• বাংলা |
  • English |
  • عربي
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Rohingya Press – Truth. Voice. Resistance
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Daily Publications
  • History
  • OP-ED
    • Opinion & Editorials
    • Letters from Exile
    • Interviews
  • Reports
    • UN & NGO Reports
    • Legal & Policy Briefs
    • Academic Research
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
  • Daily Publications
  • History
  • OP-ED
    • Opinion & Editorials
    • Letters from Exile
    • Interviews
  • Reports
    • UN & NGO Reports
    • Legal & Policy Briefs
    • Academic Research
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Rohingya Press
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Russia’s Rosatom says will proceed with Myanmar nuclear plant despite quake

April 23, 2025
in Business, Refugees
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Russia’s Rosatom says will proceed with Myanmar nuclear plant despite quake
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS

BANGKOK, April 22 (Reuters) – A plan to build a nuclear power plant will continue in Myanmar, a war-torn Southeast Asian country partly devastated by a massive earthquake in March, the Russian state-owned firm leading the project told Reuters.
Myanmar’s junta chief Min Aung Hlaing and Russian President Vladimir Putin last month signed an agreement for a small-scale nuclear facility, three weeks before the 7.7 magnitude quake flattened communities and left more than 3,700 people dead – the country’s deadliest natural disaster in decades.

The agreement involves cooperation to build a Small Modular Reactor (SMR) in Myanmar with an initial 110 MW capacity, consisting of two 55 MW reactors manufactured by Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom.
“The recent earthquake has not affected Rosatom’s plans in Myanmar,” the company’s press office said in an email.
“Rosatom adheres to the highest international safety and reliability standards, including strict seismic resistance requirements.”
The company’s intention to go ahead with the nuclear plan despite the quake, which crippled critical infrastructure, has not been previously reported.

READ ALSO

India pushes 21 Rohingya into Bangladesh through Sherpur border

Five Rohingyas cross into Bangladesh to escape torture by Arakan Army: RRRC official

Rosatom declined to provide any construction timeline or details of the location of the proposed nuclear facility that will be powered by RITM-200N reactors, which were made by the company for use initially on icebreaker ships.
A Myanmar junta spokesman did not respond to calls from Reuters seeking comment.
The push for nuclear power in Myanmar comes amid an expanding civil war triggered by a 2021 military coup that removed the elected government of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.
Facing a collection of established ethnic armies and new armed groups set up in the wake of the coup, the ruling junta has lost ground across large parts of the country and increasing leaned on its few foreign allies, including Russia.
The conflict, which stretches from the border with China to the coast along the Bay of Bengal, has displaced more than 3.5 million people and left Myanmar’s mainly agrarian economy is tatters.

Myanmar is currently evaluating options for financing the Russia-backed nuclear power project. “This may involve both own and borrowed funds,” Rosatom said. In places such as Bangladesh and Egypt, Russia has funded conventional nuclear power projects through low interest loans.
Authorities in neighbouring Thailand, which is closely monitoring Myanmar’s nuclear developments, assess that a plant could be built in Naypyitaw, a fortified purpose-built capital that was heavily damaged by the earthquake, according to a security source briefed on the matter.
Two other potential sites include a location in the central Bago region and the Dawei special economic zone in southern Myanmar, where the junta and Russia have announced plans to build a port and an oil refinery, according to the Thai assessment.

Myanmar lies on the boundary between two tectonic plates and is one of the world’s most seismically active countries.
MONEY AND MANPOWER
Southeast Asia’s first nuclear facility – the 621 MW Bataan Nuclear Power Plant in the Philippines – was finished in 1984 with a price tag of $2.3 billion but mothballed in the wake of the Chornobyl disaster, opens new tab in the then Soviet Union two years later.
The Philippines and other regional countries have since mounted repeated efforts to explore nuclear energy but made limited progress.
Vietnam is, however, renewing a bet on nuclear power after it suspended its programme in 2016.
Russia and Myanmar have been collaborating in the sector for years, with Burmese students studying nuclear energy and related subjects in Russian universities under government quotas since 2019, according to Rosatom.
In comparison to a large conventional nuclear power reactor, components of SMRs can be assembled and transported as a single unit to the installation location, according the International Atomic Energy Agency, opens new tab.
“I do not foresee any complication, technology-wise,” said Doonyapong Wongsawaeng, a lecturer at the Department of Nuclear Engineering at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.
“I feel that the main challenge would instead be the continuous commitment from the Myanmar government.”
With the Myanmar junta prioritising exports of natural gas, which could be used to fuel cheaper domestic power generation, to earn foreign exchange, the nuclear plan makes no economic sense for a cash-strapped administration, said Richard Horsey, senior Myanmar adviser at International Crisis Group.
“Nuclear power is very expensive, and Myanmar simply can’t afford it,” he said.
Reporting by Panu Wongcha-um; Editing by Devjyot Ghoshal and Kate Mayberry

