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PGE to select nuclear project in next few years CEO says, report

Poland's top statecontrolled energy PGE will decide on whether it will purchase atomic energy in the next couple of years, the business's CEO said in remarks released on Saturday, signaling unpredictability around the job that was initiated by the previous federal government.

Private Polish utility ZE PAK, PGE and Korea Hydro & & Nuclear Power (KHNP) concurred in 2022 to deal with advancement of 4 1,400-megawatt atomic power plants in Patnow, central Poland, using South Korean technology.

The project was set to be nation's second nuclear power plant, supplementing the output of the first plant to be constructed by U.S. company Westinghouse Electric Co on the Baltic Sea coast. That very first plant now faces a delay.

Poland's brand-new government, which took office in December, vowed it would look for to drastically increase the share of clean power in electricity generation that is now controlled by coal however has yet to present a comprehensive policy update on the energy mix.

We are at a really initial stage of task analysis. The application of such a key energy facilities task should be included in the federal government's general method relating to the development and target design of the nuclear energy sector in our country, PGE CEO Dariusz Marzec told Business Expert.

Only after the government picks that design and once the Patnow task analysis is ready will it be clear if PGE needs to invest in nuclear power or concentrate on establishing its Baltic offshore portfolio of over 7 gigawatts, Marzec stated asked when a. choice would be made.

It's a matter of the next couple of years, he said.

(source: Reuters)