Anna Kireyeva (b. 1979) graduated from Murmansk State Pedagogical University with a major in English as a foreign language. She has been with Bellona-Murmansk since 2002. Since 2006, Kireyeva has headed Bellona-Murmansk’s information services, writing news reports for Bellona’s Russian website and managing public relations for Bellona-Murmansk.
Author articles
- Fourteen years since Kursk sank environmentalists watch the seas for next catastrophe
- Vessel involved in Barents Sea oil protest finally returning home
- Kola Nuclear Power Plant to give 15 more years of life to its oldest reactors
- This is only a test: Russia’s nuclear icebreaker fleet gets training on handling nuclear emergency information
- Infamously polluting Kola smelting works undergo first planned inspection since 2010
- Bellona Murmansk roundtable takes on region’s most pressing environmental issues
- Putin tells St. Petersburg economic forum that Russia to pursue same old nuclear and fossil fuel energy projects
- Murmansk conference concludes sunken Russian subs must immediately be raised
- Major radioactive storage site near Murmansk to be decommissioned amid controversy
- Decades old radioactive waste storage site near Murmansk nears closure
- Russia’s dirtiest oil company to drill gas for Murmansk Region
- Northern Sea Route ‘no Suez canal,’ but imperils the Arctic more and more
- After years in the doldrums, wind energy projects in Murmansk see their sails filling
- Plans afoot to make Atomflot a one stop utility shop for all of Russia’s nuclear vessels
- For those who noticed, 2013 was Russia’s year of the environment – Murmansk polluters lost the memo
- Murmansk air conference denounces ‘pseudoscience’ and makes headway on contentious industrial pollution
- Atomic energy willing to aid Russia’s crude dreams of the Arctic
- Murmansk environmentalists demand safe drilling technologies before Russia pursues Holy Grail of Arctic oil
- IAEA comes to Murmansk to tote up nuclear safety roadblocks passed – and those to come
- Russian authorities risk sinking Greenpeace boat, keep prisoners in ‘inhumane’ conditions
- UPDATE: Putin puts all chips on Arctic oil development in Salekhard as courts begin jailing Greenpeace activists
- The Arctic hosts a week of worried discussion and environmental protest
- Another stagnate year in the fate of the Russian nuclear service ship Lepse
- Arctic gas ambitions to cost Russian tax payers a pretty penny
- Murmansk waves farewell to yet another radiation hazard