NewsConcerns Arise Over China's Affordable Nuclear Proposal in Kazakhstan

Concerns Arise Over China’s Affordable Nuclear Proposal in Kazakhstan

By Eurasianet ⁣ – Dec 27, ‍2023, 3:00 PM CST

  • The ​Chinese ⁤proposal offers a nuclear ‌plant at half the price of ‌French, Russian, and South Korean ‌alternatives.
  • Concerns arise over the Chinese design using outdated technology, ⁢despite compatibility with ‌Kazakh-produced fuel assemblies.
  • The projected cost for a two-unit⁤ nuclear power plant⁤ is over‍ $12 billion, ⁢with⁤ an output of 2.4 GW of power.

Nuclear

A Kazakh media ⁤outlet,⁤ citing a watchdog group ⁢representative, is reporting ⁣that ‍the Kazakh government is ⁢balking at a Chinese proposal⁤ to build‍ the Central Asian ⁢nation’s first nuclear power plant. The Kazakh government⁣ has not ‍officially commented on the report.

The Kursiv news outlet cites Baurzhan Ibrayev, chair of the ​Central Asia advisory board of ​the UK-based New Nuclear Watch Institute, as saying the projected cost of the Chinese-built plant ‌would be up to half the price ⁤of proposals submitted by French, Russian and South Korean ⁤entities. At ⁤the same time, Ibrayev appeared to cast shade on the ‌Chinese nuclear industry,‌ hinting‍ in the Kursiv report⁣ that a Chinese​ entity used “not the latest​ technology” in ​a previous joint venture, ‍which ‍started up in 2015 to produce nuclear⁤ fuel assemblies‍ in Kazakhstan.

One advantage of Beijing’s‍ proposal is that a Chinese design would be compatible with Kazakh-produced fuel ‌assemblies, or​ structured groups of fuel rods used⁢ to fuel for ⁣nuclear reactors, Kursiv reported.‍ The other designs under consideration,‌ however,⁤ couldn’t⁣ run on domestically⁤ produced fuel assemblies, according ⁢Ibrayev. “Today, ⁣there is​ new technology, new reactors” requiring different fuel, he is ‌quoted⁣ as saying.

The cost ⁤of building a two-unit nuclear power plant⁤ could ⁣be more than $12 ⁢billion, according to ‌Energy Ministry estimates. As currently envisioned, the two-unit ⁢plant could produce 2.4 GW ‌of power.

Elsewhere, China is actively pursuing solar energy development ‍in⁣ Uzbekistan. Uzbek diplomats from the consulate in the Chinese city of Guangzhou‍ held talks with⁢ representatives of Laplace Energy Solutions in early December, focusing⁣ on developing a ⁤training program for Uzbek workers. Company experts will soon travel to Uzbekistan ‍on a fact-finding mission, the Uzbek news agency Dunyo reports.

By Eurasianet.org

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