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Romanian PM: Cost of planned SMR nuclear plant is $6-7 billion

Romania's 460 MW modular small nuclear reactor plant is expected to?cost $7 billion, and it will be difficult to devise a financing plan for such an investment? said Romanian Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan on Friday.

Nuclearelectrica, a state-owned producer of nuclear power in Romania, announced on Thursday that it had made a decision to invest in a small modular reactor plant (SMR) in Doicesti. This could be the first project in Europe using this technology.

The project would build six reactors in a staggered manner beyond 2030, using technology from the U.S. company NuScale Power. Nuclearelectrica holds a 50% share in the joint-venture and has not disclosed the project's cost.

Bolojan said to local radio station Europa FM: "As far as I can remember, it's a pretty large sum of money. It is $6-$7billion. The business plan should also take into account how the energy will be used."

"The investment will only be made when a funding formula is found." The amount of money involved, the complexity and early stage of the technology, as well as the large sum of money, will delay the investment.

Romania, a member of the European Union, uses a mixture of gas, coal and renewable energy sources to generate electricity. It has also committed to phase out lignite, or brown coal, under conditions agreed as part exchange for EU funding.

Nuclearelectrica is a company that owns?two 706-megawatt reactors using Canadian CANDU technologies, which are owned by AtkinsRealis (formerly known as SNC-Lavalin). These reactors account for one fifth of Romanian power production.

It signed a main engineering contract in 2024 for 3.2 billion euros ($3.80 'billion) to build two additional 700 MW nuclear reactors before 2032, with a consortium including U.S. Fluor Corp. and Sargent & Lundy.

It has also signed a main 'engineering contract' to extend the?life?of the first reactor connected to the grid in 1996 by 30 years at a cost around 1.9 billion euro. $1 = 0.8423 Euros (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton; Luiza Ilie)

(source: Reuters)