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Nuclear Non-Proliferation and the Global South: Understanding Divergences and Commonalities

Negating Non-proliferation? The Potential Sino-South Challenge to Nuclear Market Regulation

 

ABSTRACT

Developing industrial-scale nuclear energy projects requires substantial technical expertise, access to complex fuel supply chains and long-term financial capital. For developing countries investing in civil nuclear energy programmes, securing external support is crucial. However, the nuclear technology trade market is heavily regulated and rather thin. Exporter states must balance commercial opportunity with security interests, given nuclear technology’s dual use. Because of this, incumbent exporters bear responsibility in crafting and enforcing market regulations. As highlighted by the budding Chinese-Argentinian relationship, newly capable market entrants, particularly the People’s Republic of China (PRC), have the potential to challenge international non-proliferation norms by fulfilling market demand where other, predominately Western, states have demurred. The strength of nuclear markets’ non-proliferation-oriented regulatory structures hinges on nascent relationships between entrepreneurial exporters and participating Global South states.

Acknowledgements

A debt of gratitude is sincerely owed to LTC Jordan Becker and Dr Scott Limbocker for their enduring enthusiasm and encouragement for this project.

Notes

1 Nuclear topics of all types commonly invoke such awe, fear and seriousness that they are usually discussed as a separate, exceptional realm. This is true of both their development as a physical science, as well as matters of politics or policy. Sensationalising nuclear topics’ technopolitical nature often results in ambiguities and contradictions. Hecht describes this phenomenon as stemming from “nuclear exceptionalism.”

Additional information

Notes on contributors

J. Alexander Thew

J. Alexander Thew is a US Army Major and Assistant Professor of Economics at the United States Military Academy, West Point (NY), US.

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