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Thailand exploring small modular nuclear reactor technology, states PM

Thailand is checking out small modular nuclear reactor technology as Southeast Asia's. secondlargest economy seeks to diversify its energy mix amid. diminishing reserves of gas that produces much of its. power, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said.

Our green shift objective is one of the most ambitious in. Southeast Asia, and we have a detailed roadmap in place to. have 50% of energy production be eco-friendly by 2040, Srettha. stated in a speech on Friday at an American Chamber of Commerce. event in Bangkok.

Together with green hydrogen and battery storage services, the. nation is looking at small modular reactor (SMR) power plants. to make producing more environmentally friendly, he said.

SMRs are innovative atomic power plants with the capability to. create around one-third of the electrical energy produced by. conventional nuclear power reactors, according to the. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Under a previous power development strategy, Thailand's first. nuclear power plant was set up to start operation in 2020 but. the job was delayed after Japan's Fukushima nuclear mishap. in 2011.

Southeast Asia currently has no functional atomic power plant,. although numerous nations in the region have looked for to establish. civilian nuclear jobs, consisting of through SMR technology.

Though SMRs have lower upfront capital expense per system, their. economic competitiveness is still to be proven in practice once. they are released, according to the IAEA.

Thailand mostly depends on natural gas for its. electrification needs, with the fuel accounting for two-thirds. of its electrical power generation. The nation has increase. melted natural gas (LNG) imports recently due to. falling domestic reserves.

Renewable energy currently comprises around 23% of. Thailand's overall set up capability, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce, led by solar, wind, little and big. hydropower jobs. The country also imports hydropower from. neighbouring Laos.

In its most recent power development plan, covering the. period in between 2018 and 2037, Thailand aims to meet 53% of its. energy requirement from natural gas, 36% from renewable sources. and 11% from coal and other nonrenewable fuel sources.

(source: Reuters)