Nuclear waste: Eskom’s R200m deal via Business Report

Cape Town – South African power utility Eskom, struggling to meet demand in Africa’s most developed economy, is to pay an estimated R200 million for the supply of nuclear waste storage casks to keep its Koeberg plant running beyond 2018.

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Koeberg produces about 32 tons of spent fuel a year but its spent-fuel pools, where assemblies are cooled under water for a decade, are 70-percent full. The fuel assemblies contain radioactive materials including uranium and plutonium, which can remain dangerous for thousands of years.

“Additional space will be created by moving spent fuel from spent-fuel pools into dry spent-fuel storage casks,” an Eskom spokesman said on Wednesday.

Phase 2 of the project will procure a further 30 to 40 dry storage casks before a final phase in which an on-site transient interim storage facility (TISF) will be built by 2019.

“An off-site central interim storage facility is planned to be available by 2025 (and) dry storage casks will be transported from the TISF to this facility,” Eskom said.

Low and intermediate-level radioactive waste is transported by road hundreds of kilometres away to the desolate Vaalputs repository, which Eskom favours as the central interim storage facility.

South Africa is considering a range of final storage options, including recycling high-level waste or storing it deep underground, as it plans an ambitious nuclear power expansion to generate an additional 9 600 MW by 2030.

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