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Global Green USA and Green
Cross Partners Announce Opening of First Public Outreach and Information Office
at Nuclear Weapons Site in Russia
Global Green Press Release
February 8, 2007
(For personal use only)
Global Green USA, together with Green Cross Switzerland and
Green Cross Russia, announces the opening to the public of the first ever Green
Cross Public Outreach and Information Office (POIO) at a nuclear weapons
dismantlement site in the Russian Federation in the city of Severodvinsk. “The
more transparency and public dialogue, the better will controversial and complex
policies in nuclear weapons demilitarization, fissile material management, and
energy strategies proceed,” noted Dr. Paul Walker, Legacy Program Director with
Global Green USA in Washington, DC.
Global Green and Green Cross have over 10 years of experience managing 11 public
outreach and information offices at chemical weapons stockpile and destruction
sites in Russia under auspices of the Green Cross/Global Green “Legacy of the
Cold War” Program, and in close coordination with international threat
reduction, nonproliferation, and G-8 Global Partnership efforts. These offices
have been successful in facilitating destruction of over 5,000 tons of deadly
chemical weapons to date.
Severodvinsk in the Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia has a population of 200,000 and
is located 30 miles west of the city of Arkhangelsk. It is home to the
“Zvezdochka” shipyard – the world’s largest – which is responsible for
maintenance and decommissioning of nuclear ships and subs. Numerous nuclear
submarines, from the November- to the Typhoon-class, have been built there. In
addition, Russia plans to build its first floating nuclear power plant there
jointly with China. Therefore, timely and comprehensive information on safety,
security, and public health and environmental risks is of primary importance to
the local population.
Russia's nuclear sector is currently under rapid change. The country inherited
from the former Soviet Union about 20,000 nuclear warheads, about 1,000 tons of
weapons-grade uranium, 180 tons of weapons-grade plutonium, as well as 248
nuclear submarines. The current leadership of Rosatom, Russia’s Atomic Energy
Agency, is conscious that the numerous problems Rosatom is facing cannot be
resolved without involving the population and regional administration. Profiting
from experience gained over a decade in the facilitation of chemical weapons
demilitarization in Russia, Green Cross and Global Green know about the
importance of building up a network of information and trust.