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Saudi Arabia to award nuclear reactor contract by end 2018 - official

It is also one of the steps (in fact the first step) of the full nuclear cycle that KSA intends to master..

Nuclear power is the most efficient way of extracting energy from a fuel source. It is about 8000 times more efficient than oil and coal. A fingertip sized pallet of nuclear fuel (highly enriched uranium) contains as much energy as 481 cubic meters of natural gas, 807 kilograms of coal or 564 liters of oil!

I am quite sure that there is tons of uranium ore below the surface in KSA. However it is a quite challenging process to dug or drill it out. It must be mixed with the surrounding minerals and processed.

The ore is first crushed and then heated to dry the carbon content like clay so it can be washed away. That slurry of ore and water is leeched with sulfuric acid. This process causes the uranium atoms to bond with the sulfur and oxygen forming the uranium oxide liquid. To get it to that yellow powder (appearance wise) the uranium is pulled out of solution using ammonia afterwards to be purified even more once put into barrels.

Afterwards the uranium must be enriched before it can be used for power generation. That yellow cake uranium is 99,3% uranium-238 and only 0,7% uranium-235. To make the nuclear fuel nuclear scientist need uranium-235 isotope (an atom that contains the right number of protons but different number of neutrons). This is where the famous nuclear centrifuges come in that enrich the uranium. This is the most dangerous (due to radiation) and complicated process.

Firstly the yellow cake uranium is turned into a gas by creating a reaction with fluorine. The resulting uranium hexafluoride gas is even more pure than yellow cake uranium and ready to go into a centrifuge (basically a giant spinning container) designed to use physics in order to separate materials. The center fleeing forces in the centrifuge cause the heavier isotopes to come out of solution and collect as far from the center of the centrifuge as possible. Thus the heavier uranium-238 isotopes get thrown outward allowing the lighter uranium-235 to stay closer to the middle of the centrifuge.

This spinning process has to be repeated 1000's of times in centrifuge after centrifuge. Eventually the gas in the middle of the centrifuge gets more and more concentrated (in other words enriched = the gas is more U-235).

Once the fuel is 5% U-235 and 95% U-238 it is suitable for some nuclear reactors. Others require as high as 20% U-235. However that is nowhere near enriched enough for nuclear weapons which can require as high as 90% U-235.

Once the desired enrichment levels for the type of nuclear power plant that you want to run are reached, the enriched uranium hexafluoride has to be turned back into a solid by adding calcium. The calcium and hexafluoride react creating a salt leaving behind only uranium oxide which is then heated to approximately 1400 degrees Celsius and extruded into tiny ceramic pellets. Those uranium pellets are in turn put into rods and then 100.000's of those rods can be placed in various configurations inside a nuclear power plant.

It requires a lot of technical and chemical knowledge to master but it is very much possible once you have mastered the nuclear energy process.

The 40 Saudi Arabian nuclear engineers that went to South Korea for training purposes are taught the initial process.

Sorry for sounding like a nerd but I am chemical engineer by profession and nuclear energy is a subject that I like to read about and occasionally study. Anyway what I quickly described is of course not a full account of the entire process. Nevertheless it can give an idea of the process.:enjoy:
 
Not sure if I understood you correctly brother. Too late for what exactly?

Saudi Arabia plans to award a construction contract for its first nuclear reactors by the end of 2018, a senior government official said on Tuesday.

By the end of 2018 uranium reserves will be explored in 9 different regions of KSA.

I meant uranium exploration is bit late, considering construction of reactors would finish end of 2018 and it takes about 2 - 3 years to complete a mining setup, which is after exploration.

I assume in beginning Saudi Arabia, would be importing the uranium to operate nuclear reactors!
 
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Saudi Arabia plans to award a construction contract for its first nuclear reactors by the end of 2018, a senior government official said on Tuesday.

By the end of 2018 uranium reserves will be explored in 9 different regions of KSA.

I meant uranium exploration is bit late, considering construction of reactors would finish end of 2018 and it takes about 2 - 3 years to complete a mining setup, which is after exploration.

I assume in beginning Saudi Arabia, would be importing the uranium to operate nuclear reactors!

A construction contract for the first nuclear reactors (16 in total are planned to be built by 2030) will be awarded by the end of 2018. Awarded, not built.

As for mining infrastructure, KSA has one of the best mining infrastructures in the region and where uranium is going to be explored other minerals are being excavated or explored while we speak. For instance phosphate.

There are uranium reserves in KSA although they have not been explored much hence the decision to explore uranium in 9 different regions.

Neighboring Jordan for instance has one of the biggest uranium reserves in the world so the regions bordering Jordan most likely have similar if not bigger reserves.

Don't forget that there are unconventional sources for uranium such as phosphates.

https://www.iaea.org/OurWork/ST/NE/...as(2013)_Phosphate_Resources_&_Production.pdf

http://www.world-nuclear.org/inform...ranium-resources/uranium-from-phosphates.aspx

By the end of 2018 uranium reserves will be explored in 9 different regions of KSA.

DMKmcMxW0AEJ8ra.jpg


Just a little reminder of how rich KSA really is in not only fossils fuels but minerals as well:

KSA reserves uranium (PDF)

Uranium from Phosphates

Jordan and Saudi Arabia team up on uranium, SMRs
29 March 2017

Jordan and Saudi Arabia have signed agreements on cooperation in uranium exploration and carrying out a feasibility study into the construction of two small modular reactors (SMRs) in Jordan.

Jordan-Saudi%20Arabia%20-%20March%202017%20-%20460%20(KA-CARE).jpg

Yamani and Touqan sign the agreement on the SMR feasibility study (Image: KA-CARE)

The agreements were among 15 major investment and economic agreements signed in Amman on 27 March following a meeting between Saudi Arabia's King Salman and King Abdullah II of Jordan.

In a statement, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KA-CARE) said an agreement had been signed between the two countries covering the exploration and mining of uranium in central Jordan.

A memorandum of understanding (MOU) was also signed by KA-CARE president Hashim Yamani and Khaled Touqan, head of the Jordan Atomic Energy Commission (JAEC). Under that MOU a feasibility study will be conducted on the construction of two small modular reactors in Jordan for the production of electricity and desalinated water.

Saudi Arabia and Jordan signed a nuclear cooperation agreement in January 2014. The main focus of that agreement was on basic and applied research related to nuclear energy and technologies, design, construction and operation, power plants and nuclear reactors. Also included was cooperation in research and exploration for "raw materials", plus radioactive waste management.

Although Saudi Arabia's nuclear program is in its infancy, the Kingdom has plans to construct 16 nuclear power reactors over the next 20 years. A 2010 royal decree identified nuclear power as essential to help meet growing energy demand for both electricity generation and water desalination, while reducing reliance on depleting hydrocarbon resources.

