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by Shatha Yaish and Dana Moukhallati

The United Arab Emirates said Monday it has issued a licence for one of four reactors at its Barakah nuclear power plant, due to start operating soon in a first for the Arab world.

Here are some facts about the plant, designed to supplement the energy needs of a country which has substantial oil reserves but is investing heavily in renewables.

– What is the UAE’s nuclear programme? -The $22.4 billion Barakah plant, on the Gulf coast west of Abu Dhabi, is being built by a consortium led by the Korea Electric Power Corporation.

When fully operational, the four reactors will generate 5,600 megawatts, around 25 percent of the UAE’s electricity needs.

Abu Dhabi authorities said in January that the plant would start operating within months. No new date was given on Monday but Hamad al-Kaabi, the UAE representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency, indicated it would happen soon.

“The full operation of Barakah plant in the near future will contribute to the UAE’s efforts for development and sustainability,” he told journalists.

He said the licence is the culmination of “12 years of efforts”.

The plant is a regional first. Neighbouring Saudi Arabia has announced plans to build up to 16 nuclear reactors, but they have yet to materialise.

– Why go nuclear? -The UAE’s seven emirates have an energy-hungry population of 10 million, mostly expatriates. Its glass skyscrapers and their air-conditioning systems guzzle energy, particularly during the scorching summer.

The fourth largest crude producer in the OPEC cartel, the country was built on oil and sits on a huge, recently discovered gas field.

Nevertheless, it is spending billions to develop enough renewable energy to cover half of its needs by 2050.

Officials hope that as well as generating cheap electricity, the plant will elevate the UAE’s status as a regional player with influence extending to Yemen, the Horn of Africa and Libya.

“This is part of the UAE’s drive to diversify its energy economy, reduce dependence on fossil fuels, and project its image as a regional leader in science and technology,” one Gulf analyst told AFP.

Other big projects include a homegrown space program which sent the first Emirati astronaut into space last year and plans to launch a probe to Mars.

– Is it safe? – The first of the Barakah plant’s reactors had been due to come online in late 2017, but that was delayed several times to meet regulations.

“There have been delays in issuing the required license (from the country’s atomic regulator) to ensure the safety of the nuclear plant,” the Gulf analyst said.

The state-owned Emirates Nuclear Energy Corp (ENEC) announced in December that the reactor’s first nuclear fuel assemblies were expected to be loaded in the first quarter of 2020.

The UAE has repeatedly said its nuclear ambitions are for “peaceful purposes” and moved to dispel any concerns over safety.

It cites more than 40 international missions and reviews by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO) since 2010, demonstrating its commitment to transparency.

Residents living within 50 kilometres (30 miles) of the plant have been instructed on what to do in case of an accident.

The UAE has said it will not be developing an uranium enrichment programme or nuclear reprocessing technologies.

– How’s the neighbourhood? -The Barakah plant is located near the border of Saudi Arabia, closer to the Qatari capital Doha than to UAE capital Abu Dhabi. It lies on the Emirates coast, separated from Iran by troubled Gulf waters.

Relations between Iran and the UAE, a staunch US ally, have deteriorated as Washington has pursued a “maximum pressure” policy against Tehran and accused it of attacking oil tankers in Gulf waters.

A missile and drone attack that knocked out half of energy giant Saudi Aramco’s production was claimed by Yemen’s Huthi rebels, but Washington pointed the finger at Iran.

“The 2019 attack on Aramco highlighted the vulnerability of the Gulf’s energy infrastructure to external attacks,” the Gulf analyst said.

Tensions pitting Iran against the US and its allies “increases the vulnerability of new energy infrastructure to the possibility of such attacks.”

Meanwhile Qatar, the target of a boycott by Saudi Arabia, the UAE and others since June 2017, last year said the plant poses a “flagrant threat to regional peace and environment”.

The Emirates said there was no cause for concern, reiterating its commitment to “the highest degree of nuclear safety, security and nuclear non-proliferation”.

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© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

ByAFP