A nuclear plant. Russia’s nuclear agency Rosatom has concluded nuclear
power memoranda of understanding with Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Sudan,
Zambia and Uganda. FILE PHOTO | AFP
Over the past few years, reports have surfaced of a range of African countries planning nuclear power plants.
At
the moment, the only nuclear plant in operation on the continent is
South Africa’s Koeberg, producing 1.86GW of power. This, according to
some African leaders, is about to change.
Ugandan
President Yoweri Museveni recently announced that his country is
planning 30GW of nuclear power by 2026. That equates to 16 times the
current total of nuclear energy on the entire African continent.
Uganda
is only one of a number of countries interested in nuclear power.
Russia’s nuclear agency Rosatom has concluded nuclear power memoranda of
understanding with Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Sudan and Zambia. Uganda is
also on the list.
Most African countries suffer from
severe electricity shortages. The majority need to double their
generating capacity to meet current needs.
According to International Energy Agency figures, Kenya, Sudan and Zambia are primarily dependent on hydroelectric power.
A
2.4GW nuclear plant would double their electricity production.
Nigeria’s dominant energy source is gas, and here it would take a 4.8GW
nuclear plant to double its capacity.
Of the countries
with Rosatom agreements, only Egypt has any concrete plans in place. A
site for a 4.8GW nuclear plant has been identified at El Dabaa, on the
Mediterranean Sea, and building is understood to be imminent. In the
other countries, the location and scale of the projects have yet to be
determined.
Elsewhere in the world, countries like
Germany, Belgium and the US are downscaling their nuclear plans or
exiting altogether. The reasons include perceptions of increased risk
following the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan — when a major
earthquake, disabled the power supply and cooling of three reactors,
causing a devastating nuclear accident — as well as economic factors.
Cheaper power
The
cost of electricity generation from solar photovoltaic and wind
technologies has come down dramatically. It already costs less than
power produced by nuclear plants and renewable energy is set to become
even cheaper.
Given that South Africa has shelved its
nuclear plans on affordability grounds, surely less resourced African
countries would find investments like these even more difficult.
Nuclear
power agreements are notoriously shrouded in secrecy. But it is
possible to get a sense of Rosatom’s plans for African nuclear contracts
by examining recent examples where details of mutual commitments have
become public.
A deal struck with Bangladesh provides a
useful benchmark against which to understand other deals that have been
done with Russia. In the case of the 2.4GW Rooppur nuclear plant,
Rosatom is providing most of a $12.65 billion loan.
This
only covers the estimated construction costs. Interest accrual,
possible cost overruns, operations and decommissioning are likely to
amount to more than double of this initial outlay. That makes a total
cost of roughly $30 billion likely.
Egypt’s El Dabaa
project has a similar funding arrangement. Here, Rosatom has given a
loan of $25 billion, which again is projected to cover only
construction.
For both Rooppur and El Dabaa, the annual
interest for their loan is around three per cent. In addition, the loan
is structured in a way that ensures repayments only start 10-13 years
after the loan is made, to continue in annual instalments for 22-28
years thereafter.
Debt burden
The
country receiving the nuclear plant initially pays very little, but
when the repayments kick in, it is suddenly faced with a massive burden
that most African economies will never be able to meet. By then the
three per cent annual interest could have increased the amount owed by
as much as 40 per cent.
The nuclear industry also has a
history of cost overruns and construction delays. A country may
therefore face a situation where it needs to service a
higher-than-expected debt while being unable to recoup funds from
electricity sales.
What is equally concerning is that
the debt then places Russia in a position where it is able to exert
disproportionate influence over a country’s affairs.
Zambia
is eyeing a nuclear plant on the scale of Bangladesh’s Rooppur. The
plant is expected to cost $30 billion. Given Zambia’s total annual
budget is $7.2 billion this is clearly unaffordable. If one were to
scale the Rooppur cost from 2.4GW to the 30GW nuclear power plants
proposed by President Museveni, the figure would be 15 times Uganda’s
annual GDP of $24 billion.
Are there cheaper alternatives to nuclear power to alleviate energy shortages in Africa?
A
great deal of hope was placed on the 40GW Grand Inga hydroelectric
scheme on the Congo river. But the project isn’t going to come to
fruition soon due to funding challenges.
The most
promising solution seems to be through multiple small-scale power
production initiatives, typically in bio-energy, solar heaters and
photovoltaic modules. These provide cheaper electricity than nuclear and
are in addition good job creators. With its extensive agricultural
sector, all of Africa has great biowaste energy potential.
Kenya has shown that there are excellent geothermal energy extraction possibilities along the Rift Valley.
Many
countries, including Egypt and Kenya, enjoy ample sunshine, making them
ideal for solar power generation. With the right incentives, these
could drive an African energy generation boom.
Hartmut Winkler is a professor of Physics at the University of Johannesburg.
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