GABI organizes nuclear energy roundtable discussions on a diverse range of topics that are relevant to nuclear markets both in the United States and globally. The discussion topics range from the civil nuclear partnerships, nuclear safety, nonproliferation, spent fuel management, international R&D and commercial collaboration, market and industry forecasts, and other related topics.

11 12, 2018

Avenues of Expanding U.S.-Korea Energy Cooperation

By |2018-12-13T16:38:40-05:00December 11th, 2018|Categories: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

South Korea and the United States are well positioned to overcome their domestic energy problems through bilateral international cooperation. Korea has increasingly imported LNG from the United States, and as a result, the two nations have also seen economic benefits in trade and investment. As global energy demand is anticipated to grow, there are market

15 11, 2018

Track II Dialogue on DPRK Denuclearization Roadmaps and Verification

By |2018-11-29T11:33:24-05:00November 15th, 2018|Categories: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops, Uncategorized|0 Comments

Recent, extraordinary events have created opportunities and requirements to develop a roadmap to the goal of verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), or North Korea. The technical and policy scope of a DPRK denuclearization roadmap must prioritize verifiable declaration and dismantlement of the DPRK's nuclear weapons program, including nuclear

23 10, 2018

The Nuclear Innovation: Clean Energy Future (NICE Future) Initiative Perspectives on the Role of Nuclear in Global Clean Energy

By |2018-10-25T10:14:58-04:00October 23rd, 2018|Categories: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

During the 9th Clean Energy Ministerial (CEM), a multinational effort called the Nuclear Innovation: Clean Energy (NICE) Future Initiative was launched. The NICE Future initiative seeks to elevate discussions about nuclear energy from "traditional, nuclear-only fora to broader multilateral discussions on clean energy at both the ministerial and working levels." To this end, NICE is

11 10, 2018

Multinational Nuclear Supplier Partnerships within the OECD: Ensuring Relevance and Competitiveness in the Global Nuclear Power Market

By |2018-10-15T11:21:01-04:00October 11th, 2018|Categories: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

The nuclear industries of countries guided by democratic and free market principles are facing various market and government imposed challenges, including escalating regulatory burdens, rising construction costs, adverse domestic power markets, and atrophying supply chains. Perhaps most worrisome, however, is the threat posed by state-owned, vertically-integrated vendors in Russia and China. Not only do governments

14 09, 2018

The U.S.-Korea Civil Nuclear Partnership Implications for Energy, Geopolitics, and Nonproliferation

By |2018-09-18T10:51:19-04:00September 14th, 2018|Categories: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

The U.S.-South Korea civil nuclear relationship has evolved significantly over the decades--South Korea's civil nuclear program first developed under U.S. technological guidance and patronage, and the two countries' nuclear energy industries and establishments remain closely intertwined. What was once a relationship of tutelage has gradually transformed into a more equal partnership. Korea has established itself

24 08, 2018

Catalysts for Deployment of Advanced Nuclear: Innovative Technology Development Approaches

By |2018-08-24T12:03:55-04:00August 24th, 2018|Categories: Events, Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

Advanced nuclear concepts currently in development have the potential for improved cost competitiveness, inherent safety, enhanced flexibility and deployability, more manageable waste streams, and increased proliferation resistance. Successful deployment of such technologies may dramatically alter the energy landscape of the future, and accelerating their development will be necessary so that they can meaningfully contribute to

18 06, 2018

Current Status of Spent Fuel Management in Sweden: Progress and Lessons Learned

By |2018-06-21T16:24:20-04:00June 18th, 2018|Categories: Events, Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

Although solutions to the disposal and management of spent nuclear fuel have proven elusive for virtually all nuclear power countries, Sweden is among the most furthest along in solving this problem. Under Swedish law, license holders are responsible for ensuring the safe management and final disposal of radioactive materials and waste. Thus, Swedish utilities collectively

8 06, 2018

US-Korea Cooperation in New Nuclear Markets: Opportunities, Challenges, and Imperatives

By |2018-06-21T16:27:02-04:00June 8th, 2018|Categories: Events, Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

Growing global energy demand and carbon mitigation challenges together drive increasing interest in nuclear power globally, even as the world continues to deal with the aftereffects of the Fukushima accident. With China’s potential to become a dominant civil nuclear vendor and significant difficulties for nuclear energy in U.S. power markets, the imperatives for international cooperation

16 05, 2018

Commercial Perspectives on Fuel Cycle Development in Saudi Arabia

By |2018-06-21T16:29:25-04:00May 16th, 2018|Categories: Events, Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

The uranium fuel market is weak from commercial and technical issues ranging from a small supply chain, to an overabundance of supply met with too little demand. Prices have dropped low enough that conversion plants have begun to temporarily halt production to allow the prices to recover. The current state of the nuclear fuel market

4 04, 2018

The National Security Implications of the U.S. Commercial Nuclear Industry

By |2018-06-21T16:35:09-04:00April 4th, 2018|Categories: Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Energy Workshops|0 Comments

The strength of the United States’ voice in upholding international safety, security, and nonproliferation standards is directly correlated with the robustness and health of its domestic commercial nuclear industry. As the U.S. commercial industry declines, so does the power of U.S. leadership in setting global nuclear governance norms. Players such as Russia and China are

Go to Top