In September 2015, contracts were signed between KA-CARE and the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI) to support their cooperation in developing KAERI's SMART (System-integrated Modular Advanced Reactor). This is a 330 MWt (100 MWe) pressurised water reactor with integral steam generators and advanced safety features.

Earlier this month, China and Saudi Arabia signed a cooperation agreement for a joint study on the feasibility of constructing high-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGRs) in the Middle Eastern country.

In March 2015, Russia and Jordan signed an intergovernmental agreement on cooperation in the construction and operation of two 1000 MWe VVER units at Az-Zarqa in central Jordan. A feasibility on the construction of those units is expected to be completed within the next few months.


Researched and written
by World Nuclear News


http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NP-Jordan-and-Saudi-Arabia-team-up-on-uranium-SMRs-2903174.html

@Bubblegum Crisis patience brother.:coffee:

 
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#WORLD NEWS
OCTOBER 30, 2017 / 3:06 PM / 2 DAYS AGO

Saudi Arabia to extract uranium for 'self-sufficient' nuclear program

Sylvia Westall
4 MIN READ

ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia plans to extract uranium domestically as part of its nuclear power program and sees this as a step towards “self-sufficiency” in producing atomic fuel, a senior official said on Monday.

Extracting its own uranium also makes sense from an economic point of view, said Hashim bin Abdullah Yamani, head of the Saudi government agency tasked with the nuclear plans, the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KACARE).

In a speech at an international nuclear power conference in Abu Dhabi, he did not specify whether Saudi Arabia seeks to also enrich and reprocess uranium – steps in the fuel cycle which are especially sensitive as they can open up the possibility of military uses of the material.

The world’s top oil exporter says it wants to tap atomic power for peaceful purposes only in order to diversify its energy supply and will award a construction contract for its first two nuclear reactors by the end of 2018.

“Regarding the production of uranium in the kingdom, this is a program which is our first step towards self-sufficiency in producing nuclear fuel,” Yamani told a conference organized by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). “We utilize the uranium ore that has been proven to be economically efficient.”

Atomic reactors need uranium enriched to around 5 percent purity but the same technology in this process can also be used to enrich the heavy metal to higher, weapons-grade levels.

This issue has been at the heart of Western and regional concerns about the nuclear work of Iran, Saudi Arabia’s foe, and led to the 2015 deal in which Iran agreed to freeze the program for 15 years for sanctions relief.

On Monday, IAEA chief Yukiya Amano said Iran was complying with the nuclear deal signed with world powers and which U.S. President Donald Trump has called into question.

Under the agreement, Iran can enrich uranium to 3.67 percent purity, around the normal level needed for commercial power-generation.

MOMENTUM
Saudi Arabia would be the second country in the Gulf Arab region to tap nuclear after the United Arab Emirates, which is set to start up its first, South Korean-built reactor in 2018. The UAE has committed not to enrich uranium itself and not to reprocess spent fuel.

Industry sources have told Reuters Saudi Arabia is reaching out to potential vendors from South Korea, China, France, Russia, Japan and the United States for its first two reactors.

The plans have received extra momentum as part of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, an ambitious economic reform program launched last year by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Yamani said Saudi Arabia will soon pass laws for its nuclear program and will have set up all of the regulations for its nuclear regulator by the third quarter of 2018.

“The IAEA also has been requested to conduct an integrated review of our nuclear infrastructure during the second quarter of 2018,” he said, which will allow the agency to assess efforts to prepare Saudi infrastructure “to introduce nuclear power for peaceful purposes.”

Saudi Arabia is considering building some 17.6 gigawatts of nuclear capacity by 2032, the equivalent of about 17 reactors, making it one of the strongest prospects for an industry struggling after the 2011 nuclear disaster in Japan.

Preliminary studies have estimated Saudi Arabia has around 60,000 tonnes of uranium ore, Maher al Odan, the chief atomic energy officer of KACARE said at an electricity forum in Riyadh on Oct 11.

Additional reporting by Reem Shamseddine in Khobar, Saudi Arabia; Editing by Janet Lawrence

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...self-sufficient-nuclear-program-idUSKBN1CZ1ON

Fantastic news.:yahoo:

DMv5pWLW0AA5XFW.jpg
 
#WORLD NEWS
OCTOBER 30, 2017 / 3:06 PM / 2 DAYS AGO

Saudi Arabia to extract uranium for 'self-sufficient' nuclear program

Sylvia Westall
4 MIN READ

ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia plans to extract uranium domestically as part of its nuclear power program and sees this as a step towards “self-sufficiency” in producing atomic fuel, a senior official said on Monday.

Extracting its own uranium also makes sense from an economic point of view, said Hashim bin Abdullah Yamani, head of the Saudi government agency tasked with the nuclear plans, the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KACARE).

In a speech at an international nuclear power conference in Abu Dhabi, he did not specify whether Saudi Arabia seeks to also enrich and reprocess uranium – steps in the fuel cycle which are especially sensitive as they can open up the possibility of military uses of the material.

The world’s top oil exporter says it wants to tap atomic power for peaceful purposes only in order to diversify its energy supply and will award a construction contract for its first two nuclear reactors by the end of 2018.

“Regarding the production of uranium in the kingdom, this is a program which is our first step towards self-sufficiency in producing nuclear fuel,” Yamani told a conference organized by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). “We utilize the uranium ore that has been proven to be economically efficient.”

Atomic reactors need uranium enriched to around 5 percent purity but the same technology in this process can also be used to enrich the heavy metal to higher, weapons-grade levels.

This issue has been at the heart of Western and regional concerns about the nuclear work of Iran, Saudi Arabia’s foe, and led to the 2015 deal in which Iran agreed to freeze the program for 15 years for sanctions relief.

On Monday, IAEA chief Yukiya Amano said Iran was complying with the nuclear deal signed with world powers and which U.S. President Donald Trump has called into question.

Under the agreement, Iran can enrich uranium to 3.67 percent purity, around the normal level needed for commercial power-generation.

MOMENTUM
Saudi Arabia would be the second country in the Gulf Arab region to tap nuclear after the United Arab Emirates, which is set to start up its first, South Korean-built reactor in 2018. The UAE has committed not to enrich uranium itself and not to reprocess spent fuel.

Industry sources have told Reuters Saudi Arabia is reaching out to potential vendors from South Korea, China, France, Russia, Japan and the United States for its first two reactors.

The plans have received extra momentum as part of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, an ambitious economic reform program launched last year by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Yamani said Saudi Arabia will soon pass laws for its nuclear program and will have set up all of the regulations for its nuclear regulator by the third quarter of 2018.

“The IAEA also has been requested to conduct an integrated review of our nuclear infrastructure during the second quarter of 2018,” he said, which will allow the agency to assess efforts to prepare Saudi infrastructure “to introduce nuclear power for peaceful purposes.”

Saudi Arabia is considering building some 17.6 gigawatts of nuclear capacity by 2032, the equivalent of about 17 reactors, making it one of the strongest prospects for an industry struggling after the 2011 nuclear disaster in Japan.

