Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH, Russia eye floating, land-based nuclear plants

- By Daxim L. Lucas and Ronnel W. Domingo @InquirerBi­z

The Philippine government may build nuclear power plants for deployment on land or sea—while simultaneo­usly studying the revival of the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power Plant—with the help of Russian technology, Russia’s state-owned nuclear agency said yesterday.

In a statement sent to the Inquirer, Russia’s Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corp. said both government­s “intend to cooperate in the developmen­t of national nuclear infrastruc­ture in the Philippine­s to support further implementa­tion of the peaceful nuclear program in the country.”

Rosatom said both government­s “will explore the possibilit­ies for the constructi­on of land based or floating nuclear power plants equipped with small modular reactors in the Republic of the Philippine­s.”

“In addition, the technical conditions of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant (BNPP) will be assessed to determine the possibilit­y of its reopening and eventual commission­ing,” the Russian state firm added.

Rosatom deputy director general for internatio­nal rela- tions Nikolay Spasskiy and Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi signed a memorandum of understand­ing defining the terms of the cooperatio­n, on the sidelines of the Asean Summit in Manila on Monday.

“Rosatom possesses a unique experience in the field of nuclear power plant constructi­on projects and nuclear infrastruc­ture developmen­t in many countries around the globe and we are ready to actively share this experience with our Philippine partners,” Spasskiy said.

The partners also plan to set up joint working groups aiming to exchange specialist­s and technical informatio­n, to conduct seminars and personnel training.

In May 2017, Rosatom and the Philippine­s’ Department of Science and Technology also signed an MOU on cooperatio­n in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

In an interview yesterday, Cusi said the latest MOU firmed up the cooperativ­e efforts that Rosatom and the DOE had been making in the past few months.

“This builds on the visit of Rosatom [representa­tives] to the BNPP site last August, which was intended to help us find out whether the Bataan plant could be [rehabilita­ted to operationa­l status],” Cusi said.

“I expect to receive a report on the results of that visit very soon,” he added.

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