In what is becoming a new emblem of arbitrary Russian secrecy, the decree appointing Kutin to the post was signed on September 20th, but not made public in the media or on government websites until five days later – a new policy many believe to be calculated to avert outcry or criticism.
Kutin’s an undistinguished bureaucratic career
Born in Leningrad in 1965, Kutin is holds a doctorate in technical science. He has worked in the St. Petersburg city administration as the deputy chairman of the city property committee, as well as the deputy director of the Russian Munitions Agency. Since 2005, he has been Rostekhnadzor’s deputy director, Konstantin Pulikovsky, who resigned the post at his own request.
Pulikovsky presided over some of Rostekhnadzor’s most notoriously disputed state environmental impact studies for nuclear power stations, oil and gas pipelines and other dangerous installations.
Pulikovsky’s resignation draws an era of embarrassment to a close
It was Pulikovsky, who in 2006, green lighted the state environmental impact study that led to the drafting of plans to run the Eastern Siberian – Pacific Ocean oil pipeline within 800 metres of Russia’s national treasure, Lake Baikal. Some 43 of the 52 expert that participated in the state impact study refused to back its findings, yet Pulikovsky nonetheless rubber stamped the impact study and gave the go ahead for it’s near miss with the lake.
It was only after a month of environmental outcry that Putin himself, then president, ordered that the route of the pipeline be ordered father away from the shores of Lake Baikal. The incident brought critical charges that Pulikovsky was on the take of powerful oil lobbies, but Putin took no steps to dismiss him from the post.
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| Murmank’s nature and Youth lead a protest in Moscow at the Rostekhnazdor headquarters, hanging a banner protesting life span extensions for ageing reactors. |
| Ecodefence |
Other dubious items in Pulikovsky’s resume include granting engineered life span extensions to some of the oldest and most dangerous reactors in Russia. Among them were reactors at the Bilibin and Novovornezh nuclear Power plants, as well as the fatally flawed Chernobyl style reactors at the Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant. And the aged first reactor unit at the Kola Nuclear Power Plant even received two life span extensions from Pulikovsky’s Rostekhnadzor.
Whether embarrassment continues remains to be seen
This last provoked outrage among Murmansk area environmentalists, and the Nature and Youth environmental organisation conducted a protest last spring in which they hung a banner from the entrance of the Rotekhnadzor building in Moscow. Pulikovsky had no reaction to the vociferous protest.
It would be hoped that the new management of Russian Federal Service for Ecological, Technological and Atomic Oversight will show themselves to fit their job descriptions as protectors of the interests of Russian citizens rather than the pliable puppets of Russia’s nuclear and oil industries.
Andrei Ozharovsky, a nuclear physicist with the environmental group Ecodefence, is a frequent contributor to Bellona Web.