Rosatom subsidiary will proceed with Finnish nuclear project

Finland's government was not immediately available for comment.

By Anne Kauranen, Reuters April 12, 2022
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Participants are seen at the stand of Russian state nuclear agency Rosatom during the International military-technical forum “Army-2021” at Patriot Congress and Exhibition Center in Russia’s Moscow Region, on August 23, 2021. (Maxim Shemetov / Reuters File Photo)

HELSINKI — Russia’s state-owned nuclear power supplier Rosatom and its Finnish unit RAOS Project will proceed with a planned nuclear plant in Northern Finland, RAOS said on Monday, despite uncertainty over government permits since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“Rosatom and RAOS Project continue fulfilling their obligations under signed agreements and contracts relating to the Hanhikivi 1 project,” RAOS Project told Reuters in an email.

Since Russia began what it calls a “special operation” in Ukraine, Finland’s minister of economic affairs Mika Lintila has repeatedly said it would be “absolutely impossible” for the government to grant a construction permit for the Hanhikivi plant.

[Putin’s Ukraine move puts a northern Finland nuclear plant project in jeopardy]

The plant was commissioned by a Finnish-Russian consortium dubbed Fennovoima, in which Finnish stakeholders such as Outokumpu, Fortum and SSAB own two thirds and Rosatom’s subsidiary RAOS Voima holds the rest.

Many of the Finnish stakeholders have publicly expressed their will to pull out and write down the project, but are unwilling to pay RAOS Project for breach of existing contracts and possible indemnities.

Meanwhile, RAOS Project has continued preparatory construction work, such as cabling and excavation in the planned plant’s site on the northwest coast of Finland, but cannot embark on building the facility without a government license.

“RAOS Project Ltd as the … supplier is acting based on and in accordance with the engineering, procurement and construction contract signed in December 2013 with Fennovoima,” it wrote.

Fennovoima had expected to obtain a construction license from the government by summer 2022 to build the 1.2 gigawatt reactor, while construction was expected to begin in 2023.

Finland’s government was not immediately available for comment.