Preliminary studies have estimated Saudi Arabia has around 60,000 tonnes of uranium ore, Maher al Odan, the chief atomic energy officer of KACARE said at an electricity forum in Riyadh on Oct 11.

Additional reporting by Reem Shamseddine in Khobar, Saudi Arabia; Editing by Janet Lawrence

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...self-sufficient-nuclear-program-idUSKBN1CZ1ON

Fantastic news.:yahoo:

DMv5pWLW0AA5XFW.jpg

As I predicted (it was just obvious). ^^

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/saud...ssian-s-400-system.521665/page-4#post-9924531



...
 

Yes, and South Korean involvement is almost 99,9% secure.


It's worth noticing that the South Koreans have managed to operate generation III+ reactors (APR-1400 is being built in Barakah if I am not wrong) which is something that the French has yet to accomplish for instance.

KSA should also involve itself in the generation IV reactor research.

As soon as the first nuclear power plant is up and running in KSA we need to join this forum urgently:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_IV_reactor

UAE should/will probably once the Barakah is finished (will happen very soon). At least I hope so.

@Khafee
 
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Saudi Arabia has 60 000 tons of Uranium reserves..not talking about other huge quantities that can be extracted from phosphate..KSA has given up (officially) on enriching Uranium..but there is a close in the IAEA that stipulates: every country who has uranium reserves of its own can enrich Uranium up to 5% for civilian nuclear use..Saudi Arabia made that pledge most likely before discovering its own Uranium reserves..So now it can exercise its right to enrich Uranium according to this IAEA close..
 
Saudi Nuclear Talks: Risks and Limitations
Jay Solomon

Also available in العربية

January 31, 2018


Allowing Riyadh to produce its own nuclear fuel could have bad proliferation consequences in the Middle East and Asia, but Washington may not have the leverage to enforce a permanent ban.

The Trump administration is preparing to make two key decisions about Saudi Arabia and Iran that could set the course for the spread of nuclear technology in the Middle East for decades to come. Earlier this month, the president set a May deadline for the United States and Europe to agree on much tougher terms for the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran. In particular, the White House wants to do away with the agreement's so-called sunset clauses, which could allow Tehran to produce nuclear fuel at an industrial scale in about a decade.

Concurrently, the administration has begun negotiations with Iran's main regional adversary, Saudi Arabia, on a potential bilateral nuclear cooperation agreement. Riyadh has ambitious plans to build as many as sixteen nuclear reactors at a cost of some $80 billion in the coming decades. American companies want in on these lucrative projects in a bid to revitalize the moribund U.S. nuclear power industry.

Yet finalizing a nuclear partnership with Saudi Arabia has bedeviled successive U.S. administrations. Like Tehran, Riyadh wants the right to produce nuclear fuel on its soil by enriching uranium and reprocessing plutonium from spent reactor fuel. The George W. Bush and Obama administrations rebuffed such requests, fearing the kingdom could use these technologies to build nuclear weapons.

Although the Trump administration has yet to announce its formal position on the matter, some officials involved in Riyadh's emerging nuclear plans believe Washington might soften its position on Saudi uranium enrichment in order to bolster President Trump's pledge about rejuvenating the U.S. nuclear industry. Yet doing so risks setting a precedent that other regional states could follow, including Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates—all of which have announced their intentions to develop nuclear power in recent years. "It's hard to tell one ally 'yes' and the others 'no,'" said one senior Asian executive involved in negotiations with the Saudi government. "You could see these technologies quickly and dangerously spread."

SELLING OFF COUNTERPROLIFERATION "GOLD"?
In 2009, the Obama administration concluded a nuclear cooperation agreement with the UAE that is now described as the "gold standard" in combating proliferation. Among other things, Abu Dhabi legally forfeited its right to enrich uranium or reprocess plutonium, instead agreeing to buy nuclear fuel from foreign suppliers. At the time, the deal was seen as a means of pressuring Iran into giving up its own enrichment capabilities. If the United States decides to accept Saudi enrichment, however, it could give the Emiratis justification to back out of the agreement while further emboldening Tehran.

Fears of a similar nuclear cascade haunted the negotiations that culminated in the 2015 agreement with Iran. Critics of the deal, including many Arab governments, warned Washington that accepting Tehran's long-term enrichment demands would create a regional technology and security imbalance that Saudi Arabia and other countries might seek to right. Senior U.S. officials countered that failure to constrain Iran's nuclear program, however temporarily, would create an even worse proliferation threat.

At the time, the Obama administration also cast doubt on whether Gulf states had the scientific or technical ability to develop their own nuclear programs in the near term. "Saudi Arabia lacks the technologies and bureaucratic wherewithal" to establish a nuclear fuel cycle "any time in the foreseeable future," wrote Colin Kahl and his coauthors in a report issued by the Center for a New American Security in 2013, shortly before he became Vice President Joe Biden's national security advisor. The paper also discussed the potential utility of threatening financial sanctions on Saudi oil exports to dissuade Riyadh from pursuing a nuclear fuel cycle.

Regardless, the kingdom has shown every indication in recent years that it plans to move forward aggressively on its ambitious nuclear plans. According to Saudi officials, the country is expanding research at the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy, its primary nuclear body, and developing a cadre of nuclear scientists and engineers. It has also signed nuclear cooperation agreements with several countries, including China, France, and Argentina.

In December, the kingdom invited five companies to prepare bids for its first wave of reactor projects, according to participants in the process. These included the American firm Westinghouse Electric, JSC Rusatom (a subsidiary of Russia's state-owned nuclear giant Rosatom), France's EDF Group, the China Nuclear Engineering Corp., and the Korea Electric Power Corp. As U.S. and South Korean officials pointed out, however, Westinghouse and KEPCO can only join the project if Washington finalizes a nuclear cooperation agreement with Saudi Arabia, since both companies use American parts and technologies in their reactors. In any case, Riyadh is expected to choose the winners by year's end.

U.S. energy secretary Rick Perry visited Riyadh last month to discuss such an agreement, but the administration has so far refused to tip its hand on whether Washington is prepared to give ground on banning enrichment. In late November, White House counterproliferation czar Christopher Ford told a congressional hearing that such a ban "is not a legal requirement, it is a desired outcome." News of the administration's negotiations with Saudi Arabia subsequently set off a furious debate in Washington about the wisdom of giving Riyadh the green light to enrich uranium.

For example, a number of groups on both the right and left have warned that softening the U.S. position on this issue could set off a nuclear cascade in the Middle East and even Asia. They also downplayed arguments that the Saudi project could reap considerable financial benefits for corporate America, noting that Westinghouse is majority-owned by Japan's Toshiba Corp. and that it filed for bankruptcy in March 2017 after postponing reactor deliveries to two U.S. power plants. "The upside for U.S. nuclear business is small in the Middle East compared to the proliferation risks," said Henry Sokolski, executive director of the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, in an interview with the author. "Certainly, the last place the U.S. should give up on the gold standard for U.S. civilian nuclear cooperation is in a region in which three 'peaceful' nuclear plants have already been bombed by hostile neighbors," he continued, citing Iraq's bombing of Iran's Bushehr reactor in the 1980s and Israel's destruction of Syrian and Iraqi reactors.

