Qatar to pay students to study nuclear engineering abroad
Three government ministries joined forces Wednesday to unveil a scholarship programme that will send Qatari students abroad to study nuclear engineering — with their salaries running the entire time they're in class.Standing at the podium of the Ministry of Education and Higher Education's press conference, officials from MOEHE, the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, and the Civil Service and Government Development Bureau laid out what they billed as one of the most generous scholarship packages the state has offered in a specialised technical field.The pitch is straightforward: students who qualify will receive a full government salary throughout their undergraduate studies overseas, have those study years counted toward their civil service tenure, and walk into a guaranteed Grade Nine government position upon graduation — with a path to postgraduate funding waiting after that."This is a strategic qualitative step," said Dr Hareb Mohammed al-Jabri, MOEHE's Assistant Undersecretary for Higher Education Affairs, describing nuclear engineering as "one of the most critical and future-oriented scientific disciplines."He was direct about the programme's intent — it isn't simply about producing graduates, it's about filling a specific institutional gap. Appointments will go directly to MECC's Radiation Protection Department, which regulates radiation use across Qatar's medical and industrial sectors.The financial incentives are notable. Yousef Ibrahim al-Hamar, MECC's Assistant Undersecretary for Environmental Affairs, and Yaqoub Saleh al-Ishaq of the Civil Service Bureau confirmed that nuclear engineering carries an 85% work nature allowance under Prime Minister's Decision No. 25 of 2025 — the highest work nature allowance of any engineering discipline in the government structure.Officials were candid about why the scholarship must send students abroad: nuclear engineering is not taught anywhere in Qatar. Graduates will train at internationally accredited universities, working in labs and technical units within the Radiation Protection Department when they return, giving them hands-on exposure across medical imaging, industrial applications, and regulatory oversight.Al-Ishaq framed the Bureau's role as more than administrative. "We're ensuring alignment between educational outputs and actual career pathways," he said, describing the programme as an "integrated path" designed from the first day of undergraduate study through to a defined career trajectory in government service.Selection criteria are tight. Candidates must demonstrate academic excellence, meet specific grade thresholds from prior qualifications, satisfy English language requirements, and hold unconditional admission from an accredited university. Officials acknowledged the number of seats will be small, reflecting both the rarity of the specialization and the precision of the workforce need.An awareness campaign targeting secondary school students is planned to accompany the launch, with officials keen to demystify a field many young Qataris may know little about.The initiative falls under Qatar National Vision 2030's push to diversify the economy and reduce dependence on expatriate expertise in technically sensitive sectors.Applications are expected to open following the awareness rollout.