Venezuela halts nuclear programme after Japan disaster

CARACAS,  (Reuters) – Venezuela is suspending  development of a nuclear power programme following the  catastrophe at a nuclear complex in Japan, President Hugo  Chavez said yesterday.

The South American country had hoped that a planned  Russian-built nuclear power plant would provide 4,000 megawatts  (MW) and be ready in about a decade.

But Chavez said events in Japan after last Friday’s  9.0-magnitude earthquake and the tsunami that followed it  showed the risks associated with nuclear power were too great.

“For now, I have ordered the freezing of the plans we have  been developing … for a peaceful nuclear programme,” he said  during a televised meeting with Chinese investors.

“I do not have the least doubt that this (the potential for  a nuclear catastrophe in Japan) is going to alter in a very  strong way the plans to develop nuclear energy in the world.”

Japan is racing to avert a new disaster after a fire broke  out at a nuclear plant and sent low levels of radiation wafting  into Tokyo, prompting some people to flee the capital and  triggering growing international alarm.

Venezuela signed a deal with Russia last October that moved  Chavez’s socialist government a step closer to its longtime  goal of developing nuclear power like Brazil and Argentina.

But some experts were skeptical at the time about whether  Venezuela would go through with the project, or even needed it  given the OPEC member’s vast oil and gas reserves, plus solar,  hydroelectric and wind energy possibilities.