IRANIAN AND ASIAN ANGLES
Still, other experts argue that Washington may no longer have the leverage to bar the Saudis from enriching uranium, particularly since Russia and China are waiting to sell them reactors. Robert Einhorn, one of the strategists behind the Iran deal, recently wrote that the Trump administration may have to allow for some Saudi enrichment, albeit with strict safeguards to prevent any nuclear weapons development. According to his January 12 article in Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a Saudi deal could contain an enrichment ban that expires after fifteen years. Refusal to make this concession could lock Washington out of future Saudi nuclear plans completely, he wrote: "If the United States wishes to cooperate with Saudi Arabia in the civil nuclear area, it will need to adopt an approach that serves U.S. nonproliferation objectives without completely shutting the door to a Saudi fuel cycle capability."

Others note that Congress, which would need to bless any agreement with the Saudis, could insert tough demands. These might include requiring the administration to make clear to Riyadh that the United States will never sell it the technology needed to enrich uranium or reprocess plutonium, and that Washington will take steps to ensure that other countries do not provide such technology either. U.S. officials should also demand that Saudi Arabia reach an agreement with the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, to allow for expansive inspections of its nuclear sites—a provision called the Additional Protocol. "One of our overriding goals should be to deny the spread of these sensitive technologies," said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, in an interview with the author.

Either way, U.S. nuclear policies toward Iran and Saudi Arabia are now inextricably linked and coming to a head. A Trump administration push to tighten restrictions on Iran's capabilities could gain some traction among skeptical European governments, but if the White House then turns around and supports Saudi enrichment rights, its regional strategy would appear hollow. The administration is currently being advised to leverage the threats posed by Saudi and Iranian nuclear ambitions in order to gain support from other nuclear powers on maintaining tough counterproliferation restrictions—a unity that will be difficult to forge.

The Saudi talks are also being closely watched in Asia. South Korea is set to renegotiate its own nuclear cooperation agreement with the United States and has been seeking provisions that will allow it to produce limited amounts of nuclear fuel. Officials in Seoul say this is purely for civilian purposes, but the rapid growth of North Korea's nuclear weapons capabilities has been stoking calls for similar armaments in the south. As the previously quoted Asian executive pointed out, "What happens with Saudi Arabia could have a big impact in South Korea."

Jay Solomon is the Segal Distinguished Visiting Fellow at The Washington Institute and author of The Iran Wars: Spy Games, Bank Battles, and the Secret Deals That Reshaped the Middle East.

http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/saudi-nuclear-talks-risks-and-limitations

I don't necessary agree with this article, just sharing it.

EXCLUSIVE: Saudi Arabia shortlists two sites for first nuclear power project
22 JANUARY 2018 12:08 PM BY ANDREW ROSCOE



nuclear-780x422.jpg


Kingdom has invited consultants to submit proposals for site and safety studies



Saudi Arabia is assessing two potential sites for its first nuclear power plant (NPP) project, for which it is planning to begin the tendering process in 2018.

According to details garnered by MEED projects and corroborated by sources close to the programme, the kingdom has shortlisted two sites for its first atomic energy project, and has invited consultants to submit proposals for the contract to conduct a site characterisation study, environmental impact assessment (EIA) and preliminary safety analysis report (PSRA) to assist with the selection of the preferred site.

The two shortlisted sites are at Umm Huwayd and Khor Duweihin. Both are on the coast near the UAE and Qatari borders.


The two sites were shortlisted following investigations conducted in 2011 and 2012 in accordance with sitting guidance issued by international regulatory agencies, including the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).

Initially, 17 potential sites had been identified, which included nine potential sites close to the Red Sea coast, six sites on the Arabian Gulf and two locations further inland.


MEED reported in December that the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KA-Care), the body overseeing the kingdom’s planned nuclear power programme, had received request for information (RFI) from a number of the world’s largest nuclear power providers including: the US’ Westinghouse, France’s EDF Russia’s Rosatom.

The kingdom’s first nuclear project is planned to be two-reactor 2.8GW plant. Riyadh is planning to develop nuclear energy through three main programmes.

The first two of these will involve building and installing nuclear power plants, with the third targeting mining uranium resources to fuel the plants, sources close to the kingdom’s nuclear programme have told MEED.

In addition to building large scale nuclear power plants at various sites across the country, Riyadh is also planning to develop nuclear power at several locations through SMART (System-integrated Modular Advanced Reactor) facilities, which will produce nuclear power from much smaller reactors. Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah City for Atomic & Renewable Energy (KA-Care) signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with South Korea in November 2016 to develop the technology in the kingdom.

According to a source at KA-Care, Saudi Arabia owns a percentage of the intellectual property (IP) rights for the technology, and is already moving ahead with plans to begin to develop the first two SMART reactors, which will have a capacity of about 100MW each, within the next four years.

The kingdom is also seeking to launch a programme to mine uranium, which will be used to produce fuel for the nuclear plants and also for other uses such as nuclear medicine. Developing the kingdom’s mining sector is a key pillar of the Saudi Vision 2030, which was launched in April 2016.

While progress is being made with plans for the country’s first conventional and SMART reactors, Riyadh has not publicly committed to a target for total nuclear power capacity. Previously, senior government officials have said the kingdom was targeting 17-19GW of nuclear power in the coming two decades.


Saudi Arabia is assessing two potential sites for its first nuclear power plant (NPP) project, for which it is planning to begin the tendering process in 2018.

According to details garnered by MEED projects and corroborated by sources close to the programme, the kingdom has shortlisted two sites for its first atomic energy project, and has invited consultants to submit proposals for the contract to conduct a site characterisation study, environmental impact assessment (EIA) and preliminary safety analysis report (PSRA) to assist with the selection of the preferred site.

The two shortlisted sites are at Umm Huwayd and Khor Duweihin. Both are on the coast near the UAE and Qatari borders.

The two sites were shortlisted following investigations conducted in 2011 and 2012 in accordance with sitting guidance issued by international regulatory agencies, including the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).

Initially, 17 potential sites had been identified, which included nine potential sites close to the Red Sea coast, six sites on the Arabian Gulf and two locations further inland.

MEED reported in December that the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KA-Care), the body overseeing the kingdom’s planned nuclear power programme, had received request for information (RFI) from a number of the world’s largest nuclear power providers including: the US’ Westinghouse, France’s EDF Russia’s Rosatom.

The kingdom’s first nuclear project is planned to be two-reactor 2.8GW plant. Riyadh is planning to develop nuclear energy through three main programmes.

