1. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012
MENA Nuclear Power Market Map 2012
www.nuclearenergyinsider.com
2. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 2
Forecast for the the Middle East and North Africa
30% of executives surveyed expected11-15 GWe
(Gigawatt of Electrical Energy) to be in operation by 2020
58% of executives surveyed expected up to 40 GWe
to be in operation by 2030
Anticipated demand for electricity is expected to grow
by 25% per year from 2010 to 2015 (Deloitte)
Morocco
Algeria
Tunisia
Libya Egypt
Syria
Turkey
Iraq
Kuwait
Bahrain
Qatar
Jordan
Israel
Lebanon
Saudi
Arabia
Yemen
Oman
UAE
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
2020 2030
This presentation shows the expanding market for nuclear equipment
and services in support of the construction of new Nuclear Power Plants
(NPPs) in the Middle East and North Africa Region.
Further analysis of the market, including 15 in-depth interviews with senior
nuclear industry executives with direct experience of the MENA Market
and government officials, can be found in the The Middle East Nuclear
New Build Report 2012 available now at nuclearenergyinsider.com.
3. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 3
MENA nuclear program tracker
UAE
4 Unit Nuclear Power Power Plant under contract
Project: Braka
Size: Four 1400 MW (e) APR1400 reactors
Supplier: KEPCO
Construction subcontracts: $5.59 billion – Samsung
and Hyundai
Completion: 2017
TURKEY
4 Unit Nuclear Power Power Plant under contract
Project: Akkuya
Size: Four VVER 1200 reactors
Capacity: 4.8 GWe
Construction suppplier: Rosatom
Construction deal: $20 billion
EPC Contractor: JSC Atomstroyexport
Completion: 2019
EGYPT
On hold due to political turmoil, which
prior to the Arab Spring was scheduled
for NPP tender in 2011.
JORDAN
Project: Majdal project
Size: Single unit 750 to 1000MW plant
Scheduled commencement: 2013
Completion: 2017
SAUDI ARABIA
16 reactors to be built over next 20 years.
4. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 4
Future MENA Commercial Nuclear Power Market
n NPP contracted
n Near term developments programs
n Long term interest
UAE
1 to 3 additional
4 reactor NPPs
with unit capacity
expected to
exceed 1200 MWe.
Kuwait
Post Fukushima
– halted plans for
four 1000 MWe
reactors by 2022.
EGYPT
Subject to political stability:
Announced nuclear capacity target:
Four reactors by 2025
JORDAN
Nuclear will provide:
• 6% of total energy by 2020
• 30% of total energy by 2030-2040
SAUDI ARABIA
Nuclear energy will provide 20% of total energy by 2030.
Announced nuclear capacity target is 16 reactors by 2030:
• First two reactors targeted for completion by 2021
• Two more to be completed each year after 2021
Expected total capacity: 22.4 GWe
TURKEY
Nuclear will provide 5% of total energy by 2020.
Future programs
Project: Sinop
Status: Negotiations with TEPCO regarding a NPP
(four 1350nMWe ABWR reactors) were halted
following the accident in Fukushima.
Possible future bids:
• APWR reactors supplied by Mitsubishi with Kansai
• French consortium of Areva and GDF Suez
NPP contracted
Turkey
UAE *
Near term development programs
Bahrain *
Egypt
Jordan
Kuwait *
Oman *
Qatar *
Saudi Arabia *
Long term interest
Algeria
Iraq
Israel
Lebanon
Libya
Morocco
Syria
Tunisia
Yemen
* Members of the Gulf Cooperation Council’s (GCC) nuclear power cooperation initiative.
Further explanation of the GCC’s role and objectives can be found in section 2.5.4 of the full report.
5. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 5
Potential civilian nuclear energy spending
2012 2019 2025
$1.5bn $13bn $9bn
2012 2019 2025
$3bn $18.5bn $14bn
$0.25bn
2012 2019 2025
$3.5bn $1bn
JORDAN
TURKEY
$0bn $1bn $0.5bn
2012 2019 2025
EGYPT
2012 2019 2025
$1bn $7bn $7bn
SAUDI ARABIA
UAE
6. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 6
MENA research reactors status tracker
EGYPT
Facility: ETRR-1
Type: Tank WWR
Power KW(t): 2,000
Status: Operational
LIBYA
Facility: IRT-1
Type: Pool, IRT
Power KW(t): 10,000
Status: Operational
MOROCCO
Facility: MA-R1
Type: Triga Mark II
Power KW(t): 2,000
Status: Operational
ALGERIA
Facility: NUR
Type: Pool
Power KW(t): 1,000
Status: Operational
EGYPT
Facility: ETRR-2
Type: Pool
Power KW(t): 22,000
Status: Operational
ALGERIA
Facility: ES-SALAM
Type: Heavy Water
Power KW(t): 15,000
Status: Operational
ISRAEL
Facility: IRR-1
Type: Pool
Power KW(t): 5,000
Status: Operational
TURKEY
Facility: TR-1, Turkish Reactor 1
Type: Pool
Power KW(t): 1,000
Status: Shut down
ISRAEL
Facility: IRR-2
Type: Heavy Water
Power KW(t): 26,000
Status: Unverified information
TURKEY
Facility: TR-2, Turkish Reactor 2
Type: Pool
Power KW(t): 5,000
Status: Shut down
JORDAN
Facility: JSA
Type: Subcritical
Power KW(t): 0
Status: Under construction
IRAQ
Facility: TAMMUZ-2
Type: Pool
Power KW(t): 500
Status: Shut Down
JORDAN
Facility: Jordan Research and
Training Reactor
Type: Tank in Pool
Power KW(t): 5,000
Status: Under construction
IRAQ
Facility: IRT-5000
Type: Pool, IRT
Power KW(t): 5,000
Status: Operational
TURKEY
Facility: ITU-TRR, Tech Univ
Type: Triga Mark II
Power KW(t): 250
Status: Operational
7. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 7
Major nuclear programs: Jordan
Jordan
Mid 2007 Nuclear Engineering Department established at Jordan University of Science
and Technology
May 2008 Nuclear Law establishes JAEC and independent JNRC
July 2008 Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd (AECL) with SNC-Lavalin conduct a 3-year
feasibility study on building an AECL 740 MWe Enhanced Candu-6 reactor
using natural uranium fuel, for power and desalination
December 2008 MOU with Korea Electric Power Corp (KEPCO) to carry out site selection
and feasibility study on nuclear power and desalination projects
January 2009 JRTR RFP issued
September 2009 Tractabel Engineering, a subsidiary of GdF Suez, undertakes a two-year siting
study
November 2009 $11.83 million agreement with Worley Parsons for the pre-construction
phase of a 1000 MWe nuclear power plant. (Technology selection, tender
preparation and bid evaluation)
March 2010 $130 million agreement with Korean Atomic Energy Research Institute and
Daewoo Engineering and Construction Co, to construct a 5-megawatt reactor,
a radioactive isotope manufacturing facility, and a nuclear training centre near
the northern city of Irbid
April 2010 Agreement with Areva for the protection of the planned nuclear installations
and the exploration and mining of uranium
July 2010 Fixed price EPC contract for JRTR awarded to KAERI & Daewoo E&C
Mid 2010 JSA construction initiated
November 2010 Groundbreaking for Jordan Center for Nuclear Research
February 2011 GDF Suez, Rosatom, Datang International Power Generation Co. and Kansai
Electric Power Co. short-listed as possible strategic partners to operate and
invest in the new plant
Mid 2011 JSA commissioning
Late 2011 JRTR PSAR Submittal
December 2011 NPP Supplier selected
December 2013 JRTR FSAR Submittal
July 2014 JRTR Operating License & Fuel load
2020 First NPP online
Program Highlights and Schedule
8. THE MIDDLE EAST NUCLEAR NEW BUILD REPORT 2012 | PAGE 8
Major nuclear programs: Turkey
Turkey
1976 Akkuyu site license approved
1982 Revised nuclear law establishing Turkish Atomic Energy Authority
(TAEK) issued
1997 Proposals for Akkuyu received
2000 Akkuyu Project cancelled
2007 Nuclear laws updated to address the construction and operation of NPP
and sale of their electricity
• TAEK set criteria on construction and operation of NPP
March 2008 Issued Tender for Akkuyu
June 2008 123 Civilian nuclear cooperation agreement signed with US
May 2009 High Planning Council approved the Strategy Paper Concerning the Electricity
Market and Security of Supply targeting nuclear to reach a minimum of 5% by
2020, expected to increase
May 2010 $20 billion Intergovernmental agreement (IGA) signed with Rosatum to build,
own and operate the AES 2006 Akkuyu plant with four 1200 MWe units
June 2010 Civilian nuclear cooperation agreement signed with South Korea
November 2010 KEPCO withdraws from negotiation for Second Project
Mid 2011 TEPCO withdraws from negotiation for Second Project
Late 2013 Akkuyu First concrete
2018 First unit to be operational
2019 Akkuyu Commercial Operation
2021 Last units operational
Program Highlights and Schedule