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A Personal Evaluation of Nuclear Energy in Turkey- 2007
Haluk Direskeneli
Haluk Direskeneli

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Sunday, 9 December 2007

This commentary is from USAK’s Energy Review Newsletter
http://www.turkishweekly.net/energy
To subscribe email to energyreview@turkishweekly.net

Those of 1968 generation will recall that there was a “Nuclear’’ division in the METU Mechanical Engineering Department along with “Heat” and “Mechanics”. There were many graduates with BSc and MSc, even PhD degrees from “Nuclear” division, all confident that they could design, build and operate nuclear power plants.

There were also students from other Middle East Countries, even several from Iran, studying together with their Turkish colleagues. The Iranians had a thick Azeri Turkish accent at the beginning, which was lost in time, replacing it with smooth daily Turkish, making them no different than our own local nationals. Then in time they completed their university studies, got their diplomas and returned to their countries, and worked on their careers

In Turkey, Turkish METU graduates started working at Turkish Electricity Authority, Nuclear Energy Department, but then years passed, Turkey could not enter into the nuclear age during all these years. Time passed by with no serious development in Turkish Nuclear energy plans except serious corruption news in Turkish Nuclear tenders. Then, IMF asked the government to stop work on Nuclear Energy tenders since that activity put high financial risk on the Turkish Treasury. Work ceased in early 2000s.

Nuclear Energy Division of Turkish Electricity Authority which was created in early 1960s, was also closed and its mostly METU graduate engineers were either transferred to other departments or left the establishment. Almost 40 years passed since1968 years, which were exciting for METU graduates. What do you think those METU ME Nuclear graduates have been doing since 1968s years??

Some of the Turkish graduates formed their own private companies in the energy sector. Most were very successful in their own private businesses. They constructed high capacity coal mine transfer systems in thermal power plants, some completed mechanical installation works in thermal power plants, others completed site installations abroad, especially in the Middle East Countries as well as in the Central Asian countries.

Some formed their own plants in order to make fabrication of steel structures for industrial installations, some worked in public enterprises, in the Ministries. They were promoted to high prestigious public posts and private positions, many of them went to abroad to earn their life and pursue their own careers. Some of them worked in Nuclear power plants in those foreign lands and occupied high level positions in USA, Canada, Switzerland nuclear power industries.

Some of the Iranian national METU graduates worked on their own Nuclear Industry in Iran. Today we all know that Iranian METU graduates cover the decision-making posts of top management level in Iranian nuclear business. They construct, design, build and hopefully will soon operate nuclear power plants in Iran.

Whatever is said on Iranian business environment, you may criticize their products, their outputs, their political environment or else, but you should evaluate carefully the latest stage that they have reached in their own nuclear technology.

Today, Iranian nuclear technology is somewhat the product of METU Mechanical Engineering Department Nuclear Division of the 1968s.

We wish the great human resource of METU Nuclear graduates could have been utilized to establish the local nuclear power plants in Turkey and solve our prevailing energy problem.

We shall enter into a serious energy crisis in 2008-2009, which is foreseen by all parties. Our big players of public and private enterprises have foreseen the bottleneck. They had meetings one after another. Turkish energy market is not so easy, not so profitable. It is a very tough sector. It is a very difficult market. Public enterprises cannot make new investments, they have no financial resources to allocate, no money to spend.

Nobody wants to make new big investments, just because our Energy market lost its bankability, its reliability in the financial markets. International investors are reluctant to make investments; they do not want to finance any project, since they foresee high risk.


For that high risk, they calculate a high interest rate.

Why our energy markets/ projects are not “bankable?” The documents created to finance the new energy projects are not “bankable documents.” They are not real/ internationally recognized “bankable documents.” Our legal framework is very new, not properly tested yet. Very few show any interest on new energy projects. If you ask any international reputable company to prepare any proposal for your new energy project, you cannot get their response. The pre-feasibility / feasibility documents are not in international standards.

Public tenders are not bankable; they ask impossible clauses, so these are not bankable

The feasibility documents prepared in the local market for billion US Dollar projects are created at low cost, at low quality, hence they are not acceptable if not miserable

Today go to any reputable International Engineering Company,

And ask a proposal for any of your energy projects, see if they respond

You are at the mercy of Eastern World/ Indian- China- Korean companies, or Canadian Candu, if you eliminate USA and French companies due to unnecessary international disputes of the near past.

