The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a statement said that it categorically rejected the 'heinous act'
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Fifteen years ago, on December 27, 2009, the UAE signed a historic deal worth Dh75 billion with a South Korean group to build and help operate four nuclear plants. It was historic for both countries in several ways.
The deal made UAE the first Arab nation to have access to civil nuclear power and technology, the first among major oil exporters to actually diversify its source of power generation away from fossil fuel and the first GCC state to have the capability to export nuclear-generated electricity through the GCC power grid.
For South Korea, the deal marked its first commercial export of nuclear technology, making it the newest member of the nuclear exporters’ club long dominated by France, Japan, the US and Russia.
In September this year, UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, announced the start of operations at the fourth and final unit of the Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant located in the Al Dhafra region. It added another 1,400 megawatts of clean electricity capacity for powering the national grid.
The Barakah Plant now generated 40TWh of electricity per year, nearly the equivalent of the annual electricity consumption of New Zealand, and provides up to 25 per cent of the UAE’s electricity, becoming the largest source of clean energy in the region.
Sheikh Mohamed said that the start of operations at the first fully operational nuclear energy facility in the Arab World is a “significant step on the journey towards net zero”.
Despite growing demand, consumption of natural gas for power generation is at a 13-year low in Abu Dhabi because of the significant contribution that Barakah is now making to Abu Dhabi's energy mix.
The selection by Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation (ENEC) of Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) came as a surprise to many observers who early in the bidding process had expected a race between a French consortium including Areva, GdF Suez SA, Electricité de France and Total SA and a US-Japanese consortium including General Electric Co. and Hitachi Ltd.
But the bid from the unexpected contender, led by Korea Electric Power Co., construction units of the Samsung and Hyundai groups, and Westinghouse, a unit of Japan’s Toshiba Corp, emerged as the “best equipped to fulfil the (UAE) government’s partnership requirements in this ambitious programme,” according to Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Chairman of the Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation, or ENEC.
Under the agreement, the two countries will set up a higher committee and sub-committees to facilitate cooperation in fields including energy, sustainability, information technology and communications and human resource development.
Three complementary agreements were also signed in these fields.
The UAE contract is unusual by industry standards because the country has no nuclear experience. As a result, it sought not only the equipment necessary to build its first nuclear reactor, but also an operator to run the plant.
This differs from the typical pattern, in which nuclear-engineering firms supply reactors to established power companies, who know how to operate them. That also meant that UAE was looking for a longer-term politics free relationship which is expected to have gone in favour of Korea.
1995: Signs International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
2003: Signs IAEA agreement on nuclear safeguards.
2003: Signs IAEA convention on physical protection of nuclear material.
2006: Six members of Gulf Cooperation Council (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates) commission study on peaceful use of nuclear energy.
2007: GCC agrees with IAEA to cooperate on feasibility study for a regional nuclear power and desalination plan.
2008: Publishes white paper on nuclear energy. Brings in international nuclear experts to start work to establish main nuclear bodies, the Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation (FANR) and Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation (ENEC).
2009, July: Bids received from three consortia shortlisted for contract to build a fleet of reactors.
2009, Oct 4: UAE approves federal legislation establishing FANR.
2009, Dec 16: US-UAE nuclear cooperation deal comes into force. Government-to government deals.
2009, Dec 23: Abu Dhabi announces formation of ENEC.
2009, Dec 27: ENEC selects Korean consortium to build first fleet of four nuclear reactors.
2012: Construction of the first reactor begins.
2018: Construction of Barakah 1 completed.
2021: First unit begins operations.
2022: Unit 2 of Barakah begins operations.
2023: Third Barakah unit begins commercial operation.
2024: Fourth and final unit of Barakah Nuclear Power Plant begins operations.
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