Jean-Jacques Cornish

South Africa still in the market for nuclear energy plant

 

Led by their former  Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, South Africans breathed a sigh of relief when President Cyril Ramaphosa scrapped plans to buy a nuclear power plant from Russia that would have been ruinously expensive.

But it is not over.

Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe says this week that South Africa is still in the market for  nuclear energy, provided it can be purchased economically.

This is necessitated by  the financially hamstrung Electricity Supply Commission becoming  a millstone around the exchequer’s neck, by failing to meet its crippling debt burden. 

The Commission, which once sold power to all of South Africa neighbors and produced cheap electricity that was a loadstone to foreign heavy industrial investors,  is now no longer able to meet South Africa’s domestic needs with its pool of aged and poorly maintained coal-fired power stations.

The daily blackouts are proving to be an  deterrent to those very investors the power once attracted.

Mantashe is adamant SouthAfrica will not go for the big bang approach to nuclear energy taken by Jacob Zuma.

The disgraced former President now says ruefully if his nuclear plans had been allowed to come to fruition, South Africa would have been saved the rolling blackouts – known euphemistically as load shedding –  it is now experiencing.

Mantashe offers an altogether more cautious approach:

“It comes back to a resolution we took as a government: not going big bang  to nuclear , but going at a pace and price that the country can afford. Go modular, go at a pace and a price that the country can afford.”

He says the state’s Integrated Resource Plan contains provisions for nuclear energy, but acquiring it will first need approval by government.

The former trade union leader and secretary general of the ruling African National Congress, Mantashe now heads a merged Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry.

He says South Africa must plan for a new nuclear plant to come on line after 2045.

Until then, the country’s only nuclear plant at Koeberg, outside Cape Town, will have it life extended.

Local business has reacted cooly to this development.

The general belief  is that the promises made to Russia by Zuma were  secured with hefty bribes.

Zuma is facing corruption charges and further evidence of this is expected to come to light before the judicial commission on corruption which is known in South Africa as state capture.

“The fact that we suspected corruption,” says Mantashe of the Russian deal, “ does not mean nuclear energy is irrelevant for South Africa today.”

Whether a search for affordable nuclear energy will once again bring France into the equasion is uncertain.

Mantashe reference to the  use of modular nuclear technology at a pace it can afford – indicates the construction of smaller plants.

Investors warn that nuclear energy production of any size is expensive.

Economic realities – a soaring unemployment rate of more than a third of the workforce out of jobs and youth unemployment exceeding  50% – and sluggish Gross Domestic Product growth will keep  South Africa out of this market for the foreseeable future.

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Jean-Jacques Cornish is a journalist and broadcaster who has been involved in the media all his adult life.

Starting as a reporter on his hometown newspaper, he moved briefly to then Rhodesia before returning to South Africa to become a parliamentary correspondent with the South African Press Association. He was sent to London as Sapa’s London editor and also served as special correspondent to the United Nations. He joined the then Argus group in London as political correspondent.

Returning to South Africa after 12 years abroad, he was assistant editor on the Pretoria News for a decade before becoming editor of the Star and SA Times for five years.

Since 1999 he’s been an independent journalist writing and broadcasting – mainly about Africa – for Talk Radio 702 and 567 Cape
Talk, Radio France International, PressTV, Radio Live New Zealand, Business Day, Mail & Guardian, the BBC, Agence France Press,
Business in Africa, Leadership, India Today, the South African Institute for International Affairs and the Institute for Security Studies.

He has hosted current affairs talk shows on Talk Radio 702 and 567 Cape Talk. He appears as an African affairs pundit on SABC Africa and CNBC Africa.
He lectured in contemporary studies to journalism students at the Tshwane University of Technology and the University of Pretoria.

He speaks on African affairs to corporate and other audiences.
He has been officially invited as a journalist to more than 30 countries. He was the winner of the 2007 SADC award for radio journalism.

He’s been a member of the EISA team observing elections in Somaliland, Democratic Republic of Congo, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Egypt and Tunsiai.

In October 2009 he headed a group of 39 African journalists to the 60th anniversary celebrations of the Peoples’ Republic of China.

In January 2010 he joined a rescue and paramedical team to earthquake struck Haiti.

He is immediate past president of the Alliance Francaise of Pretoria.

Jean-Jacques is a director of Giant Media. The company was given access to Nelson Mandela in his retirement years until 2009.
He is co-producer of the hour-long documentary Mandela at 90 that was broadcast on BBC in January 2009.