Eastern World companies are newcomers to the international nuclear energy business, at low prices with their own developing/ untested technology

We should not exaggerate the nuclear power plant requirement. 5000 MWe tender for nuclear power plant is an exaggeration. It will create pure foreign domination.

Turkey couldn’t create her own technology in nuclear energy business, yet

Although we had huge human engineering/ intellectual power in 1968s

Turkish companies could not create high value added energy products in energy business for her own local market to generate cheap energy

Not only Nuclear technology

We even cannot construct our own Thermal power plant, not even simple coal firing plants, which are a number of steel tube fabrications, not a space shuttle,

Our own local private companies cannot cover scope other than “civil works, foundations, and site installation”, at so low profit margins, with low value added levels, based on unqualified or semi-qualified labor work

Nobody wants to leave that unqualified or semi-qualified labor work to foreign companies, local workers resist to foreign participation as in Kazakhstan, Ireland, Gulf,

We still hope that we can complete huge works with so little early preparation,

We still think that we can handle/ create “bankable feasibility documents” at low cost with in-house excel sheets

This writer, a veteran of energy business for more than 30 years, has occupied seats at the foreign side of the negotiation table many times in the past

Foreign side comes to the negotiation table well prepared with all calculated risks of the subject project, they make serious and expensive “due diligence” works, they pay serious money for that early preparation, they evaluate the project risks carefully

When they receive your "In-house prepared so-called bankable feasibility document"

They will advise that they will carefully review the document

That review will not be finalized for years

And you wait for their final decision in years and years

Turkish people should know that they should create their own technology

They should support their own human resources, more funds to be allocated to R&D, more money for young engineering graduates, more software and hardware supplies

Believe me that our young engineering graduates are no different than those of their counterparts in the reputable foreign companies. In some of foreign engineering companies, there are even high level managers / directors with Turkish origin

Nuclear power plants are basically a kind of improved thermal power plants. There is one cycle more. You have to employ high safety measures, and solve waste problem. We can consider further advantages of a nuclear power plant in energy security. It is good test to train your people on nuclear technology, on nuclear safety, on nuclear awareness.

Your geography imposes your foreign policies as well as your energy policies. In your geography you have no luxury of staying anti-nuclear, in nuclear free environment. You need to develop your own nuclear technology, educate your nuclear intellectual power, train your staff/ your human resources. By being an anti- nuclear activist, you cannot learn details of the nuclear technology. You learn by doing as elsewhere as always.

We should also appreciate that nuclear technology is a very dear, very
precious, very expensive issue. It is not free of charge. It is not even possible to get only with bare money as in the case of thermal power generation.

The level of development in your own country in Nuclear technology will obviously warn other parties that you are no longer at the vulnerable developing stage but in the high tech league. That has also a deterrence factor for the rival parties to think twice for any action they take against yourselves.

If you do not wish to give any concession in your foreign policy, then you should depend on your own talent at a lower and independent cost. You can only get it through your own hard work by employing your young talents with their latest scientific and intellectual capability.

You can only get it through your own hard work by employing your young talents with their latest scientific and intellectual capability on  a long tedious journey with blood, sweet and tears.

It is also a matter of survival of the fittest in the region.

Final wording, as the old saying goes, “If you think you can, you can.”

Your comments are always welcome. Thank you & best regards

 

Haluk Direskeneli
ODTU ME’1973 - Ankara MMO 6606
URL: http://energynewsletterturkey.blogspot.com/

 

This commentary is from USAK’s Energy Review Newsletter
http://www.turkishweekly.net/energy
To subscribe email to energyreview@turkishweekly.net


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 OTHER COMMENTS OF HALUK DIRESKENELI

2012 National Coal Policy for Turkey
7 February 2012

Konya Karapinar Coal Fields Ready for Thermal Power Plant Investment
11 January 2012

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A Personal Evaluation of Nuclear Energy in Turkey- 2007 A Personal Evaluation of Nuclear Energy in Turkey- 2007 A Personal Evaluation of Nuclear Energy in Turkey- 2007 A Personal Evaluation of Nuclear Energy in Turkey- 2007 
Journal of Turkish Weekly (JTW)
USAK House,
Ayten Sok. No:21
Mebusevleri, Tandogan, Ankara, Turkey