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    Home » South Africa plans next phase of new 2,500 MW nuclear plant

    South Africa plans next phase of new 2,500 MW nuclear plant

    September 22, 2021
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    *Nuclear power plant

    Cape Town — South Africa is forging ahead with plans for a new 2,500-megawatt nuclear power plant in a bid to boost energy security and wants to end the procurement process by 2024, the deputy energy minister said on Tuesday.

    “We plan to issue the Request for Proposal (RFP) for 2,500MW nuclear programme at end of March 2022 and complete the procurement in 2024 to support the economic reconstruction and recovery plan and ensure security of energy supply,” Nobhule Pamela said in an address to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), according to a copy of her speech.

    With the government having only launched a request for information in June last year to test the market’s appetite for the new plant, and the procurement process still in the early stages, there were no immediate details on estimated cost or completion date for the project.

    Last month, South Africa’s energy regulator backed a long-term government plan to build new nuclear power units, a move that could help to shift the country away from coal and into less carbon-intensive means of generating electricity.

    Africa’s most industrialised economy has the continent’s only operating nuclear plant, a 1,900 megawatt (MW) facility outside Cape Town that was built under apartheid.

    However, much of its electricity supply comes from a fleet of coal-fired power plants that spew harmful emissions into the air and many of which are set for closure within a decade as South Africa cuts down emissions.

    South Africa, which experiences regular blackouts due to erratic power supplies, has said it said it will look to expand its nuclear capacity at a pace and time it could afford, after abandoning in 2018 a massive nuclear expansion plan championed by former president, Jacob Zuma.

    Analysts had expressed serious concern about Zuma’s project for an array of nuclear plants totalling 9,600 MW because it would have put massive extra strain on South Africa’s public finances as it faced a raft of credit rating downgrades.

     

    • Reuters (Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by Emma Rumney and Bernadette Baum)
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