Yerevan TPP connected to the grid ahead of Armenia Mon July 21, 2014 18:23:38 One of the largest generating stations in Armenia - CJSC "Yerevan heat ¬ electric power plant" is connected to the mains again after suspension for the planned overhaul of June 3. The station was connected to the network on July 20 instead of schedule - July 29. Planned work schedule to clean the rotor gazotrubiny, but it turned out that the rotor does not need to be cleaned due to this has been repaired to complete before the deadline, said the general director of CJSC "Yerevan TPP" Hovakim Hovhannisyan. The cost of the overhaul was 9.5 billion drams, and 90% of these funds were used to purchase spare parts gazorubiny. CEO noted that during this repair was possible to increase the efficiency of 1-1.5%, which will reduce fuel consumption for electricity production.
"Pressure Grows on Putin as Forensics Experts Reach Crash Victims in Ukraine", reads the title of the article published by the New York Times.
"European leaders threatened new sanctions on Russia as soon as Tuesday, suggesting they were increasingly open to the harder line being taken against Moscow by the United States, which has accused Russia of providing the surface-to-air missile system that brought down the jetliner, training rebels in how to use it, and perhaps even supplying experts who helped to fire it", writes the newspaper.
Mark Rutte, Prime Minister of the Netherlands, told Parliament that “all political, economic and financial options” were available as the European Union prepared to debate measures further isolating the Russian leader, reports the New York Times.
“The world also wants to see a real change in the stance Russia has taken over the crisis in Ukraine,” the newspaper quotes David Cameron. “We need no more weapons crossing the border, no more troops crossing the border, no more support for the separatists, respect for Ukrainian territorial integrity.”
A larger team of forensic experts, including 23 from the Netherlands, two from Germany, two from the United States, and one from Britain, arrived in Kharkiv early Monday.
“We are here to get the bodies back to their countries and to their families. We will try our utmost to do this as quickly as possible,” Michel Oz, the group’s Dutch coordinator, said, quoted by the New York Times.. But he added that it was still unclear whether the separatists who control the crash site would allow a train loaded with corpses to leave for Kharkiv.