East and West firms compete to build nuclear power plant in Ghana

FILE — The logo of Electricite de France, EDF — one of the companies vying to open the first nuclear power plant in Ghana — is seen in front of cooling towers at the entrance of the nuclear power plant site, in Civaux, France, on March 19, 2024.

ACCRA — Ghana will select by December a company to build its first nuclear power plant from contenders including France's Electricite de France, U.S.-based NuScale Power and Regnum Technology Group, and China’s National Nuclear Corporation, an energy ministry official said.

South Korea's Kepco and its subsidiary Korea Hydro Nuclear Power Corporation as well as Russia's ROSATOM were also competing for the contract expected to span the next decade, Robert Sogbadji, Ghana’s deputy director for power in charge of nuclear and alternative energy said.

"Cabinet will approve the final choice. It can be one vendor or two nations; it will depend on the financial model and the technical details," the deputy director added.

Ghana started considering building a nuclear power plant in the 1960s but the process was derailed by a coup. It revived the plan in 2006 with the International Atomic Energy Association's assistance, following a devastating power crisis that year.

Sogbadji said 16 countries and companies had responded to the government's request for vendors, but a technical team of state agencies led by the energy ministry narrowed it down to five nations.

Ghana, like other African countries, is increasingly looking to the possibility of nuclear power to close supply gaps in a continent where over 600 million people lack access to electricity.

Burkina Faso and Uganda have both signed agreements with Russia and China to construct their first nuclear power plants. Kenya, Morocco and Namibia are also working to add nuclear to their energy mix.

South Africa, which operates the continent's only nuclear plant, is looking to add 2,500 megawatts, MW, of power from the resource amid severe power shortages.

Sogbadji said Ghana aims to add about 1,000 MW of power from nuclear to its electricity mix by 2034.

The West African nation, which is currently grappling with power outages, has 5,454 MW of installed capacity, of which 4,483 MW is available, according to its energy regulator.

Ghana - an oil, cocoa and gold exporting nation - expects nuclear power to become its base load for quicker and broader industrialization while increasing energy exports to Benin, Ivory Coast and Togo, among others, through the West Africa Power Pool.

Sogbadji said the government has already secured a site with capacity to accommodate up to five reactors.

The West African nation would prefer a "build, own, operate and transfer" arrangement with room for local equity holding, Sogbadji added.