The first two of these will involve building and installing nuclear power plants, with the third targeting mining uranium resources to fuel the plants, sources close to the kingdom’s nuclear programme have told MEED.

In addition to building large scale nuclear power plants at various sites across the country, Riyadh is also planning to develop nuclear power at several locations through SMART (System-integrated Modular Advanced Reactor) facilities, which will produce nuclear power from much smaller reactors. Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah City for Atomic & Renewable Energy (KA-Care) signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with South Korea in November 2016 to develop the technology in the kingdom.

According to a source at KA-Care, Saudi Arabia owns a percentage of the intellectual property (IP) rights for the technology, and is already moving ahead with plans to begin to develop the first two SMART reactors, which will have a capacity of about 100MW each, within the next four years.

The kingdom is also seeking to launch a programme to mine uranium, which will be used to produce fuel for the nuclear plants and also for other uses such as nuclear medicine. Developing the kingdom’s mining sector is a key pillar of the Saudi Vision 2030, which was launched in April 2016.

While progress is being made with plans for the country’s first conventional and SMART reactors, Riyadh has not publicly committed to a target for total nuclear power capacity. Previously, senior government officials have said the kingdom was targeting 17-19GW of nuclear power in the coming two decades.

https://www.meed.com/exclusive-saudi-arabia-shortlists-two-sites-first-nuclear-power-project/
 

An interesting report about uranium reserves in mainly KSA, Egypt and Sudan.

Courtesy of brother @Gomig-21

http://www-pub.iaea.org/mtcd/meetings/PDFplus/2009/cn175/URAM2009/Session 3/05_88_Howari_USA.pdf

Saudi Arabia begins exploration of uranium, thorium

17-12-2017 Argaam

The Saudi Geological Survey (SGS) has started a survey to explore and assess uranium and thorium resources in the Hail region of the Al Hail Province.

The project, which is being carried out in cooperation with the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KACARE) and the China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC), aims to explore uranium and thorium deposits for peaceful use. (Yes of course!)


During the launch of the project last Thursday, SGS president Zohair Nawab said the Kingdom had no intentions to use nuclear energy for military purposes.

The exploration survey is intended for mineral wealth exploration, power generation, seawater desalination, and developing renewable energy sources, he added.

In March, SGS and CNNC signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in Beijing for bilateral cooperation in mineral resources. The two companies signed another MoU in September to explore uranium and thorium resources.

In October, Hashim bin Abdullah Yamani, president of KACARE, the agency tasked with the nuclear plans, said in Abu Dhabi that the Kingdom plans to extract uranium domestically as part of its nuclear power program and sees it as a step towards “self-sufficiency” in producing atomic fuel.

The world’s top oil exporter will award a construction contract for its first two nuclear reactors by the end of 2018, according to Reuters.

Last week, Bloomberg reported, citing three unnamed sources that the US government was “encouraging” Saudi Arabia to consider bids by American companies to build nuclear reactors and “may allow the enrichment of uranium.” (Yes, of course!)


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https://www.argaam.com/en/article/articledetail/id/519901

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Interesting times indeed.

Saudi Arabia to award nuclear reactor contract by end 2018 - official

Reuters Staff

RIYADH, Oct 10 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia plans to award a construction contract for its first nuclear reactors by the end of 2018, a senior government official said on Tuesday.

“With sponsorship from the highest levels in the state, the contract will be signed by the end of 2018,” Maher al Odan, the chief atomic energy officer of King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy, told a news conference in the capital Riyadh. (Reporting By Reem Shamseddine; Writing by Noah Browning; Editing by Gareth Jones)

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-wine-country-tourism-lifeblood-idUSKBN1CH34U

http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/country-profiles/countries-o-s/saudi-arabia.aspx

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_energy_in_Saudi_Arabia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Abdullah_City_for_Atomic_and_Renewable_Energy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_program_of_Saudi_Arabia




KSA will master the entire "nuclear energy process" as I mentioned above within less than 2 decades if not sooner. So it is not a question if but when. KSA will be like Japan and South Korea by then by all accounts. Nuclear weapons are old technology anyway. "Even" the likes of NK with outside help (granted) but hardly any economy can accomplish it. So no big deal really. The political aspect is the most challenging one which is why Rick Perry (Minister of Energy in the US) has been pressuring KSA to pick the US option (visited recently) and for KSA to sign the "123 agreement" which most regional countries have signed but KSA refused to do so. Very wisely.

http://middle-east-online.com/?id=263062

No coincidence that China is involved with the uranium drilling and that a deal was just signed with Russia.

In a few decades if everything goes according to the plan (God Willing), troublemakers out there to hurt KSA, will think more than they already do about such moronic ideas and once/if I ever will be involved in nuclear engineering in KSA, I will do my outmost to make this a reality as will 1000's of others.

Nuclear Power in Saudi Arabia
(Updated October 2017)

  • Saudi Arabia plans to construct 16 nuclear power reactors over the next 20-25 years at a cost of more than $80 billion.
  • It projects 17 GWe of nuclear capacity by 2040 to provide 15% of the power then, along with over 40 GWe of solar capacity.
  • There are also plans for small reactors for deslination.
In December 2006 the six member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) – Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar and Oman – announced that the Council was commissioning a study on the peaceful use of nuclear energy. France agreed to work with them on this, and Iran pledged assistance with nuclear technology.

Together they produce 636 TWh per year (2015), almost all from oil and gas and with significant annual demand growth. They have total installed capacity of over 90 GWe, with a common grid apart from Saudi Arabia, though with negligible import and export. There is also a large demand for desalination, currently fuelled by oil and gas.

In February 2007 the six states agreed with the IAEA to cooperate on a feasibility study for a regional nuclear power and desalination programme, with Saudi Arabia leading the investigation.

Saudi electricity
Saudi Arabia’s population has grown from 4 million in 1960 to over 31 million in 2016. It is the main electricity producer and consumer in the Gulf States, with 338 TWh gross production in 2015, 150 TWh from oil and 189 TWh from gas. It consumes over one-quarter of its oil production, and while energy demand is projected to increase substantially, oil production is not, and by 2030 a large proportion will be consumed domestically, much of it for electricity generation. Its per capita consumption is about 9000 kWh/yr, heavily subsidised.

Generating capacity is over 30 GWe. Demand is growing by 8-10% per year and peak demand is expected to be 70 GWe by 2020 and 120 GWe by 2032, driven partly by desalination increase. However, in October 2015 the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KA-CARE) said: “The annual increase in domestic demand for energy ranges now between 6% and 8%. Forecasts indicate that the Kingdom will have to increase its generated power by 80 GWe by 2040." Saudi Arabia is unique in the region in having 60 Hz grid frequency, which severely limits the potential for grid interconnections – it has no electricity import or export.

The Ministry of Water & Electricity (MOWE) is broadly responsible for power and desalination in the country.

