Rosatom Replaces 92% of Critical Foreign Software With Domestic Alternatives
Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom says it has achieved a 92% import-substitution rate across key categories of software after investing roughly 200 billion rubles ($~2.5 billion) into the effort over recent years.

Rosatom has raised the level of import substitution in critical software categories to 92%, according to company CEO Alexey Likhachev.
Likhachev said the level of software import substitution at strategically important facilities has already reached 100%. Over the past five years alone, the corporation invested approximately 200 billion rubles ($~2.5 billion) to achieve those results.
Since 2016, Rosatom has added more than 550 proprietary solutions to Russia’s Unified Register of Domestic Software and Databases. Most of the products are designed for industrial automation. They include systems for predicting product quality and equipment conditions, as well as software for engineering design, mathematical modeling, lifecycle management, and digital services for urban administration.
Rosatom also noted that its software products are now used by 4,500 enterprises across Russia. The systems operate not only in the nuclear sector, but in a wide range of other industries as well.








































