A drone strike hit an external electrical generator near the Barakah nuclear power plant in the UAE’s Al Dhafra region, sparking a fire that authorities say did not damage the reactors or compromise radiological safety.
No injuries were reported. All units at the Barakah plant continue operating normally, according to UAE authorities.
What happened at Barakah
The strike targeted an external electrical generator, not the reactor buildings themselves. The resulting fire was contained, and UAE officials moved quickly to confirm that the plant’s core operations were never at risk.
The Barakah nuclear power plant supplies roughly 25% of the UAE’s total electricity, making it a cornerstone of the country’s energy strategy and one of the most significant pieces of civilian nuclear infrastructure in the Middle East.
The geopolitical backdrop
Analysts have pointed to a heightened risk environment driven by ongoing regional conflicts and what has been described as a fragile ceasefire situation.
The UAE’s nuclear program operates under the US-UAE 123 Agreement, a bilateral framework that prohibits the UAE from enriching uranium domestically.
What this means for energy security and regional stability
The Barakah nuclear power plant has been operational since 2021 and was built at a cost of approximately $20 billion. A facility that generates a quarter of a nation’s electricity is, by definition, systemically important.





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