In a major geopolitical and energy breakthrough, Türkiye and the United States signed a Strategic Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement on September 25, 2025, during President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s high-profile visit to the White House. The agreement marks a significant step in deepening bilateral ties, particularly in the high-tech domain of nuclear energy, with wide-ranging implications for energy security, technological cooperation, and regional influence.
Nuclear Partnership with Global Impact
While official details remain limited, Turkish officials confirmed the deal focuses on,
- Development of large-scale nuclear power plants
- Deployment of small modular reactors (SMRs)
- This cooperation is viewed as a strategic counterbalance to Türkiye’s existing energy projects with Russia and evolving negotiations with countries like China, Japan, and South Korea.
- It signals Türkiye’s intent to become a diversified nuclear energy player with ties to multiple global powers.
The signing ceremony followed another key deal during Erdoğan’s US trip—state-run BOTAS signed LNG import contracts totaling 75.8 billion cubic meters with Mercuria (Switzerland) and Woodside Energy (Australia), underlining Türkiye’s aggressive push toward energy diversification.
Türkiye’s Expanding Nuclear Ambitions
Akkuyu: The First Step
Türkiye’s nuclear journey began with the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant, currently under construction by Russia’s Rosatom in Mersin province.
- Cost: $20 billion
- Reactors: Four VVER units
- Total Capacity: 4,800 MW
- First Unit Operational By: 2026
What’s Next?
Türkiye plans two additional nuclear plants,
- Sinop on the Black Sea coast
- Thrace region in the northwest
- These locations remain open for international collaboration—with the new US partnership seen as a leading contender.
SMRs: Türkiye Eyes the Future
One of the most critical aspects of the US-Türkiye nuclear pact is the focus on Small Modular Reactors (SMRs)—compact, scalable nuclear reactors that can be,
- Deployed near industrial zones
- Integrated with renewable energy sources
- Built faster than traditional nuclear plants
SMRs are seen as the next frontier of nuclear technology, and Türkiye’s early investment could position it as a regional SMR hub.
For Static
- Date of signing: September 25, 2025
- Signed by: Bayraktar (Türkiye), Rubio (USA)
- Focus: Civil nuclear cooperation—large reactors & SMRs
- Other active nuclear project: Akkuyu (Russia, 4,800 MW)
- Additional energy moves: 75.8 bcm LNG contracts with Swiss & Australian firms
- Strategic aim: Diversify energy sources, reduce gas imports, modernize grid


Sudan Approved an Agreement Allowing Rus...
International IDEA: 30 Years of Supporti...
India Re-Elected to UNESCO Executive Boa...

