First Chinese firm wins contract for Russian floating nuclear power project
- Shipbuilder Wison (Nantong) Heavy Industries Co has been commissioned to build the hulls for two floating plants for state-run Rosatom
- The two countries have been steadily developing political and economic ties, with energy a key area of cooperation
China’s Wison (Nantong) Heavy Industries Co won a bid to build the hulls for two floating nuclear power plants for Rosatom, a Russian state nuclear energy corporation, at a price of US$226 million, the newspaper Kommersant reported.
The two floating nuclear power plants will be used to supply power to the Baimsky mining and processing plant in Chukotka in Russia’s far east.
Russia completed the world’s first floating nuclear power plant, the Akademik Lomonosov, in 2019 and is building more to provide power to remote areas of the country.
According to analysts cited by the report, the Chinese shipyard was chosen for reasons of cost effectiveness and its ability to complete the work on time.
The report said the hulls would be delivered to Russian shipyards after completion in 2023 and 2024, where key work, including the installation of reactors, would be carried out.