Việt Nam prepares workforce training as Ninh Thuận nuclear project resumes

May 02, 2025 - 12:46
VINATOM will collaborate with relevant agencies to enhance workforce skills, bolster scientific and technological capabilities, and support industrial production to meet stringent quality and safety standards.
The area for the proposed Ninh Thuận 2 nuclear power plant in Ninh Hải District, Ninh Thuận Province. VNA/VNS Photo

HÀ NỘI — After an eight-year pause, Việt Nam is resuming its Ninh Thuận nuclear power project, a move experts say demands specialists to guarantee safe and efficient operations as preparations accelerate.

Dr Trần Chí Thành, Director of the Việt Nam Atomic Energy Institute (VINATOM) under the Ministry of Science and Technology, stressed the importance of training a skilled management and operational team.

VINATOM will collaborate with relevant agencies to enhance workforce skills, bolster scientific and technological capabilities, and support industrial production to meet stringent quality and safety standards. The institute will also serve as a technical and safety advisor for the country's nuclear energy, he said.

Professor Phạm Duy Hiển, former deputy head of VINATOM, pegged Việt Nam’s current tally of nuclear professionals at roughly 400. It’s a start, but far short of what’s needed to run even a single plant.

“To get the first reactors humming, we’ll need more specialists. International partners need to commit to continuous training until the plant is operational," he said.

He was clear that training is only half the battle. Regulatory agencies must be led by sharp-eyed experts capable of dissecting proposals from global partners with rigor.

For now, Việt Nam can only deploy two to four reactors. The long-term vision is more expansive: a sustainable nuclear programme to anchor energy security.

VINATOM held that the nuclear technology for the initial phase should be Generation III+, which has already been adopted in many parts of the world. Thanks to its high installed capacity, this technology can meet Việt Nam’s electricity demand in the early stage.

The Ninh Thuận project, shelved in 2016 over cost and safety concerns, is more than an energy fix. “It’s a catalyst for advancing our scientific, technological and industrial capacity,” Thành said. — VNS

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