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Rosatom will explore the construction of a high-capacity reactor in Uzbekistan

Rosatom will explore the construction of a high-capacity reactor in Uzbekistan

Rosatom, the state-owned nuclear corporation of Russia, signed a deal with Uzbekistan’s Atomic Energy Agency on Friday to examine the feasibility and cost of building a nuclear power plant capable enough to generate large amounts in this Central Asian nation.

Rosatom has already planned to build smaller nuclear units in Uzbekistan. The agreement was signed with the Uzbek Government at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. Over the weekend, the Kazakh government also asked the Russian energy company to lead a group to build the country's first nuclear power station.

The five former Soviet Central Asian republics do not have any nuclear power plants, despite the fact that Uzbekistan, and its neighbor Kazakhstan, who are both uranium-producing countries, have said for years that their economies, which are growing, need them.

The Uzbekistan facility will use two VVER-1000 Russian reactors with the option to expand to four. In May of last year, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a deal with Uzbek president Shavkat Miziyoyev to build smaller plants in Uzbekistan. Each plant will have a 55 megawatt capacity.

Alexei Likhachev, the head of Rosatom, said on Friday that Rosatom is discussing building two nuclear reactors with low power and two with high power in Uzbekistan.

Likhachev, a reporter in St. Petersburg, told reporters that the small modular nuclear plant in Uzbekistan was the first export of modern small power plants in the world. Likhachev said that the plants will help Uzbekistan meet its increasing electricity needs.

He told journalists that the company had also approved a preliminary roadmap for two units in Kazakhstan using Russian VVER-1200 nuclear reactors.

(source: Reuters)