
South Africa may require to build five nuclear power plants by 2030 at a cost of more than $35 billion as Africa’s biggest economy struggle to get together energy demand, said Rob Adam, chief executive officer of the country’s state owned Nuclear Energy Corp. Construction of the first plant should preferably start in 2013, Adam said in an interview in Johannesburg today. Plants could be located in the Western and Eastern Cape province. “The country will require to build about five Koeberg-sized stations,” he said.
Koeberg, which in progress operating in 1984, is the nation’s only nuclear plant and produce about 6 percent of its electricity. South Africa is battling an electricity deficiency after the government suspended the expansion plans of state owned usefulness Eskom Holdings Ltd. while it try and failed to convince private companies to build power plants. That resulted in a five day shutdown of the majority mines in the country, which is the world’s biggest platinum manufacturer, in early 2008.
In December of that year, South Africa halt plans to build a second, 120 billion rand ($17 billion) nuclear plant as the global financial disaster tightened credit markets. South Africa will whole laws next year to permit private companies to spend in planned nuclear plants, Chris Forlee, deputy director general of the Department of Public Enterprises, said on Oct. 26. Toshiba Corp.’s Westinghouse Electric Co. and Areva SA, the world’s biggest supplier of reactors, vied for the canceled order.
Koeberg, which in progress operating in 1984, is the nation’s only nuclear plant and produce about 6 percent of its electricity. South Africa is battling an electricity deficiency after the government suspended the expansion plans of state owned usefulness Eskom Holdings Ltd. while it try and failed to convince private companies to build power plants. That resulted in a five day shutdown of the majority mines in the country, which is the world’s biggest platinum manufacturer, in early 2008.
In December of that year, South Africa halt plans to build a second, 120 billion rand ($17 billion) nuclear plant as the global financial disaster tightened credit markets. South Africa will whole laws next year to permit private companies to spend in planned nuclear plants, Chris Forlee, deputy director general of the Department of Public Enterprises, said on Oct. 26. Toshiba Corp.’s Westinghouse Electric Co. and Areva SA, the world’s biggest supplier of reactors, vied for the canceled order.
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