The presidents of Turkey and Russia remotely inaugurated the construction of a third nuclear reactor at the Akkuyu power plant in southern Turkey on March 10, vowing to continue their close cooperation.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said the plant would launch Turkey into the ”league of nuclear energy countries” and called it a “symbol of Turkish-Russian cooperation.”
Russia is building Turkey’s first nuclear power plant on the Mediterranean coast in Mersin province. The two countries signed a cooperation agreement in 2010 and began construction in 2018.
Turkey is largely dependent on power imports. Energy Minister Fatih Dönmez, said the plant would fulfill about 10% of domestic electricity needs.
Erdoğan said the first reactor would become operational in 2023, to coincide with the centennial of the modern Turkish state. A total of four reactors are planned.
The Turkish president also said cooperation between Ankara and Moscow played a “key role” in regional stability.
“We have had the opportunity to see the results of Turkish-Russian dialogue in many fields, including in Libya, in Nagorno-Karabakh, in Syria,” Erdoğan said. The two countries back opposing sides in these conflicts.
Erdoğan and Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke at the event via video-conference Wednesday.
Speaking from Moscow, Putin called the nuclear plant a “truly flagship project.”