Jordan Atomic Energy Commission

Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
Jordan Atomic Energy Commission
هيئة الطاقة الذرية الأردنية
Agency overview
Formed January 5, 2008 (2008-01-05)
Preceding agency
  • Nuclear Energy Commission
Jurisdiction Jordanian government
Headquarters Amman Jordan
Agency executive
Website http://www.jaec.gov.jo

Jordan Atomic Energy Commission (JAEC) (Arabic هيئة الطاقة الذرية الأردنية) was established in place of the Jordan Nuclear Energy Commission. The main objective of the JAEC is to promote and develop peaceful utilization of atomic energy.

Objectives

The commission directs its projects to the two objectives:

Jordanian Nuclear Program

The nuclear program of Jordan includes building a research nuclear plant on campus of Jordan University of Science and Technology with a capacity of 5-10 Mwatt, for scientific research in medical, agricultural, and health services, the reactor is scheduled to be built in 2013.

Jordan signed or is in the process of signing bilateral treaties with the United States, France, South Korea, China, Japan, Canada, Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Spain, Argentina and the United Kingdom.

The program also includes building a nuclear reactor on the Gulf of Aqaba 2–3 years after building the first one, with the purpose of desalinating water, followed by four nuclear electric power plants by the year 2035.[1]

In October 2013 the Russian VVER-1000 design was selected in a competitive tender for Jordan's first twin reactor nuclear power station.[2]

The Jordan Nuclear Regulatory Commission (JNRC) was established in 2007 to regulate and monitor the use of nuclear energy and ionizing radiation.[3]

Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East (SESAME)

JAEC collaborates with UNESCO in constructing the Middle East's first major international research center: International Centre for Synchrotron-Light for Experimental Science Applications in the Middle East (SESAME) in Allaan, Jordan (30 km from Amman). The project is provisioned and under the full responsibility of a council of six permanent members: Bahrain, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Pakistan, Palestinian Authority, and Turkey. Observer countries are Germany, Greece, Italy, Kuwait, Russian Federation, Sweden, UK, and the US.[4][5]

See also

References

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