☢️ ASEAN fast-tracks nuclear energy plans for clean power
Nations push reactors to meet energy and climate goals

The Main Takeaway
☢️ ASEAN countries are accelerating nuclear power plans to secure clean, stable energy. Several aim for first plants or small modular reactors (SMRs) by the early-to-mid 2030s.
Why It’s on Our Radar
Low-carbon baseload for growing economies ⚡
Rising data-centre and industrial demand 🖥️🏭
Governments building policy, workforce, and safety frameworks 📜👷
What’s at Stake
Energy security in a fossil-fuel-heavy region 🛢️➡️⚛️
Climate commitments and net-zero targets 🌍♻️
Public trust after past nuclear accidents 🚨
The Big Picture
🇵🇭 Philippines – First plant by 2032 (1,200 MW), scaling to 4,800 MW by 2050; SMRs and Bataan revival on table.
🇮🇩 Indonesia – 500-MW project in plan; SMR possible by 2030; courting China & Russia vendors.
🇻🇳 Vietnam – Restarting nuclear after 2016 pause; aiming for early 2030s capacity.
🇹🇭 Thailand – US nuclear cooperation pact; SMR possible by mid-2030s.
🇲🇾 Malaysia – “Serious evaluation” stage; 2035 for small unit if swift action.
🇸🇬 Singapore – Building nuclear research capacity; no deployment decision yet.
🇲🇲 Myanmar – Rosatom deal for small plant; high political/seismic risk.
🇱🇦 Laos & 🇰🇭 Cambodia – Early cooperation with Russia/China; unlikely before 2040.
The Regional Stakes
Front-runners: 🇵🇭 & 🇮🇩 by mid-2030s 🥇
Close contender: 🇻🇳 if plans stay on track
Possible joiners: 🇹🇭 & 🇲🇾 with quick policy moves
Others building capability or facing political/technical hurdles
Beyond the Headlines
IAEA chief: Technical obstacles manageable, interest is high 📈
Public education needed to counter Fukushima-era fears 📢
SMRs could solve space & safety issues for dense nations like 🇸🇬 🏙️
Need More Angles?
Intellinews ASEAN is going nuclear – it's just a matter of time
The Star Assessing nuclear energy needs
Channel News Asia ASEAN nations can overcome space, disaster constraints in pursuit of nuclear energy: IAEA chief
(ELS/QOB)