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tv   [untitled]    July 2, 2012 8:30am-9:00am EDT

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from sons to persian means. he starts on t.v. don't. be watching r t you just in time for a recap of the headlines syria's opposition is rejecting a new peace deal to merge with the government because it doesn't present assad from the transition to the polls as the latest effort to stop the bloodshed that killed one hundred twenty people lost their state of the. dull days ahead for britain's internet freedom as ministers malo by installing black boxes which would distort people's private calls live chats and messages the authorities say it's necessary to catch criminals but what freedom activists say it's vague and too intrusive.
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and the u.s. makes a fresh calls to prosecute the world's most famous whistle blow up the spine this comes ahead of julian a sundress final talk show airing here on araa and with the week primo seeking refuge at the ecuadorian embassy in london. after japan's fukushima disaster some major countries begin powering down the atomic plants next to russia's top nuclear talks about the future of the energy source coming up next. day to day t.v. anchor head of the state's nuclear energy corp welcome and thank you for joining us it's been a little over a year since to fukushima tragedy in japan during this period we have seen quite a few countries give up on nuclear energy for example germany has already closed
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down eight reactors and is planning to shut them all down by two thousand and twenty two do you think this marks a fundamental shift in a global nuclear industry a chip that's up for you which is one year ago we were pessimistic expecting the number of contracts and the industry in general to reduce by half over the past year the global nuclear energy market has shrunk by as little as ten percent not more what accounts for the reduction is european dynamics germany in particular and japan suspension of its nuclear activities in the aftermath of many countries launched a new nuclear programs instead of shrinking the ones they already had this mostly relates to the developing world but for the first time in many years the countries that have issued licenses to build new nuclear facilities include the u.s. which lasted some two decades ago there was also the u.k. very conservative and cautious in terms of security they still indorsed a program to build up to twenty nuclear facilities after the fukushima disaster so the global ten percent reduction is not the traumatic also remember that some
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countries have old power plants and in the coming ten to fifteen years they will need to take them out of production to maintain the nuclear share in the energy balance by twenty thirty they will need to build some three hundred twenty to three hundred fifty reactor units experts say this is a really ambitious plan in fact we expected the markets to shrink by fifty percent last year assuming that as market leaders we would experience a thirty percent downturn but in reality our contracts have doubled the boiler college is like. the thought of this threat since it doesn't mean that the ten percent decrease actually plays into russia's hands but he just doesn't budge and you know i wouldn't put it that way a defining market never fares well for anybody as it increases competition it is tougher requirements that have played into our hands rather than the ten percent decrease over the last year people have figured out for themselves what happened because she left and they realized that there is no irreparable defect with nuclear energy systems in april the japanese government allowed me visit the power plant here what impressed me most was not before crippled units but rather the two
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undamaged ones that few journalists ever mention that fukushima has six reactor units not four but nothing happened to the other two but what is a vital difference is that the first four units have their emergency diesel generators in the basement or they were simply flooded with the generators for units five and six are located above the units or that's it there for the principal conclusion is that there is a feasible solution however the fukushima tragedy has taught us is that experience is extremely important and so is an opportunity to physically try out a test new technical solutions why do you think we are enjoying higher demand even though the market in general has somewhat shrunk customers have lost trust in blueprints for new projects they no longer trust promises of quality they want to make sure it works first that's does indeed play into the hands of russian industries because we are the ones who can offer the so-called post fukushima solutions for new nuclear power plants this means that the new type of power plants that we either build in russia or offer to our customers or cruelty would have
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endured the disaster that hit fukushima in march two thousand and eleven nothing would have happened to them even if they had to withstand the worst possible earthquake coupled with the worst possible tsunami which even if there had been no personnel at the power plant at the time the machinery itself would have ensured absolute safety hospitalisation sometimes says the sickness can progress as he believes that technological progress can ensure that safe nuclear energy what's your reaction to environmental. activists they were asleep nuclear energy at the end of it if you look at all species that he nicolette nuclear energy is perfectly environmentally friendly much more so than all other types of power generation such as thermal energy for example in fact it would be more precise to consider nuclear power alternative energy right there with wind power solar energy and hydraulic power engineering which it does not produce greenhouse gases such a period when a nuclear power plant is running normally its impact on the environment equals zero i actually think that all this fuss about the hazards of nuclear energy was our own
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full up we used to withhold technical information on nuclear power plants and when there is no reliable information that's when myths. that were in fact the japanese without trial and information in fukushima and first days of the tragedy. and i think this was an extraordinary blunder on their part that i was trying to filter the information they were providing to the world and they are still paying a price for this mistake in terms of domestic public opinion as we have done to address this issue in russia has developed something called an automatic system for radiation monitoring it stands for a network of sensors that are placed around a nuclear facility and and they keep track of all the environmental parameters and transmit their readings to our company. and the i.a.e.a. we have installed the systems at every single nuclear facility in russia and two years ago we started displaying these indications on the internet in real time any of our viewers may access the website right now and look at radiation indicators for any of russia's nuclear power plants are you up to date as well as for any date
