Calgary Herald

Vietnam’s energy thirst fuels nuclear demand

Communist state inks deals with U.S. firms

- MIKE IVES

HANOI, VIETNAM— Vietnamis pressing ahead with Southeast Asia’s most ambitious civilian nuclear-energy program despite safety fears since the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

Foreign companies and government­s are competing to get a toehold in an industry that could be worth $50 billion by 2030, according to estimates by U.S. officials.

Those plans got a boost last week with the announceme­nt that the United States and Vietnam had signed an agreement allowing U.S. firms to develop civilian nuclear power here. Once President Barack Obama and top U.S. energy officials sign the so-called “123 agreement,” Congress will have 90 days to either challenge it or let it take effect.

Facing an energy crunch after years of underinves­tment and artificial­ly low consumer electricit­y prices, Vietnam plans to build seven nuclear plants in the coming years.

“Vietnam has the secondlarg­est market, after China, for nuclear power in East Asia, and our companies can now compete,” U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said after inking the agreement in Brunei with Vietnam’s Prime Minister, Nguyen Tan Dung.

But in a sign of potential difficulti­es to come, the planned constructi­on start date for the first two plants has been delayed by three years, from 2014 to 2017, said Vuong Huu Tan, head of Vietnam’s Radiation and Nuclear Safety Agency, in a recent interview.

Japan’s nuclear disaster also overhangs the plans. All of the country’s nuclear plants are shuttered as it grapples with the aftermath of the March 2011 tsunami that caused a triple meltdown at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant.

A 2011 study by three scientists from Italian research institutio­ns said historical precedent suggests Vietnam’s coastline is potentiall­y vulnerable to earthquake-generated tsunamis originatin­g farther east in the South China Sea. Their simulation map suggests Ninh Thuan — the central province where the first reactor is slated to be built — and a few nearby provinces are among the most vulnerable to wave impact.

But Tan, the Hanoi-based nuclear official, said safety is a high priority and Vietnam’s plants will be built to internatio­nal standards.

“We need to have nuclear power plants to ensure the supply of energy for our country,” he said. “Other energy sources are not sufficient.”

One possible reason Vietnam has not wavered from its plans to build coastal nuclear plants is that it can proceed without worrying much about public opinion. The ruling Communist party controls the domestic media and bans critical discussion about government activities.

This contrasts with Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippine­s, where plans for civilian nuclear plants have met protests, said Kevin Punzalan, a researcher at De La Salle-College of St. Benilde in the Philippine­s, who has surveyed plans for nuclear energy across Southeast Asia.

Vietnam needs to develop

Vietnam has the secondlarg­est market, after China, for nuclear power in East Asia and our companies can now compete U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY

new power sources because its domestic coal and hydropower production is levelling off. The country is set to be a net energy importer by 2015.

The Asian Developmen­t Bank has said domestic electricit­y demand may rise by up to 14 per cent per year until 2015 and plateau at 11 per cent until 2020, fuelled by a rising middle class demanding air conditioni­ng and other energy-intensive comforts.

Vietnam’s 2011 power-grid master plan called for vast increases in energy production through 2030, but analysts say the government struggles to attract venture capital for new power plants, partly because it keeps power prices below market rates, reducing incentives for potential investors.

And the electricit­y sector is dominated by an inefficien­t, debt-ridden state-owned electrical company and its subsidiari­es — a clunky system that discourage­s competitio­n.

Nuclear power, however, remains front and centre on Vietnam’s energy agenda.

Vuong Huu Tan said Vietnamese university graduates are training in Russia and Japan to become nuclear technician­s. And the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency said in January Vietnam’s plan to build two plants amid salt flats on Vietnam’s central coast were in “active preparatio­n.”

 ?? AFP/Getty Images/File ?? Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, second from right, tours the damaged Fukushima nuclear facility. Vietnam is pressing ahead with plans for plants, despite safety fears.
AFP/Getty Images/File Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, second from right, tours the damaged Fukushima nuclear facility. Vietnam is pressing ahead with plans for plants, despite safety fears.

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