Thursday, December 29, 2016

Russia Sees South Africa as a Potentially Lucrative Market for Nuclear Power Plants

By Rod Adams, publisher of the Atomic Insights blog and produce of The Atomic Show Podcast.  – December 26
Rosatom, the Russian state-owned conglomerate that is building nuclear power plants in Russia and around the world, has confirmed that it is closely monitoring the public discussion that is taking place in South Africa over the newly released integrated energy plan. South Africa’s draft energy plan isn’t being presented to the public as a fait accompli. Instead, the draft provides information about several likely scenarios, all of which would include the 9.6 GWe of new nuclear plant capacity described in the 2010 version of the plan. There is some variation in the timing for the completion of the first new units depending on selected strategies for optimizing costs and balancing completion delays against the increased quantities of pollutants that would be emitted by delaying the introduction of new nuclear. In the base case, the first new nuclear plant would be starting by 2026 with the first tranche of a continuing construction program being completed by the early to mid 2030s. In that base case, nuclear energy would provide 29.5 GWe by 2050. All of the capacity would have to come from plants that are not yet built. South Africa’s only operating nuclear units were completed in the second half of the 1980s and are not expected to still be operating in 2050. Read on...http://www.theenergycollective.com/rodadams/2395423/russia-sees-south-africa-as-a-potentially-lucrative-market-for-nuclear-power-plants

No comments:

Post a Comment