The global competition between the West and the rest takes many forms, including in the energy area. The nuclear energy industry has long been such a battlefield. Unfortunately, the U.S. and Europe are not doing great when it comes to winning bids in the developing world.
In late May 2024, Uzbekistan signed an agreement with Russia for the sanctioned Russian State Atomic Energy Corporation (Rosatom) to build a nuclear power plant in Uzbekistan. It will be the first nuclear power plant in Central Asia, providing emission-free electricity to an energy-hungry nation. It will also give Moscow renewed leverage in a region that used the war in Ukraine as an opportunity to slip out of Moscow’s orbit. This Russian success is not fully consolidated; neighboring Kazakhstan has rebuffed Russian advances, at least for now. Astana is considering four options: from China, Russia, South Korea and France, and the issue will be voted upon in the national referendum to be held this Autumn