South Africa could turn to Russia or Iran to expand its civilian nuclear power capacity, a senior government minister said, a stance analysts say could deepen a rift with the United States and further delay the renewal of a strategic energy pact.
South Africa already operates Africa’s only nuclear power plant, Koeberg, with the DMRE plan to add 2,500MW of new capacity to tackle electricity outages that have plagued the economy and to reduce emissions. “We can’t have a contract that says Iran or Russia must not bid, we can’t have that condition,” Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources Gwede Mantashe, one of the government’s leading proponents of expanding nuclear capacity, said.“If they are the best in terms of the offer on the table, we’ll take any (country),” he told Reuters.The country is under scrutiny from Washington after President Donald Trump issued a far-reaching executive order this month halting aid. Among other criticisms, the order claimed – without providing evidence – that South Africa was “reinvigorating its relations with Iran to develop commercial, military, and nuclear arrangements”. Pretoria has no bilateral cooperation with Iran on nuclear power or any nuclear-related technology, the office of South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said. A US State Department spokesperson did not comment on the possibility of Iran or Russia helping South Africa expand its civilian nuclear capacity.
A South African tender for nuclear projects, initially planned for last year, has been delayed for further consultation following legal challenges led by the then-opposition Democratic Alliance party, now part of the coalition government.