It had plans to install 24 GWe of renewable electricity capacity by 2020, and 50 GWe by 2032 or 2040, and was looking at the prospects of exporting up to 10 GWe of this to Italy or Spain during winter when much generating capacity is under-utilised (cooling accounts for over half the capacity in summer). The 50 GWe in 2032 (later: 2040) was to comprise 25 GWe CSP, 16 GWe solar PV, 4 GWe geothermal and waste (together supplying 150-190 TWh, 23-30% of power), complementing 18 GWe nuclear (supplying 131 TWh/yr, 20% of power), and supplemented by 60.5 GWe hydrocarbon capacity which would be little used (c10 GWe) for half the year. The nuclear target date has now been put back to 2040. In 2016 renewables targets were scaled back from 50% to 10% of electricity (by 2040?) as plans shifted more to gas, so that it would increase its share from 50% to 70%.

In July 2017 the cabinet approved the establishment of the 'National Project for Atomic Energy', and new financial and administrative regulations for KA-CARE.

Saudi desalination
The Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC) increased its desalinated water output in 2014 by 10%, to more than 1.1 billion cubic metres. The country continues to install huge desalination capacity, much of it thermal MSF and MED, but a lot is reverse osmosis (RO), driven by electricity.

It is expanding its Yanbu desalination plant to supply the Medina region. Phase 1 is a 146,000 m3/d hybrid plant, mostly MSF using heat recovered from a gas turbine power plant, but with two RO units. Phase 2 upgrades this and adds a 68,000 m3/day MED plant from Doosan using the heat from an associated 690 MWe power plant, all costing over $1 billion. It will be the world's largest MED plant. Doosan will also build Yanbu 3, a 550,000 m3/day MSF plant due for completion in 2016. A 600,000 m3/d RO plant is planned at Rabigh in the west.

The world’s largest thermal desalination plant is Saudi Arabia’s 1,025,000 m3/d Ras Al Khair (Ras Azzour) MSF project northwest of Jubail, costing SAR 27 billion ($7.2 billion) and built by Doosan. The project includes a 2.6 GWe power plant. The hybrid desalination facility has a capacity of 727,000 m3/d multi-stage flash (MSF) evaporation and 307,000 m3/d RO membrane filtration. It will supply water from the Gulf to 3.5 million people in the Riyadh area. The 880,000 m³/d Shoaiba 3 plant was formerly the largest. Veolia has a $402 million contract to build a 178,600 m3/d ultrafiltration and RO plant for Marafiq at the $19.3 billion Sadara petrochemical complex, to come on line in mid-2015. The water will be for two cooling towers and as boiler feedwater.

The first of three phases of the King Abdullah Solar water initiative were expected to be operating by the end of 2013. Phase 1 involves construction of two solar plants which will generate 10 MW of power for a 30,000 m3/d reverse-osmosis (RO) desalination plant at Al Khafji, near the Kuwait border. Phase 2 will involve construction of a 300,000 m3/d desalination plant over three years. The third phase aims to implement the solar water initiative throughout Saudi Arabia, with the eventual target of seeing all the country's desalination plants powered by solar energy by 2020. One of the main objectives of this initiative under King Abdullah City for Science & Technology (KACST) is to desalinate seawater at a cost of less than Riyal 1.5/m3 (US$ 0.40/m³) compared with the current cost of thermal desalination, which KACST says is in the range Riyal 2.0-5.5/m³ (US$ 0.53-1.47/m³), and desalination by RO, which is Riyal 2.5-5.5/m3 (US$ 0.67-1.47/m3) for a desalination plant producing 30,000 m3/d.

Saudi Arabia's General Establishment for Water Desalination (GEWD) is, over the four years to 2019, implementing new projects with a total production capacity of up to 2.5 million m3/d in the Makkah region and the eastern province.

Saudi nuclear power plans: large units
In August 2009 the Saudi government announced that it was considering a nuclear power program on its own, and in April 2010 a royal decree said: "The development of atomic energy is essential to meet the Kingdom's growing requirements for energy to generate electricity, produce desalinated water and reduce reliance on depleting hydrocarbon resources." The King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KA-CARE) was set up in Riyadh to advance this agenda as an alternative to oil and to be the competent agency for treaties on nuclear energy signed by the kingdom. It is also responsible for supervising works related to nuclear energy and radioactive waste projects.

In June 2010 it appointed the Finland- and Swiss-based Poyry consultancy firm to help define "high-level strategy in the area of nuclear and renewable energy applications" with desalination. In November 2011 it appointed WorleyParsons to conduct site surveys and regional analysis to identify potential sites, to select candidate sites then compare and rank them, and to develop technical specifications for a planned tender for the next stage of the Saudi nuclear power project. Three sites were short-listed as of September 2013: Jubail on the Gulf; and Tabuk and Jizan on the Red Sea. The Nuclear Holding Company was being set up in 2013.

In June 2011 the coordinator of scientific collaboration at KA-CARE said that it plans to construct 16 nuclear power reactors over the next 20 years at a cost of more than 300 billion riyals ($80 billion). These would generate about 20% of Saudi Arabia's electricity. Smaller reactors such as Argentina’s CAREM are envisaged for desalination. An April 2013 timeline showed nuclear construction starting in 2016.

In April 2013 KA-CARE projected 17 GWe of nuclear capacity by 2032 of total 123 GWe, with 16 GWe solar PV, 25 GWe solar CSP (to provide for heat storage), and 4 GWe from geothermal, wind and waste. About half the capacity in 2032 would still be hydrocarbon, with one-third solar following investment in that of some $108 billion. In addition 9 GWe of wind capacity would be used for desalination. In January 2015 the nuclear target date was moved to 2040.

In September 2013 both GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy and Toshiba/ Westinghouse signed contracts with Exelon Nuclear Partners (ENP), a division of Exelon Generation, to pursue reactor construction deals with KA-CARE. GEH is proposing its ABWR and ESBWR, while Toshiba/ Westinghouse is proposing the AP1000 and its ABWR version. Areva and EdF have signed a number of agreements with Saudi companies and universities, and EdF signed an agreement with Saudi Arabia's Global Energy Holding Company (GEHC) for the creation of a joint venture whose first task will be to carry out feasibility studies for an EPR reactor in the country.

In January 2015 the government said that its target for 17 GWe of nuclear capacity would be more like 2040.

INVAP (Investigacion Aplicada) from Argentina and state-owned Saudi technology innovation company Taqnia set up a joint venture company, Invania, to develop nuclear technology for Saudi Arabia's nuclear power program, apparently focusing on small reactors such as CAREM (100 MWt, 27 MWe) for desalination. Taqnia is the technology arm of the Public Investment Fund.

