China To Set Up New Nuclear Power Plant For Pak
(Press Trust of India | Islamabad | October 28, 2002)
A Chinese delegation on Tuesday told Pakistan that it would help
set up the country's third nuclear power plant to overcome its
energy shortage, a top Pakistani scientist said.
"China has shown its willingness to give us a new nuclear power
plant," said Ashfaq Ahmad, head of Pakistan's Strategic Programme and
one of the leaders of Pakistan's nuclear programme. "We have energy
problems so we want to enhance the contribution of nuclear energy."
Ahmad today met a delegation headed by Li Dingfan, chief of China's
nuclear programme, to discuss proposals for setting up a power
plant in the remote eastern Punjab town of Chashma, which would be
the country's third. A longtime ally, China is a leading supplier
of weapons and defence technology to Pakistan. Pakistan's second
power plant was built in Chashma, 225 kilometres southwest of
Islamabad, in the 1990s with Chinese assistance.
The nation's first nuclear power plant was set up in Karachi in
the 1970s with Canadian help.
Islamabad's plans to set up a nuclear power plant with China's
aid comes amid reports that Pakistan provided assistance to North
Korea a few years ago in its nuclear weapons programme.
President Gen. Pervez Musharraf has denied those reports.
On Monday, Ahmad insisted that Pakistan's nuclear programme is
only for peaceful purposes. The current Chashma plant has the
capacity of generating 600 megawatts of power, he said.
Ahmad, the former chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission,
said the government also plans to have a fourth nuclear power plant built
in Karachi.
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