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in the past and that is what has kept everyone down it was there's no way of reading this has to ship all that sensors are sealed and they post their readings on the internet all magically and that's it gone are the myths and the horror stories we're already developing a new generation of technology pursuing the notion of natural safety the kind of safety that does not require additional hardware what we need for our nuclear facilities next is a safety system that will be doing its job. even if there is nobody there to push a book even if the personnel failed to take action the system should be designed so as to be safeguarded against any possible malfunction all by itself that is a task for a new generation of nuclear power plants that we're currently developing couples and you want to suggest assistance i think it would considering the kind of technical solutions you have just described how would you account for germany's decision to shut down all of its nuclear plants was this a decision driven by political pressure accusations of an all rounder somebody is was certainly politics i respect the german government's decision because i see
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this as a choice made by a sovereign nation and that said we had a roundtable discussion yesterday which was attended by the turkish energy minister mr hill does he has to bring questionings he said. if you believe that your nuclear power plants are on say you should shut them down right now when you say they are unsafe which you will shut them down after twenty twenty weeks how are you going to get by with vulnerable nuclear facilities for ten more years and if they are safe enough to last until twenty twenty why shut them down at that point we sure it was politics finish the fight but if you wait you're saying that germany is to only european countries that's ready to give up next their energy but other countries such as usually norway greece that are also opposing new care energy but issuing if not to get them started norway had decided to make a shift toward renewable energy prior to the fukushima disaster that is really about nuclear energy back in the one nine hundred eighty s. and there have been no recent developments in this regard to therefore to be realistic it is indeed germany who has given up on nuclear energy and that is of
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course a serious decision germany is a country that used to get thirty two percent of its electricity from nuclear plants now they've indeed decided to abandon it and that's a fight like japan has also put a freeze on most of its nuclear facilities however last week they decided to end the friends and they were about to launch their first two reactor units with that in the background thirty one countries have decided whether to go on with developing their nuclear reactor says. dims or even to build nuclear facilities for the first time what we see is strong difference he asia i.e. there will be countries actively developing their nuclear energy programs like turkey which is planning to build some thirty reactor units china with seventy four units south africa has just decided to build about ten units england is planning to build up to twenty units so each country will make its own decisions after the russian out there are several aspects first of all it's about expertise you need to have more knowledge of nuclear energy and you need the technologies germany for one
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you can't build a nuclear power plant anymore if they decided to build one now they'd have to outsource construction to us or the french or the americans or german industries have been out of the business for nearly twenty five years and they have lost so number one is know how secondly it's about whether a country can afford developing renewable energy or shale gas or germany is a rich economy they have already estimated the perspective costs of abandoning nuclear energy and they can probably afford it but we also know many governments who say we're not rich enough to finance alternative energy research but lack of access to affordable energy is a major impediment for our economic growth we need to pay wages we need to create jobs and we cannot afford investing in weird energy or solar energy for decades on end of it because i want to have the level of rush hour but it shows that in the u.k. and the united states it's private companies that own nuclear facilities this isn't currently the case in russia but president putin in his prayer lection manifesto said there were plans to privatise where saturn at the thought of some of you yet
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not that would let's not forget the tone is primarily an element in this country's nuclear defense capabilities i know our policy makers outlook on this issue and i'm sure will never be privatized because some of its industries cater to russia's nuclear arsenal yet such things are not for sale i think you are there you know what is it that is going to get us there to show some projects related to the civilian part of the nuclear industry or. are already open to private capital including foreign interests there are already quite a few private investors involved in your radio mining besides you've mentioned the united states well we're the largest owner of uranium deposits on u.s. territory lost out on loans twenty percent of america's new radium reserves are presently mining in the state of wyoming for example this is something you probably couldn't imagine some three or four years ago today it's a reality that we own a controlling stake in your anian one the world's largest corporate owner is miner
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of uranium resources forty nine percent of the company is owned by several thousand private investors which is another area where we've opened up is the construction of nuclear facilities we have a similar situation in mechanical engineering and we don't own one hundred percent of our hardware producing companies anymore and we intend to reduce our respective states to fifty one percent and in the long term once there was carefully free competition in the industry i think we would be able to sell all those industrial assets together but as far as knowledge and technology are concerned the government should retain a controlling stake as for nuclear defense related assets the states will keep not just a controlling stake but one hundred percent ownership of them for ever there is simply no other way if you want to stick it in ca thank you very much for this interview thank you. hold it. both of.
