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Argentina's Milei will partially privatize the nuclear power plant operator

His spokesperson announced on Tuesday that the Argentine president Javier Milei would sign a decree aimed to partially privatize the company responsible for three nuclear power plants in operation. The libertarian leader is continuing his pledges to reduce the size of state.

Manuel Adorni, a spokesperson for the Milei administration, told a news conference that the administration plans to sell 44 percent of Nucleoelectrica Argentina, which operates Atucha I and Atucha II power plants as well as Embalse, in an international public auction.

He added that the state would keep a 51% share in the company, and also set up a program of joint ownership for up to 5%.

Adorni reiterated that the South American nation's state-run businesses are all subject to privatization.

Milei was elected in December 2023, promising to reduce spending to bring the public finances into balance and to tame an annual inflation rate that reached triple digits.

In a separate announcement, the government stated that private investments were crucial to increasing access to capital and diversifying risks as well as ensuring the continuation of NA-SA operations in an efficient and competitive manner.

A group of workers from Argentina's National Commission for Atomic Energy and Nuclear Activity has criticized the decision. They claim that the government should be in a position to oversee the development and safety nuclear energy and that partial privatization will result in higher electricity prices.

In a press release, it stated that privatizing NA-SA would not improve the lives of people, but instead encourage citizens to pay the difference in order to boost the profits of a private firm.

(source: Reuters)