Ex-Soviet state reveals outcome of nuclear referendum
The preliminary results of Sunday’s vote in Kazakhstan indicate that the majority of voters are in favor of building a power plant
Around 71% of voters in Kazakhstan are in favor of building the country’s first nuclear power plant, according to the preliminary results of a referendum on Sunday. Last year, the authorities named Russia’s Rosatom and competitors from France, China, and South Korea among the potential contractors.
The final results are expected within a week of the referendum. The Kazakh election authorities reported late Sunday that preliminary turnout was 63.8% – enough for the vote to be valid.
The government has singled out Zhambyl District in the southeastern region of Almaty as the potential site for the facility. Southern Kazakhstan chronically suffers from electricity shortages.
Speaking to reporters on Sunday, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said: “My personal vision is that an international consortium should be working in Kazakhstan, which would consist of global companies that have the most state-of-the-art technologies.” He added, however, that the final decision has not been made.
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Tokayev earlier argued that the project would ensure Kazakhstan’s sustainable economic progress and strengthen its energy security for decades to come.
After the president officially put forward the idea in an address to the nation in September 2023, officials have held multiple consultations with the population to discuss the matter.
Also last year, Kazakhstan’s Energy Ministry said in a statement that “for the first nuclear power plant in the country, it is recommended to opt for technology [that has been] tested in the construction and successful operation of a similar power plant.”
The statement revealed that Russia’s Rosatom, France’s EDF, China’s CNNC, and South Korea’s KHNP all made the short-list of potential contractors.
The Kazakh government has been eyeing Rosatom’s newest VVER-1200 reactor – the latest iteration of the company’s VVER-1000 model, which was installed and has proven itself at China’s Tianwan, India’s Kudankulam, and Iran’s Bushehr, among other nuclear power plants built by Russian specialists in the 1990s and 2000s.
The new version of the reactor has a service life of 60 years, with output 20% higher than that of the older model.
The first power unit fitted with a VVER-1200 reactor was put into operation in Russia’s Voronezh Region in 2016 – the first 3+ generation power unit in the world. Since then, this type has also been installed at a power plant in Russia’s Leningrad Region and one in Belarus.
As of 2022, Kazakhstan was the world’s top producer of uranium – which is used in electricity generation in nuclear power plants – accounting for 43% of global supply, according to Nasdaq Stock Market estimates.