Enec eyes small modular reactors and AI

14 January 2025

Abu Dhabi-based Emirates Nuclear Energy Company (Enec) is interested in small modular reactors (SMRs), its managing director and CEO, Mohamed Al-Hammadi, told the ongoing Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week summit.

“We are interested in SMRs and exploring opportunities,” Al-Hammadi said, citing the technology’s rapid development vis-a-vis the long-term nature of investments in nuclear plants.

“They are easier and take a shorter time to build, and that’s important, especially because any utility investment takes at least 20 to 30 years.”

Al-Hammadi added that Enec is closely monitoring the role artificial intelligence (AI) will play not just in the production of green electrons but also in its overall economic transformative impact.

He also cited the growing positivity around the adoption of nuclear power as nations and governments develop and implement their 2050 net-zero targets.

“There has been a growing positivity … on nuclear energy being developed by responsible nations.   

“In the UAE, we have done it right; that’s why we are being invited by other nations and companies to develop scalable, large-scale [nuclear power plant] projects,” Al-Hammadi said.

Related readBig Tech fuels nuclear resurgence with small modular reactors.

Abu Dhabi’s 5,600MW Barakah nuclear power plant entered full operations in September last year. Each of the plant’s four nuclear reactors can generate 1,400MW of electricity.

It is a major milestone, coinciding with the UAE’s plan to invest in and develop nuclear power plants further afield. For instance, Enec and South Korea’s Korea Electricity Power Corporation (Kepco) signed a preliminary agreement in June last year to explore nuclear investment opportunities in emerging markets. 

The $100bn US-UAE Partnership for Accelerating Clean Energy (Pace), announced in November 2022, is also expected to shift the two countries’ energy cooperation more towards nuclear energy.

The completion of Barakah 1 also implies that the project’s next phase will likely proceed in earnest.

MEED reported last year that the UAE intends to start government-to-government discussions or tender invitations regarding the project’s next phase.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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