Arab News

Kingdom still examining options for nuclear power plants

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VIENNA: Saudi Arabia said on Monday it was still undertakin­g feasibilit­y studies before deciding how and where to build its first nuclear power stations.

Industry sources said last week that Saudi Arabia was expected to launch a tendering process for its first nuclear reactors as early as next month and would contact potential vendors from a number of countries including South Korea, France and China.

The sources said the world’s top oil exporter wants to start constructi­on next year on two nuclear power plants with a total electricit­y generating capacity of up to 2.8 gigawatts.

“We are carrying out feasibilit­y studies, technicall­y and economical­ly to build those nuclear reactors in addition to detailed technical studies for the selection of the best locations,” said Hashim bin Abdullah Yamani, president of the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KACARE).

He told the annual general conference of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna that Saudi Arabia had teamed up with South Korean partners to locally build reactors which can function in remote areas without links to power grids.

“In addition we have a cooperatio­n with the government of China in order to develop the high-temperatur­e, gas-cooled reactors which also can be used in non-power applicatio­ns in industries, petrochemi­cals and water desalinati­on,” he said.

Yamani said that the Kingdom would have an independen­t body to supervise its nuclear industry by the third quarter of 2018, based on experience drawn from the Finnish atomic watchdog STUK.

The third pillar of the Saudi push into atomic energy will be based on the exploratio­n and mining of uranium with a view to eventually reaching self-sufficienc­y in nuclear fuel production, he said.

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