Reuters: Russia signs $16.5 billion deal to build first nuclear power plant in Kazakhstan

11:55 29.05.2026 •

Russia ‌signed an agreement on Thursday with Kazakhstan to build the first nuclear power plant in Central Asia's largest country at a cost of about $16.5 billion, partially covered by a major export loan from Moscow, writes Reuters.

Kazakhstan, the world's biggest producer of uranium and a ​country which suffered from the fallout from Soviet nuclear testing, has been discussing the possibility of ​atomic power for at least two decades.

A 2024 referendum returned a vote in favour ⁠of constructing a nuclear power plant and designated the village of Ulken, on the shores of Lake Balkhash ​in the southeast of the country as the site.

"The agreement signed today on the construction of the Balkhash ​NPP has an important role," Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Kazakhstan's president, said before thanking Russian President Vladimir Putin, who was in Astana for talks, for his support.

"Putting the plant into operation will make a significant contribution to the energy supply of the Kazakh economy," ​Putin said.

The two sides also signed an agreement on the provision of Russian export credit to finance construction ​of the plant.

Russia's state nuclear corporation Rosatom won the lead role in building the plant, edging out China National ‌Nuclear ⁠Corporation (CNNC), French utility EDF and Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power, according to Kazakhstan's atomic energy agency.

The head of Kazakhstan's atomic energy agency, Almasadam Satkaliyev, told reporters that the cost of the plant - with two VVER-1200 III+ reactors - would be about $16.5 billion, including about $2 billion for security and infrastructure.

Construction will begin in 2027 and the first reactor ​will be commissioned in early ​2034, according to Satkaliyev.

Kazakhstan ⁠was the site of hundreds of Soviet nuclear weapon tests which have made large swathes of land uninhabitable, caused numerous diseases among people in nearby areas, and have ​left many people distrustful of anything nuclear.

But the country needs energy. Despite having ​sizeable natural gas ⁠reserves, the Central Asian nation of 20 million relies mostly on coal-powered plants for its electric power needs, supplemented by some hydroelectric plants and the growing renewable energy sector.

Kazakhstan is already importing electric power, mostly from Russia, as ⁠its own ​generating facilities, many of which are aged, struggle to meet ​domestic demand.

It has approved construction of a second nuclear plant, with state-run CNNC selected as the main constructor.

 

read more in our Telegram-channel https://t.me/The_International_Affairs