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Rosatom, the Russian nuclear company, says that overseas nuclear plants will continue to be built despite UK sanctions

Rosatom, the Russian state-owned company, said on Thursday that it will continue to work on its foreign nuclear power plants and meet its obligations in spite of a new British sanction against Russian companies.

The UK included three subsidiaries of Rosatom that are linked to the company's foreign projects as part of its latest sanctions package. This is its biggest since Russia sent troops to Ukraine in 2022. The UK government stated that the subsidiaries were included in its latest sanctions package because they were involved "in trying [to] secure contracts for new Russian nuclear installations abroad, opening up additional revenue streams to?make up?for plunging oil revenues".

"Rosatom views any unilateral restrictions as illegal under international law. Safety is the top priority in 'the field of peaceful nucleonic energy. These measures undermine the 'foundation' of peaceful nuclear energy, Rosatom stated in a press release.

Rosatom is not a sanctioned entity.

By 2024, Rosatom will have the largest portfolio of nuclear power plants abroad - 33 large-capacity units. The company is building nuclear plants across the globe, including in Turkey, Egypt and China.

Rosatom has announced that it is the No. Rosatom is the world's No.

KAZAKHSTAN - PROJECT

Kazakhstan will choose Rosatom to lead an international consortium in June 2025 for the construction of its first nuclear power plant.

The Kazakhstan Atomic Energy Agency (KAEA), said Thursday that UK sanctions would not affect construction because the agency 'doesn't have any contract relationships with sanctioned individuals or entities and doesn't plan to include them as subcontractors.

The agency stated that the work on the power station is progressing according to plan and that it is also monitoring the sanctions policies of other countries, taking into account the risks. The agency said that the work on the power plant is?currently progressing as planned and?the agency is monitoring sanctions?policies of other countries and taking risks into account.

(source: Reuters)