A Saudi Arabian official Monday reiterated his country's interest in exploring the possibility of developing nuclear power following the Fukushima disaster, despite a decision by Germany Monday to exit nuclear energy by 2022.
A Saudi Arabian official Monday reiterated his country's interest in
exploring the possibility of developing nuclear power following the
Fukushima
disaster, despite a decision by
Germany
Monday to exit nuclear energy by 2022.
Abdullah Al-Shehri, governor of the kingdom's electricity regulator, compared
the Fukushima disaster to the sinking of the Titanic, but said: "If we
took this as a measure we would have stopped building ships."
"I think the Japanese earthquake is an incitement to look at safety
measures rather than whether we should persevere or not persevere," he
said at an energy conference here in response to a question from the audience.
The world's largest oil exporter is planning to broaden its energy mix to
reduce the amount of crude oil it burns in power plants, freeing up more hydrocarbons
for export. In February, it signed a cooperation agreement with the French
nuclear engineering firm Areva SA (CEI.FR).
A spokesman for the
King
Abdullah
City
for
Atomic and Renewable Energy, the Saudi body in charge of developing nuclear
plans, wrote in an email to Dow Jones Saturday that a new energy policy would
be made public in the coming months spelling out the role of nuclear projects
in the kingdom.
"The (unfortunate Fukushima) incident did not affect the choice of adding
nuclear to the energy mix, however, the incident will ensure that each and
every decision related to nuclear power plant development will be based on
updated safety regulations, operating standards, and crisis evaluations,"
the spokesman wrote.
Saudi officials and oil analysts estimate that
Saudi
Arabia
now burns 1.1 million-1.4
million barrels a day of energy liquids, including distillates, crude oil and
heavy fuel oil in its power plants.
The
Middle East
's largest economy is experiencing soaring peak
load electricity demand growth of 10% a year, the country's deputy electricity
minister told Dow Jones last week. Al-Shehri said the country would need 120
gigawatts of installed capacity by 2032.
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