CAIRO: Egypt has emerged at the forefront of a new push by Arab nations to build nuclear power plants in the volatile Middle East even as the West is locked in a standoff with Iran over its atomic drive.

President Hosni Mubarak announced on Tuesday that Egypt planned to construct a series of nuclear power plants, relaunching a programme shelved 20 years ago following the Chernobyl disaster.

Egypt’s move follows similar announcements by other Arab nations including the oil-rich Gulf states and former international pariah state Libya — despite growing tensions between Iran and the West over its own nuclear programme.

“There is an internal political dimension to the decision by Mubarak, who is telling Iran that they will not allow Tehran to be the sole regional power to control the atom,” said Antoine Basbous, director of the Arab World Observatory based in Paris.

Cairo’s announcement that it would seek nuclear capabilities to ensure its future energy security while ruling out any military ambitions, received the immediate backing of Iran’s arch-foe Washington.

“It is a right for all Arabs,” Mubarak thundered at the Arab summit in Riyadh in March, sparking talk it was time for an “Arab nuclear family”.

Among those seeking nuclear power are Algeria, Jordan, Libya, the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council including OPEC powerhouse Saudi Arabia, and Yemen.

GCC heads of state are due to report on the feasibility of a regional nuclear programme at their annual summit in Qatar in December.

Last week, the specialist Middle East Economic Digest reported that the GCC had proposed to Iran the creation of a multinational consortium to provide enriched uranium to the Islamic republic as a way of resolving the standoff.

No Arab countries currently feature on the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) list of the 31 countries with a nuclear capability, which together have 435 working power stations and 29 under construction.

While Egypt, the most populous country in the Arab world with 76 million people, and energy-poor Jordan could justify the switch to nuclear energy, the choice is more difficult for the Gulf countries, sitting on huge oil and gas reserves.

“It is Iran’s desire to accelerate its suspect nuclear programme that has encouraged its Arab neighbours to push forward and pursue a nuclear course,” said Basbous.

Iran has been slapped with two sets of UN sanctions for failing to halt uranium enrichment, a process the West fears could be diverted to making a nuclear bomb.

But IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei said late last month that he had no evidence Iran was engaged in a “concrete active nuclear weapons programme”.

Egypt, which is a signatory to the NPT, officially supports the scrapping of atomic weapons in the Middle East and regularly criticises Israel for its nuclear policy.

Libya itself abandoned a secret atomic programme in 2003 just as it claimed to be “on the point of producing a nuclear bomb,” according to Tripoli’s leader Moamer Kadhafi, but France is now helping to build nuclear facilities there.

—AFP

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