Cape Argus

Koeberg upgrade needed

- HARTMUT WINKLER Professor of physics at the University of Johannesbu­rg

SOUTH Africa’s only nuclear power plant, Koeberg, has frequently been in the news this year, all for the wrong reasons.

Its operating licence expires in 2024, and its continued operation thereafter depends on critical refurbishm­ents and upgrades. Work on these finally began in January this year, but immediatel­y ran into difficulti­es, forcing significan­t delays.

Koeberg is supplying only half of its power while work is in progress. This has amplified the crippling power shortages South Africa has been experienci­ng. This state of affairs, where the country effectivel­y has 3% less generating power available than it would otherwise have, is expected to persist for the bulk of the next two years.

Other potential signs of turbulence linked to Koeberg include:

● The delayed applicatio­n to the nuclear regulator to extend the plant’s licence.

● The controvers­ial dismissal of one of the regulator’s board members – an opponent of nuclear power – by the minister of mineral and energy resources.

● Resignatio­ns of senior Koeberg staff, though there is no evidence these were due to friction.

All this has led to speculatio­n the Koeberg life extension exercise is in difficulty. In turn, it casts doubt on the capacity of South Africa’s nuclear sector, and is likely to put to bed the highly ambitious proposals advocated within the sector to build new nuclear plants.

Koeberg, Africa’s only operationa­l nuclear power station, 27km north of the Cape Town city centre, is reaching the end of its scheduled life cycle.

The plant consists of two units of just over 900 megawatts each, and together these contribute roughly 5% of South Africa’s electricit­y.

Koeberg was built by the French company Framatome between 1978 and 1984. In line with internatio­nal practice, the plant was granted a 40-year operationa­l licence which will expire in July 2024.

Licensing the plant for a further 20 years is possible, as long as it meets specific safety criteria. Typically, these involve particular upgrades and the replacemen­t of various components.

The plant has operated reasonably safely, with only comparativ­ely minor incidents recorded.

Some civil society groups have called for the closure of Koeberg when its licence expires. South Africa’s extreme electricit­y crisis would make such a closure difficult to absorb.

While the constructi­on of new nuclear plants is prohibitiv­ely expensive and time intensive, extending the lifespan of a plant is in principle achievable in the short term and financiall­y defensible.

The extension of the lifespan of Koeberg was also envisaged in the government-endorsed 2019 Integrated Resource Plan for electricit­y.

Nuclear activities in South Africa are controlled by the National Nuclear Regulator. The regulator is expected to be guided by recommenda­tions drawn up by experts commission­ed by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency who inspected Koeberg in 2019. The recommenda­tions include technical interventi­ons for operating the plant safely for another 20 years. The most significan­t of these is the replacemen­t of steam generators.

The upgrade is projected to cost R20 billion. Most of this would go towards buying and installing six new steam generators. The need to replace them was identified more than 10 years ago, but protracted litigation over who would do the job held up the project. The operation was eventually scheduled for this year.

The replacemen­ts and upgrades needed to secure a 20-year operating licence extension require each Koeberg unit to be shut down for a projected five months. Unit 2 was switched off on January 18 this year and was supposed to reopen in June this year. Unit 1 was then to go through the same process, starting in October.

Things then went wrong. The critical steam generator replacemen­t was again postponed, until next year. The full reasons have not been disclosed.

But there has been no denial of reports the on-site storage facilities for the radioactiv­ely contaminat­ed old steam generators were not ready.

The delay in getting Koeberg Unit 2 up and running on schedule resulted in an additional 900MW shortfall during South Africa’s most recent midwinter bout of severe power blackouts.

Unit 2 started operating on August 7, almost two months later than projected. Another outage of comparable duration is required next year.

The mishandlin­g of the Koeberg life extension project raises serious questions about the capacity of South Africa’s nuclear sector.

This sector has advocated the building of a large fleet of new nuclear plants, implying that it could be done without major cost and time overruns. But the much smaller and far more straightfo­rward Koeberg upgrade has not gone well.

South Africa should drop any ambitions for new nuclear plants. The nuclear sector should instead focus on its more modest target, namely to complete the Koeberg upgrade, run the plant for another 20 years and then complete the potentiall­y problemati­c decommissi­oning.

 ?? ?? CHALLENGES at Koeberg Nuclear Station cast doubt on the capacity of South Africa’s nuclear sector, and are likely to put to bed the highly ambitious proposals advocated within the sector to build new nuclear plants, the writer says. | African News Agency (ANA) archives
CHALLENGES at Koeberg Nuclear Station cast doubt on the capacity of South Africa’s nuclear sector, and are likely to put to bed the highly ambitious proposals advocated within the sector to build new nuclear plants, the writer says. | African News Agency (ANA) archives
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