The residue from thermally processing oil shale to generate energy has created the highest mountains in Estonia, including the hills shown in this photo.
EESH POLEVKIVI
Jurgis Vilemas is the kind of man who is able to admit when he is wrong, and his flexible attitude is emblematic of the approach that the Baltic republics' top scientists are taking to lead their nations into the future. Like many of his peers in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, he was trained in Moscow in an era when scientists were highly revered but their activities restricted.As a nuclear engineer, Vilemas, who directs the Lithuanian Energy Institute, the country's main adviser on issues related to energy and the environment, is fiercely proud of his country's nuclear power plant, which happens to be the country's largest state enterprise. Known as Ignalina, the plant relies on the same graphite-moderated, channel reactor (RBMK) design as the ill-fated nuclear plant in Chernobyl, Ukraine, although it has been extensively upgraded over the past decade to increase its safety with the aid of U.S. and European scientists.
KELLYN S. BETTS