said yesterday. He directed the inquiry at the former Armour Research Foundation, now part of the Illinois Institute of Technology. ''Now it seems ridiculous and unthinkable,'' said Mr. Reiffel, 72, who later served as a deputy director at NASA during the Apollo program. ''But things were remarkably tense back then.'' Mr. Sagan went on to become a worldwide celebrity for popularizing science on television. He died in 1996. Mr. Reiffel described the plan in a letter in the May 4 issue of the scientific journal Nature. Nature published a review of two Sagan biographies. The author of one of the books suggested that Mr. Sagan breached security in 1959 by revealing the classified project in an application for an academic fellowship. Mr. Reiffel concurred that Mr. Sagan probably released classified information. The exchange in the scientific journal inadvertently shines a spotlight on a period when science in the U.S. was greatly influenced by Cold War politics. The U.S. space program was sputtering while the Soviet Union had launched Sputnik and a pair of lunar probes. The Eisenhower administration considered the lunar blast as a way to reassure Americans the Soviet threat could be countered, while demonstrating to the Kremlin that the United States had an effective nuclear deterrent. Under the scenario, a missile carrying a small nuclear device was to be launched from an undisclosed location and travel 238,000 miles to the moon, where it would be detonated upon impact. The planners decided it would have to be an atom bomb because a hydrogen bomb would have been too heavy for the missile. Mr. Reiffel said the nation's young space program probably could have carried out the mission by 1959, when the Air Force deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles. Military officials apparently abandoned the idea because of the danger to people on Earth in case of a failure. The Air Force has declined to comment on the project, pending a review of historical records. 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