It will be ``a long time, a very long time'' before construction is
restarted, Castro said Monday in a speech to the Fifth National Congress
of Committees for the Defense of the Revolution.
The announcement appeared to mark the end of the project and the
accompanying political wrangle with Washington.
Although work has been suspended on Juragua since 1992, a few months
after the Soviet Union collapsed, Cuban authorities periodically discussed
resurrecting the project, provoking protests from Washington.
In March of last year Moscow alluded to the possibility of a resumption
of work on the reactor, although it has not taken any action in the
following months.
At this point, the Cuban government no longer considers nuclear power
the solution to the island's chronic shortage of electricity.
Workers still maintain the construction site in Cienfuegos province on
Cuba's southern coast, using a Russian grant of $30 million made in
1993.
The reactor, begun in 1980, has cost $1 billion so far, and it would
cost an additional $750 million and four years to finish it, according to
official estimates.
Washington is fiercely opposed to having a nuclear reactor less than
200 miles from the Florida Keys.
But the Cubans have always argued that the technology of the Juragua
reactor is different from Chernobyl and that their security measures would
prevent a repetition of the 1986 Ukrainian disaster in the Caribbean.
Castro halts work on nuclear reactor
It won't restart for `a long time,' he
says
Copyright © 1998 The Miami Herald