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her mother. would speak. to. her her. mum will. come up with a missile good luck with her mum. just see the minimum. amount of money by no means a low. pressure
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is that so much of the mayor's money lending and says to me in a particular area the use of unmanned drone attacks has surged during the obama presidency proponents of this weapon claim to be a precise. schafer american. syria's
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opposition is rejecting a new peace deal to merge with the government because it doesn't block president assad from the transition proposals the latest effort to stop the bloodshed they killed over one hundred twenty people lost. dugdale a handful of bridges internet freedom as ministers malo by installing black boxes which would still people's private polls like chats and messages its origins say is necessary to catch criminals but what freedom activists say it's radio and too intrusive. and of the u.s. maze of fresh calls to prosecute the world's most famous whistle blow up a spying this comes ahead of julian assange his final talk show airing pale on our t.v. and what the we can be supreme most seeking refuge at the ecuadorian embassy any.
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time now for the update with. hello there thanks for watching welcome to the sport and these are the headlines he's the best spain midfielder andres iniesta is named player of euro twenty twelve after helping his side defeat his lead to retain a european crime plus perfect tiger woods wins for the third time this season to go second on the all time victory list on the p.g.a. tour. better than bowl world champion yohan blake the same bowl for the second time in three days as both jamaican sprinters qualify for the london olympics. now helping spain retain their european me european crown midfielder andres iniesta has been named player of euro two thousand and twelve by you a five he played in every game with spain including sunday's final where they
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trained italy four nil any esther is also among ten spanish players named his twenty three man squad of the tournament their return to their kiev hotel with the three alone a trophy in hand after the match and partied into the night it was and a story when making spain the first team ever to win three leading torments in a row with merl worth more on their achievement from ukraine his cape park which. helped and space successfully defend their side of the year eighty thousand and twelve to complete travel. to success of the european crowd and also to do so while the current world champions. and. despite my hard time and then had to play the last ten good substitutes young people have been judged and then binondo charice and one gave up the bench to wrap up the pournelle scoreline. this
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. hearing here is big plays. if there were ever any doubts just how good this may be nonsense and i as a producer a fantastic display to beat italy and win the euro two thousand and twelve championships was punishment an excellent form for out of a tournament and then winning their third major trophy in a row they've created a legacy has been probably one of the best teams to have ever played for international football that's something we're going to we're going to have in our mind whenever there's something that you know you can only live once in a lifetime and it's with had an amazing chance of there's. no way we've been so many years without winning in with our team with a spanish team winning everything with clubs and now it's finally the chance were you not to show how strongly i. started there were questions whether spain could maintain the consistency of its all the euro two thousand a championship side and the world cup in two thousand and ten but they quickly on
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supposed critics was an excellent football front but solomon terms of competition when tommy just grew stronger and stronger culminating in his performance against italy of the likes of championing yes so once again influential producing some incredibly fluid football which is really easy on the i and really spain where a team who just play football in the right spirit and a fully deserving winners this year of two thousand and twelve title i think we have a really generation ah the young players are with they're winning all the while you know i'm just twenty one and the ninety's and the last time i think there's been a very very good review all of the teams are i think we have a lot of chess when the thing just one really right for italy tonight tried hard but the gulf in class which is obvious to the supporters the only because as he really didn't have much of a chance to create a couple of good opportunities but unfortunately won a able to be because he is in the spain goal but nevertheless he can be very proud of their performance at this tournament before it started no one really gave them a hope of getting to the semifinals or even the final bit upset the olds and really
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they can go home with their heads held high nothing seems to go ride. from the first fifteen minutes we're lucky we are here. sparing. saw. everything. fully deserving winners and i can see no reason whatsoever why they can't go on a walk up in brazil in two thousand and fourteen i'm looking to what would be an unprecedented trophy in a row. so after thirty one matches over thirty days the first big football tournament to eastern europe comes to a close with a record breaking performance from the world's number one team spain are still the champions commiserations to a city after a memorable final at the olympic stadium but from all of us here in kiev it's time to say goodbye. in tennis maria sharapova is aiming to reach the quarter finals of
