Friday, February 6, 2009

U.S./Emirates go nuclear... deal

What is small, smart and full of oil? No, it's not Dick Cheney's heart - it's the United Arab Emirates.

The U.A.E. is one of the most forward thinking and advanced countries in the Middle East and I would venture to say, the world. As a small confederation of mostly tiny desert emirates the UAE is looking to the future.. and that future includes international cooperation, an expanded relationship with the US, and energy stability.

I know you're probably scratching your head going "The UAE? Aren't those guys swimming in oil?" and yes, yes they are. The UAE is one of the most oil rich countries in the world, especially considering its puny size and small population. Unlike other Arab and oil-producing countries the Emirates are looking forward to the age of energy-independence and oil's inevitable decline.

If 2008 has taught the oil-producing countries of the world anything it is that fortunes can swell and then disappear very quickly. In the past year oil prices climbed from 70 dollars a barrel up to 150 at the height of summer, then down to $40 at the end of the year. That means most OPEC countries had horrible years because they expected the prices to either keep going up or hold stead at the price of $75/barrel. There were very few bright spots, one of those was the Emirates due to their plan to turn their tiny country into a travel, tourism, and foreign investment destination as well as their own economy's diversification.

There is one great weakness however in the Emirates, energy. How? Well, when you at home and you plug go to the electrical outlet where does your power come from? A coal plant? The UAE has no coal. A wind farm\solar energy? The Emirates would have to build a wind mill or solar panel every 20 ft to meet their needs. A hydroelectric dam? Good luck finding rivers in the desert. Finally, the most efficient, a nuclear power plant. Well.. the UAE is on its way.


The UAE signed a nuclear deal with the United States for nuclear fuel and access to important knowledge regarding the construction of one or more power plants. This deal is mutually beneficial, the Emirates get their precious energy, the US has something to cement their relationship with the oil-rich country, the US gets loads of cash (which they need), and the whole thing will be overseen entirely by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

I do love it when a plan comes together.

What do you think? Do you think this is a smart move by either party? Any aspects you think I'm missing? Enlighten everyone with a comment!


Links:

U.S. and UAE sign nuclear deal

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

clearly a brilliant move, the more nuclear energy generaton develops, the cheaper it will get. It will also mean more companies investing in R&D on this important electricity source.

More countries should be doing this. Zimbabwe, where I live, recently discovered uranum and we have Iranians swarming all over the place. This is because the cost of developing Zimbabwe's potential is prohibitive for Mugabe, so I suspect he is flogging off the uranium to Iran in return for hard cash.

He has asked them to help set up a power plant, but they are not interested. They want the raw uranium.

VH said...

The nuclear plant illustration is excellent.
Energy diversification is always a good plan. The UAE is thinking of its future.

Anonymous said...

Not a bad move at all. It scares me that I live so close to one in Ohio - if they're willing to do them there and have us get money out of it? Golden.

Anonymous said...

Where will they put spent fuel rods?

It's always a loophole with nuclear energy.

All source of alternative energy depend upon oil at least to the degree that shipping manufactured goods depends upon it.