يتحدث الخبر عن أن السودان يسعى لامتلاك محطة للطاقة النووية في العام 2030 لانتاج 4400 ميغاواط
وعلى المدى القصير يسعى السودان لبناء مفاعل للأبحاث في العام 2020
وقالت هيئة البحوث الجيولجية الحكومية أن عمليات التنقيب عن اليورانيوم هي أولوية وستقوم به الشركات الروسية
الجدير بالذكر أن السودان وقع اتفاقيات مع العديد من الشركات الروسية للعمل في مجال التعدين
Sudan
Sudan’s grid capacity was 2600 MWe in 2012. In 2011 it produced 8.6 TWh, 6.5 TWh of this from hydro.
In 2007 a nuclear power program was initiated by the Ministry of Energy & Mines, and in 2010 the country started considering the feasibility of a nuclear power plant, and Sudan's Atomic Energy Commission is consulting the IAEA. The Ministry of Electricity and Dams (MED) is the main agency, and it has set up the Nuclear Energy Generation Dept (NEGD) to undertake a feasibility study along with site and technology selection. The objective is to have a nuclear plant with four 300-600 MWe units, or 4400 MWe, operating by 2030. There is an Atomic Energy Act, but radwaste and transport functions will be under a comprehensive new draft Nuclear Act incorporating IAEA safety and other principles.
In the short term, Sudan aims to build a research reactor by 2020, and IAEA is assessing this proposal.
In July 2015 the government’s Geological Research Authority said that uranium exploration was a high priority and, with any mining, would be undertaken by Russian companies.
Sudan has been an IAEA member since 1958 and has had a safeguards agreement with IAEA under NPT since 1975.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/inform...nuclear-energy-countries.aspx#ECSArticleLink2
http://mod.gov.sd/index.php/الإقتصا...فس-سيرفى-الروسية-العاملة-فى-مجال-التعدين.html
http://www.ashorooq.net/news_site/i...:10-&catid=35:2008-07-30-07-04-03&Itemid=1191
وعلى المدى القصير يسعى السودان لبناء مفاعل للأبحاث في العام 2020
وقالت هيئة البحوث الجيولجية الحكومية أن عمليات التنقيب عن اليورانيوم هي أولوية وستقوم به الشركات الروسية
الجدير بالذكر أن السودان وقع اتفاقيات مع العديد من الشركات الروسية للعمل في مجال التعدين
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Emerging Nuclear Energy Countries
(Updated February 2016)
Sudan
Sudan’s grid capacity was 2600 MWe in 2012. In 2011 it produced 8.6 TWh, 6.5 TWh of this from hydro.
In 2007 a nuclear power program was initiated by the Ministry of Energy & Mines, and in 2010 the country started considering the feasibility of a nuclear power plant, and Sudan's Atomic Energy Commission is consulting the IAEA. The Ministry of Electricity and Dams (MED) is the main agency, and it has set up the Nuclear Energy Generation Dept (NEGD) to undertake a feasibility study along with site and technology selection. The objective is to have a nuclear plant with four 300-600 MWe units, or 4400 MWe, operating by 2030. There is an Atomic Energy Act, but radwaste and transport functions will be under a comprehensive new draft Nuclear Act incorporating IAEA safety and other principles.
In the short term, Sudan aims to build a research reactor by 2020, and IAEA is assessing this proposal.
In July 2015 the government’s Geological Research Authority said that uranium exploration was a high priority and, with any mining, would be undertaken by Russian companies.
Sudan has been an IAEA member since 1958 and has had a safeguards agreement with IAEA under NPT since 1975.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/inform...nuclear-energy-countries.aspx#ECSArticleLink2
http://mod.gov.sd/index.php/الإقتصا...فس-سيرفى-الروسية-العاملة-فى-مجال-التعدين.html
http://www.ashorooq.net/news_site/i...:10-&catid=35:2008-07-30-07-04-03&Itemid=1191