Kenya Moves Forward With Plans for Country’s First Nuclear Power Plant

Kenya Moves Forward With Plans for Country’s First Nuclear Power Plant

Officials with Kenya’s Nuclear Power and Energy Agency (NuPEA) said the country is on track to start construction on its first nuclear power plant by 2027. The group at a parliamentary hearing this month said the facility would begin generating power by 2034. Kenya’s move is the latest by an African nation as more countries on the continent consider building nuclear power stations to supply electricity amid burgeoning demand for power. Rwanda last year signed a deal with Canada’s Dual Fluid Energy for a test reactor that would use liquid fuel and lead coolant, resulting in less radioactive waste, the Rwanda Atomic Energy Board said in a statement at that time. Officials said the country has a goal of at least 1 GW of nuclear power generation by 2031. Winnie Ndubai, NuPEA’s director of strategy and planning, told Kenya’s Senate Energy Committee that two coastal locations are being considered as potential sites. Local media have reported that the proposed plant would be built in Kilifi County, a region known for its beaches and dense mangrove forests, and one of the country’s top tourist destinations. Ndubai said officials are still working on a regulatory framework for nuclear power in the country.

Koeberg remains South Africa’s only nuclear power station. Its two pressurized water reactors produce a total capacity of 1,860MW, representing about 5% of electricity generated by state-owned utility Eskom. Construction of the Koeberg nuclear plant began in 1976, with Unit 1 synchronized to the grid on April 4, 1984, and Unit 2 on July 25, 1985. The plant is at Duynefontein, 27 kilometers north of Cape Town. Courtesy: Eskom