KAMPALA, Uganda
Argentina’s INVAP-SE has signed a contract with Uganda’s ministry of Energy and Mineral Development to undertake studies that will guide the construction of a centre for nuclear science and technology in Soroti district.
The signing comes just over 17
months after INVAP-SE signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Uganda’s
government during the Nuclear Business Platform conference at Speke Resort
Munyonyo. INVAP-SE has now embarked on the process of undertaking site evaluation
at Soroti University, where 45 acres of land have been allocated, and come up
with technical studies and designs for the centre for nuclear science and
technology.
The centre will host Uganda’s
first nuclear research reactor, which will be used for the purpose of
education, training, production of radioisotopes and research in the nuclear
industry, according to a press statement.
Irene Batebe, the Permanent
Secretary in the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development, said the signing
of the contract with INVAP-SE was “a direct contributor to the energy security
of Uganda.” While speaking during the signing ceremony, she explained that
Uganda intends to generate 52,000MW of electricity by 2040 – an ambitious
amount that is not matched by the available in-country resources – with nuclear
contributing 24,000MW of that amount.
Uganda currently generates
about 1,300MW of electricity, although that amount is expected to shoot up when
the 600MW Karuma hydropower project is commissioned at some point in the last
quarter of this calendar year. Just over 50 per cent of Ugandans have access to
electricity, many of whom live in the urban areas. The access rate in the rural
areas drops to less than 20 per cent.
Uganda believes that nuclear
energy can be the game changer for the country’s economy and drag down the
price that consumers pay for electricity. Uganda plans to put up a 1,000MW
large nuclear reactor – the first of two - by 2031. The government has already
chosen a site for the reactor, a 30 square kilometer piece of land in Buyende
district.
At the Nuclear Business
Platform conference in Munyonyo last year, South Korea’s Hydro and Nuclear
Power Company signed a memorandum of understanding with Uganda’s government for
the development of a nuclear power plant. However, no contract to a vendor has
been awarded yet. Vendors from Russia and China are still hopeful that Uganda
will choose them for the construction of the reactors.
Uganda’s government is also in
the process of amending the Atomic Energy Act of 2008 and introduce a new
legislation that broadens the space for the operation of nuclear energy.
According to a press
statement, INVAP-SE will ensure that Soroti University meets all the technical
and safety requirements for the nuclear centre. This will be followed by the
technical designs for the centre.
The project is expected to be
funded by the government of Argentina, leading to more collaborations between
the two countries, especially with regards to regulation. Uganda will face the
challenge of regulating the ever-changing nuclear technologies, although some
officials within the Ministry of Energy have argued before that they are not
ready to take up any first-of-its-kind nuclear reactor.
They are looking for something
that has been tried and tested, and has passed regulatory benchmarks. Batebe
said Argentina has a stellar track record of putting up safe nuclear
technologies, and the collaboration should guide Uganda on this unchartered territory.
Pablo Maximo Abbate, the Vice
President of INVAP-SE, said the company is going to commit the best team
available for the Soroti project.
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