In January 2016 KA-CARE signed an agreement with China Nuclear Engineering Corporation (CNEC) to build a high-temperature reactor (HTR) in the country, based on the HTR-PM now under construction in China by CNEC. A further cooperation agreement to this end, including localization of the supply chain and undertaking a feasibility study, was signed in March 2017. In May 2017 a joint working group commenced a formal feasibility study for the project, with a view to submitting it to the government later in 2017. In August 2017 China Nuclear Engineering & Construction Group (CNEC) and Saudi Technology Development Corporation signed an agreement for a feasibility study on using high temperature reactors for seawater desalination. The IAEA also reports a feasibility study on HTRs providing heat for the petro-chemical industry in Saudi Arabia.

[paste:font size="5"]Uranium
In March and August 2017 China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) and the Saudi Geological Survey signed agreements on cooperation on the exploration of uranium. CNNC said it would explore nine potential areas for uranium resources in Saudi Arabia over the next two years.

Regulation & safety
The Saudi Arabian Atomic Regulatory Authority (SAARA) was set up to commence activities early in 2014. In May 2014 KA-CARE signed an agreement with the Finnish Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (STUK) to assist in this by recruiting and training personnel and establishing safety standards. In November 2016 KA-CARE signed an agreement with South Korea’s Nuclear Safety and Security Commission (NSSC) to promote cooperation in “regulating nuclear safety, safeguards and physical protection, radiation protection and relevant research, as well as development in a manner to serve atomic energy programs in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia," according to KA-CARE. NSSC said that “the platform of cooperation” was “expected to play an imperative role in facilitating bilateral cooperations in the region."

International agreements
A nuclear cooperation agreement with France in early 2011 seemed likely to advance French interests in the country’s plans. In June 2015 France signed an agreement to undertake a feasibility study for building two EPR nuclear power reactors. Additional agreements were signed on nuclear safety training as well as on waste disposal.

A mid-2011 nuclear cooperation agreement with Argentina was evidently related to smaller plants for desalination and the subsequent Invania joint venture.

A November 2011 agreement with South Korea called for cooperation in nuclear R&D, including building nuclear power plants and research reactors, as well as training, safety and waste management. In June 2013 Kepco offered support for the localization of nuclear technology, along with joint research and development of nuclear technologies if Saudi Arabia purchases South Korean reactors. In September 2015 further contracts were signed, which aim at building a partnership to establish knowledge infrastructure in SMART technology fields (see March 2015 SMART agreement above).

A January 2012 agreement with China relates to nuclear plant development and maintenance, research reactors, and the provision of fabricated nuclear fuel. A further agreement with CNNC was signed in August 2014, and in August 2016 KA-CARE signed an agreement with CNNC for human resource development.

A June 2015 agreement with Rosatom provided for cooperation in the field of nuclear energy, including: the design, construction, operation and decommissioning of nuclear power and research reactors, including desalination plants and particle accelerators; the provision of nuclear fuel cycle services, including nuclear power plants and research reactors; the management of used nuclear fuel and radioactive waste management; the production of radioisotopes and their application in industry, medicine and agriculture; and the education and training of specialists in the field of nuclear energy. A further programme of cooperation was signed in October 2017 between KA-CARE and Rosatom, focused on small and medium reactors, and on building a new research reactor.

In October 2015 KA-CARE signed a nuclear cooperation agreement with Hungary. In October 2016 it signed a nuclear cooperation agreement with Kazakhstan, focused on fuel supply.

In March 2017 an agreement between KA-CARE and Jordan Atomic Energy Commission (JAEC) was signed for a feasibility study on the construction of two small modular reactors (SMRs) in Jordan for the production of electricity and desalinated water. No particular technology was mentioned.

KA-CARE earlier said it was negotiating with Czech Republic, UK and the USA regarding "further cooperation". A full nuclear cooperation agreement with the USA is generally seen as vital to proceeding with Saudi nuclear power plans.

Saudi Arabia has had a safeguards agreement in force with the IAEA since 2009, but no Additional Protocol.

Notes & references
Muhammad Garwan, K.A.CARE, Nov 2013, Sustainable Energy Mix for Saudi Arabia

KAERI 3/9/15, KAERI and K.A.CARE signed SMART PPE Agreement
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Saudi Arabia pushes ahead with nuclear, renewable power

Kingdom’s first large scale nuclear plant to be commissioned in 2027

Published: 18:59 January 15, 2018
Fareed Rahman, Senior Reporter

Abu Dhabi: Saudi Arabia is pushing ahead with its renewables and nuclear power projects to meet rapidly growing power demand, top government officials from the kingdom said in Abu Dhabi.

The country will build a nuclear plant comprising two reactors with a total capacity of 3.2 gigawatts, Abdul Malek Al M. Saberi, a senior official from King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KACARE) told reporters on the sidelines of World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi on Monday.

“We have received proposals from five countries including China, Russia, US, South Korea and France to build the nuclear power plant. We will announce the winner at the end of the year and will sign a joint venture in the early 2019 to build the plant,” Al Saberi said.

The kingdom is aiming to commission the nuclear plant by 2027, he said adding that Saudi Arabia will be the second country in the region to have a nuclear power plant after the UAE.

When asked about investment plans, he said financing will be discussed with the bidder and declined to give the figure.

The country is also building two small reactors, with a capacity of 120 megawatts each, which are expected to be commissioned by 2023. Nuclear energy will contribute about 5 per cent of the total energy mix once the nuclear reactors become operational.

“There is an annual electricity demand [growth] of more than 7 per cent in Saudi Arabia due to growing population and industries,” Al Saberi said.

“With nuclear energy we are going to rely less on hydrocarbons for electricity generation and the nuclear energy programme will also give a boost to industrial sector growth and diversification of the economy.”

Due to a plunge in global oil prices, Saudi Arabia — along with other countries — is focusing on diversifying its economy to generate extra revenue.

The country is planning to create thousands of new jobs and set up new industries as part of its vision 2030, launched by Saudi crown prince Mohammad Bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia is also looking at wind, as well as solar plants, to contribute to the country’s energy mix.

It is targeting 9.5 gigawatts of wind and solar energy by 2023.


“We will not stop and will go beyond that. We are optimistic to achieve the target. The government is supporting the programme in a big way,” said Asem Othman Alkadi from Renewable Energy Project Development Office in Saudi Arabia.

Geothermal and waste to energy are the other sources of energy which the Kingdom is targeting in future, he added.

Saudi Arabia, one of the largest exporters of oil in the world is planning to invest $30 to $50 billion in the coming years up to 2023 in renewable energy projects.


http://gulfnews.com/business/renewa...-ahead-with-nuclear-renewable-power-1.2157535

Some quick calculations;

1 Gigawatt equals around 500 utility-scale (average size of 2 MV) wind turbines!

Or 4.6 million PV panels (average panel size of 295 watts)!
 
