____________________
Energy
Canada is ready to ride the nuclear renaissance wave
AECL president outlines potential for nuclear to become one of Canada's
major industrial sectors
TORONTO - Canada's nuclear industry, largely based in
Ontario, has the potential to become one of the largest industrial sectors in
the country, says Atomic Energy of Canada Limited's (AECL) president and CEO
Hugh MacDiarmid.
Speaking to the Ontario Energy Network in Toronto, Mr. MacDiarmid
described the tremendous growth in demand for nuclear power around the world
and Canada's newest Generation III+ CANDU reactor that's designed to capture
part of this rapid market growth.
"Canada's nuclear industry is poised to become the catalyst for the
creation of thousands of new jobs, and the generation of billions of dollars
in revenue," said Mr. MacDiarmid. "With more than 230 nuclear reactors on the
planning books around the world representing more than $1 trillion of
investment, winning just a fraction of the world nuclear new build market
represents enormous opportunity for AECL, its suppliers and all Canadians."
According to MacDiarmid, Canada's manufacturing and construction
industries have a tremendous opportunity to benefit from the global nuclear
revitalization: "Canada's CANDU nuclear industry is creating much needed work
for our manufacturing sector," added MacDiarmid, "and the millions of dollars
in work we have committed to suppliers to date is just the tip of the iceberg
as it will increase dramatically with global CANDU reactor sales."
Mr. MacDiarmid also provided an update on the status of the new ACR-1000
reactor, the newest in Canada's CANDU fleet. "AECL is ready with the right
technology and within our design engineering, R & D, licensing and
construction planning, the ACR is right where it should be - on track to meet
the market window."
|