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South Africa to review nuclear plans in response to recession

3 Min Read

South Africa Energy Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi said on Wednesday that it would review its nuclear plans as part of its response to the economic recession in the country.

Kubayi, who was in Moscow leading a South African delegation to a nuclear conference, said she was a member of a cabinet committee chaired by President Jacob Zuma which was drawing up responses to recession.

“We will do the nuclear project at a scale and pace that we can afford. So we will look at that completely, if we need to review the scale we have obviously to go back,’’ Kubayi said at a news conference.

South Africa was planning to build 9,600 megawatts (MW) of nuclear capacity, a project that could be one of the world’s biggest nuclear contracts in decades.

 

 

In response to a question on the firm that South Africa could choose to build new nuclear reactors, Kubayi said it was important to go for “the most experienced people who have a track record’’.

Kubayi met Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak and Rosatom head Alexei Likhachev on her visit to Russia, agreeing with Likhachev that South African and Russian technical teams would initiate discussions on cooperation.

She said it was too early to give an exact date on when the procurement process for the nuclear project could restart.

According to her, South Africa is reviewing intergovernmental agreements with many countries following the High Court ruling against the Russian nuclear pact.

 

 

“In a few weeks, we should be able to give an indication (of the procurement restart date), once the internal cabinet processes have been concluded.’’

South Africa has technically entered recession after two quarters of economic contraction.

The procurement process for the nuclear project has been disrupted by a court ruling which declared a nuclear pact between South Africa and Russia unlawful.

Russian state firm Rosatom is a contender to build the nuclear reactors and has been talking up its chances of winning the contract, given delays and cost overruns at French competitor Areva and Japanese-owned Westinghouse. (Reuters/NAN)
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