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wimbledon the afternoon but she is five two in the gym needs to be. who she has dated nor three of their previous encounters defending champion petra is a set down against francesca schiavone but it's four four in the second set there elsewhere for time wimbledon champion serina williams is level assess all again she had a very bad there but he's three down in the it isn't going to the phone book at the moment and later on kim clijsters is up against the eighth and surely. the quarterfinals of boom boom two things are going well for the twenty six year old. dennis. is a set up but he's six five down in the second victory for the russian could set up a last eight clash with roger federer the swiss master faces belgium surprised. its four four in the first set there later on fourth square off against chile and defending champion. friend troy skate. in golf the
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sport's household name tiger woods has claimed his third title of the series. to boost his bid to become the greatest player of all time the former world number one trailed by one shot going into the final day of the eighteenth tee national but he carded a solid two hundred round of sixty nine to be fellow american vogue van pelt by two strokes and that victory gives woodson seventy four p.g.a. trophy and it means the fourteen time major champion has overtaken the legendary jack nicklaus the second most career wins on the american tour only the late sam snead has more with eighty two victories to his name but it's thirty six one still has plenty of time to catch up and he was more than happy with his performance in mary. what are incredible week i mean the staff the maintenance crew a narrow body and yes there was a was a very difficult situation and they worked their tails off to get it done and. you know everybody thank you for being patient with us you know on yes there was a was
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a silent day about that you're one saved up for it today and it was a great up sort of play in front of triple olympic champion you same boat as again being upstaged at the jamaican olympic trials he lost to compound late for the second time in three days blake had beaten him in the hundred meters nine point seven five seconds the world's fastest time of the year and then he got the better of him again in the two hundred meters here which both consider is his favorite distance break again recording the fastest time in the world this year with nine hundred nineteen point eight seconds. represent you make it in london along with warren where he finished in that two hundred meters final. twelve russia has claimed another berth at the upcoming impacts the men's beach volleyball team bucking a ticket to london with a tuner when over poland in moscow my club change to watch them the world elim picked qualification tournament. it was a tournament that did exactly what it says on the tin olympic qualification that's
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something that up till now how deluded the russian men's beach volleyball team after failing to emulate russia's women's team already qualified by winning the continental cup this really was the last chance saloon for them but the russians kept their nerve seeing of poland in the final in two rather one sided games. in the first year and you need to beat but bush was shocked and people come to in two straight sets sergei prokofiev repeated that feat against poland second duo. and. which i hold that equaled russia's twenty run of four wins in the last going into the match at home comforts seem to have played their part in the resoundingly victory the players however went without their worries prior to the final. i had about three hours of sleep the previous night because off the top group when you play in the final the foil was shelled for seven thirty pm so we
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have to hold our emotions and keep focused but we are experienced players and know how to deal with this kind of stress. and with our eyes now firmly on london the guys mood was understandably boy and. we're not playing on going to the olympics to simply participate in it this year has been tough so we'll want to do the marks and see how high we can get if we get a medal that would be amazing playing better and better together so hopefully we can reach our peak at the olympics and make our fans. in the men's other final muscled mexico two militants the other olympic tickets up for grabs despite dropping the set against the mexican's team boston never looked like they would surrender their undefeated run in the tournament i think i would. say we had a really. seems periods although it's just one to get for two teams which of course can make problems but i think we're going to do
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a really good job and we deserved it and with that the functions books for the vulnerable competition at the olympics now been killed. that is because well it will seem i will after all be joining the women's team on the plane to london based on one that's often been sleeping or meeting or whole let's go on the political the grayson's on the final here in moscow now that you seem to be heading to london to a bit we'll get two thousand seat stadium left on the twenty eighth of july because they're going to junk the bottle now the olympic glory michael the famed overall team that must go not as always but we've got time for for the moment in a couple of. wealthy british style it's time to. go.
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to the. markets why not. find out what's really happening to the global economy because a report on our. world with. science technology innovation all the moves developments from around russia we've got the future covered.
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