The oil-rich UAE began construction yesterday of a second nuclear
power plant, one of four reactors aimed at cutting carbon dioxide
emissions by some 12 million tonnes a year in 2020.
Emirates
Nuclear Energy Corp (ENEC) said it poured the first part of safety
concrete for Unit 2, in a ceremony attended by visiting Korean Trade,
Industry and Energy Sang-jick Yoon.
In 2009, an international
consortium led by the state-run Korea Electric Power Corp won a $20.4
billion (15.8 billion euro) deal to build four nuclear power plants in
Baraka, west of Abu Dhabi.
Under the biggest single contract Seoul
has ever won abroad, South Korean firms including Samsung, Hyundai and
Doosan Heavy Industries will build the four 1,400-megawatt reactors.
Work began last year on the first plant, which is expected to enter service in 2017 after further regulatory approvals.
Unit
2 is to begin commercial operations in 2018. In addition to
diversifying the UAE’s energy supply once operational, the four plants
should cut 12 million tonnes of CO2 emissions annually by 2020, ENEC
said.
ENEC said it had applied in March to the Federal Authority
for Nuclear Regulation for construction licences for Units 3 and 4, but
did not indicate when work would begin.
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