Russia’s Rosatom state nuclear energy corporation will continue working this year to ensure that multiple power units are ready for commissioning in Bangladesh, Bolivia, and Turkiye, according to Atomenergoprom. The company is a 100% state-owned holding company that unifies the Russian civil nuclear industry and is part of the Rosatom state corporation.
Interest on the part of customers in the energy market is shifting toward flexible solutions regarding both generation volume and financing volume. Rosatom intends to pay special attention to promoting low-power nuclear power plants in 2025, with plans to enter into new agreements on projects with countries in Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia, Atomenergoprom stated.
Rosatom is also working to enter new markets in the area of energy storage, with strategic partnership projects and supplying electricity-storage devices to countries in Latin America, Southeast Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, Nigeria, India, and South Africa under development.
Rosatom’s ten-year portfolio of foreign orders totalled US$128.8 billion at the end of 2024, and US$200.4 billion for the entire life cycle.
Rosatom plans to have several more facilities in numerous other countries in the near future, CEO Alexei Likhachev has added. Collaborating in the nuclear energy sphere has been the subject of Russia’s talks with the leaders of Egypt, Brazil, Mongolia, and European countries, with Likhachev saying last month that “Russian President Putin’s negotiations with Egypt, Brazil, Mongolia, and European countries more negotiations on nuclear issues in recent months.”
Further Reading
Rosatom Proposes Small Nuclear Power Plants And High Capacity Units To Brazil