September 22, 2018 Topic: Security Region: Middle East Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: ChinaCIASaudi ArabiaMissilesDF-3
Saudi Arabia Already Has a Ballistic Missile Arsenal Courtesy of China—With a Little Help from the CIA
Saudi Arabia has reportedly never test-fired its missile arsenal, however, leaving the operational readiness of the RSSMF open to question. Nonetheless, it has maintained four or five underground facilities to house the weapons.

by Sebastien Roblin

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You would be hard pressed to find two more determined foes of Iran other than Saudi Arabia and Israel. The latter country has long been perturbed by bellicose anti-Israeli rhetoric from Tehran, and has unleashed hundreds of a ir strikes and artillery bombardments targeting Iran’s efforts to arm Hezbollah forces in Lebanon and Syria.

Meanwhile, Riyadh appear to see itself as engaged in nothing short of an epic struggle for dominance of the Middle East, and has oriented its foreign policy around combating the perceived Iranian menace, even in places its influence is moderate at best .

Iran hawks are preoccupied by the possibility of an Iranian nuclear weapon—a weapon which, given the limitations of Tehran’s air and sea forces, would need to be delivered by a ballistic missile. Iran’s continuing development of such missiles has been proposed as a casus belli, and was cited to justify the U.S. withdrawal from a nuclear deal struck in 2014 (the deal constrained Iran from developing nuclear warheads, but not ballistic missiles to carry them in). It’s often ignored that Israel and Saudi Arabia themselves maintain some of the largest ballistic missile arsenals in the region—the latter of which is the subject of this article.

Iran’s ballistic missile program began during the ‘War of the Cities’ phase of the devastating Iran-Iraq war, when Baghdad rained hundreds of Scud missiles on Iranian metropolises. Though Iran managed to acquire a few Scuds from Libya with which to retaliate against Iraqi cities, it mostly could only strike back with air attacks—which placed its steadily diminishing fleet of U.S.-built warplanes at risk.

Saudi Arabia was also growing nervous of Iraq’s evidently huge missile arsenal. Denied access to U.S. ballistic missiles, Riyadh instead went knocking at the door of Beijing—which had previously proven willing to export arms to Iran when Moscow and Washington refused to do so.

In 1987, China transferred between thirty and 120 Dongfeng (‘East Wind’) DF-3A intermediate range ballistic missiles measuring twenty-four meters long and a dozen Transport-Erector-Launcher trucks. Once gassed full of liquid fuel, the missiles could strike targets as far as 2,700 miles away—though they required special launch pads. Saudi Arabia formed a Royal Saudi Strategic Missile Force to operate the weapons, much to Washington’s annoyance.

Just four years later, Riyadh did end up in a war with Baghdad, and forty-six Iraqi missiles did fall upon Saudi territory . Yet Riyadh never bothered flinging missiles back at Baghdad. Why?

The problem with the DF-3 is that it has a Circular Error Probable of at best 300 meters. This means that if you fired a half-dozen at a given target, you could expect on average only three to land within the length of three football fields of the aim point; with the other three most likely falling further afield. Other sources claim the CEP may even be as large as one or two miles.

A weapon that inaccurate is pretty much useless for striking a military target—unless equipped with a nuclear warhead, which is what the DF-3 was designed to do.

But China wasn’t going to sell nukes to the Saudis. The DF-3s were instead modified to carry 3,000 pounds of high explosives. This meant the Saudi DF-3s were only ‘useful’ for dropping high explosives on a target as large as a city and randomly killing whatever unlucky civilians happened to be nearby the point of impact. However, the abundant firepower of U.S. war planes during the Gulf War meant the Saudis felt little need for such +tactics.

Over a decade later, Riyadh grew interested in acquiring a more effective strategic missile deterrence, and again turned to China—this time seeking its much more accurate DF-21 IRBM, which has a CEP of only 30-meters. (China even developed a guided DF-21D model designed to hit large ships at sea .) Furthermore, the DF-21’s use of solid-fuel rockets means it can be launched on very short notice.

Though possessing a shorter range of 1,100 miles, the 30-ton missile is perfectly adequate to hit targets throughout the Middle East and would be difficult to intercept as it plunges towards its target at ten times the speed of sound. Reportedly Saudi launch sites were photographed oriented for firing at Iran and Israel, though given the increasingly less discrete alliance between Riyadh and Tel Aviv in recent years, that latter part may be more for show.

In 2014, Newsweek exposed that the CIA had actually helped broker the sale of Chinese missile to Riyadh—as long as it was established that the DF-21s did not have nuclear warheads. Thus, after a series of covert meetings in Washington DC-area diners between spooks and Saudi officials, in 2007 two CIA agents were dispatched to inspect the missiles in their shipping crates before they were transferred into Saudi possession.

Saudi Arabia has reportedly never test-fired its missile arsenal, however, leaving the operational readiness of the RSSMF open to question. Nonetheless, it has maintained four or five underground facilities to house the weapons. Finally, in April 2014, as Riyadh grew fearful of U.S. rapprochement with Iran due to the nuclear deal, it paraded the gigantic missiles publicly .

The thing with a ‘deterrent’ weapon system is that, though they need to appear to be a credible threat, they only serve their primary purpose if they scare a foe into avoiding hostilities. However, that deterrence can’t happen if the adversary isn’t well aware of the extent of that threat due to secrecy, which may explain the Saudi decision to begin prominently trotting the rockets out in full view.

There are also persistent rumors that Riyadh has acquired a small quantity of nuclear weapons from Pakistan, or has arranged to have some transferred in the event of a conflict. Again, the mere existence of the rumors is useful for Saudi deterrence, regardless of the truth of the matter.

That Tehran takes the Saudi threat seriously is supported by a statement by an Iranian general claiming in September 2018 that Iran had earlier tested its Bavar-373 surface-to-air missile system to intercept a ballistic missile. As the primary threat to Iran from the United States comes from air strikes and cruise missiles, the test is likely aimed at Saudi or Israeli missile capabilities. The Bavar-373 appears to be an attempted domestic copy of the Russian S-300PMU-2 long-range SAM.

Ultimately, Washington clearly has fewer objections to the possession of ballistic missiles and possible nuclear capabilities in its nominal allies. Both Iran and Saudi Arabia, past victims of ballistic missile attack, appear to believe that bulking up on such weapons will deter each other from overt hostilities—perhaps even if they only have conventional warheads. However, the tens of thousands of civilians killed during the War of the Cities in the 1980s doesn’t really support that assumption.


Sébastien Roblin holds a master’s degree in conflict resolution from Georgetown University and served as a university instructor for the Peace Corps in China. He has also worked in education, editing, and refugee resettlement in France and the United States. He currently writes on security and military history for War Is Boring.

Source:https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/saudi-arabia-already-has-ballistic-missile-arsenal-courtesy-china—-little-help-cia-31772

200 in total combined of each missile type. Aside from the other missiles in the arsenal, the "secret" chemical weapons arsenal, Patriots, THAAD and S-400.

No other entity in the region, aside from Israel, has such powerful missiles in their arsenal.

I suggest allying with Israel in this regard and cooperate in order to develop nuclear and chemical weapons in KSA.



 

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