Source: Reuters
Tags: English NewsMyanmarnuclear plantRussia

Related Posts

Five Rohingyas cross into Bangladesh to escape torture by Arakan Army: RRRC official
Refugees

India pushes 21 Rohingya into Bangladesh through Sherpur border

July 25, 2025
Two-year-old Abdur Rahman’s leg had to be amputated after it was torn apart by shellfire during an Arakan Army (AA) attack in Buthidaung, Rakhine State, in 2024. Photo: Collected
Arakan

Five Rohingyas cross into Bangladesh to escape torture by Arakan Army: RRRC official

July 25, 2025
Pakistan only issuing passports to Rohingya, not giving them citizenship: Interior minister
Refugees

Pakistan only issuing passports to Rohingya, not giving them citizenship: Interior minister

July 24, 2025
Myanmar junta offers cash rewards to anti-coup defectors
Refugees

Shared Future, Shared Purpose: How Refugee Youth Are Solving Global Problems

July 19, 2025
Investigation found ICG report of dangers on Rohingya insurgency false, misleading
Investigations

Investigation found ICG report of dangers on Rohingya insurgency false, misleading

July 18, 2025
Rohingyas start internal civil society polls in Cox’s Bazar to form rights body
Refugee Camps

Rohingyas start internal civil society polls in Cox’s Bazar to form rights body

July 17, 2025
Next Post
The 69-member Malaysian team includes 16 officers, with the rest consisting of healthcare professionals, administrators, logisticians, engineers, and water and electricity technicians.- Markas ATM via Bernama

Malaysia opens temporary medical centre in Myanmar to provide free treatment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EDITOR'S PICK

Rohingya Repatriation: Reality or Rhetoric?

Rohingya Repatriation: Reality or Rhetoric?

April 27, 2025
Cho Tun Aung was shot dead in Yangon; the attack was claimed by Golden Valley Warriors, a little-known group

Myanmar ex-general slain in attack by anti-coup fighters

May 23, 2025
Russia’s Rosatom says will proceed with Myanmar nuclear plant despite quake

Russia’s Rosatom says will proceed with Myanmar nuclear plant despite quake

April 23, 2025
EU demands accountability for Myanmar school strike

Plea in top court seeks return, release of ‘forcibly deported’ Rohingya refugees

May 14, 2025

POPULAR NEWS

Starved, stateless and forgotten: Asia’s Rohingya crisis demands a reckoning

Starved, stateless and forgotten: Asia’s Rohingya crisis demands a reckoning

July 26, 2025
US lifts sanctions on Myanmar junta allies after general praises Trump

US lifts sanctions on Myanmar junta allies after general praises Trump

July 26, 2025
Kaladan Project’s planned two-year timeline prompts discussion of Arakan Army’s role

Kaladan Project’s planned two-year timeline prompts discussion of Arakan Army’s role

July 25, 2025
Five Rohingyas cross into Bangladesh to escape torture by Arakan Army: RRRC official

India pushes 21 Rohingya into Bangladesh through Sherpur border

July 25, 2025
Two-year-old Abdur Rahman’s leg had to be amputated after it was torn apart by shellfire during an Arakan Army (AA) attack in Buthidaung, Rakhine State, in 2024. Photo: Collected

Five Rohingyas cross into Bangladesh to escape torture by Arakan Army: RRRC official

July 25, 2025

About RohingyaPress

Rohingya Press is committed to amplifying the voices of the Rohingya people by delivering accurate, timely, and unbiased news.

Follow us

Categories

  • Analysis
  • Arakan
  • Burma
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
  • History
  • Interview
  • Investigations
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Refugee Camps
  • Refugees
  • Repatriation
  • Reports
  • Statements
  • World News

Latest News

  • Starved, stateless and forgotten: Asia’s Rohingya crisis demands a reckoning
  • US lifts sanctions on Myanmar junta allies after general praises Trump
  • Kaladan Project’s planned two-year timeline prompts discussion of Arakan Army’s role
  • India pushes 21 Rohingya into Bangladesh through Sherpur border
July 2025
M T W T F S S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  
« Jun    
  • বাংলা
  • عربي
  • English
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Fair Use Notice

© 2025 RohingyaPress News - published by ITM Ex-Forum.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Refugees
  • Burma
  • Arakan
  • Business
  • World News
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion

© 2025 RohingyaPress News - published by ITM Ex-Forum.