An anonymous reader shared this report from the Kyiv Independent:
The United States will partner with Ukraine to transition Ukraine’s coal-fired plants to small modular nuclear reactors, and to use them to help decarbonize its steel industry, the countries announced on November 16 at the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Baku, Azerbaijan…
The partnership will build a roadmap and provide technical support to “rebuild, modernize, and decarbonize Ukraine’s steel industry with small modular reactors,” according to a statement from the U.S. State Department… It will also “facilitate the transition of Ukraine’s coal-fired power plants to secure and safe SMR nuclear power plants utilizing existing infrastructure and retraining the workforce,” the statement read.
Another project announced at the conference, known as COP29, will build a pilot plant in Ukraine to demonstrate production of clean hydrogen and ammonia using simulated small modular reactor technology.
That clean hydrogen/ammonia project involves a multinational public-private consortium which also includes Japan and South Korea, according to the U.S. State Department. Their announcement says the three projects “will help position Ukraine to take a leadership role on secure and safe nuclear energy” (as well as industrial decarbonization).
Three years ago the U.S. State Department launched a program to help countries develop nuclear energy programs “to support clean energy goals under the highest international standards for nuclear safety, security, and nonproliferation.” That program will send $30 million for these three projects…
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