Eskom is examining how the suspension of a pact that enables it to import nuclear fuel components from the US will affect its sole atomic plant.
The Agreement for Cooperation in Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy between the US and South Africa expired on 4 December. That resulted in Westinghouse Electric losing its licence from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission to export fuel-assembly components to Eskom’s Koeberg plant near Cape Town.
“Eskom is exploring the implications of the withdrawal of the US NRC approval for Westinghouse, and what is needed to enable them to continue supplying fuel,” the utility said in a reply to questions. Eskom doesn’t anticipate that it will “have to establish new fuel contracts due to this current issue” and no nuclear fuel shortage is expected at Koeberg in the immediate future, it said.
The development may frustrate Eskom’s efforts to end record load shedding. The matter may be raised with US treasury secretary Janet Yellen, who is visiting South Africa this week.
US President Joe Biden was poised in August to extend the existing agreement, but it was still allowed to expire. South African department of international relations & cooperation spokesman Clayson Monyela and an energy department spokesman weren’t immediately able to comment.
The Westinghouse licence authorises it to export fuel components to Sweden for fabrication into completed assemblies, and for those to be subsequently shipped to South Africa for use in both of Koeberg’s reactors, according to the NRC order.
Westinghouse and France’s Framatome have been maintained as nuclear fuel suppliers for the plant, according to Eskom. The US company has already delivered the material that will be loaded during maintenance on one unit that’s currently under way, while fuel for the second was provided by the French firm, it said.
Read: Koeberg revamp at key stage as power grid reels
“The contracts with Westinghouse and Framatome cover the fuel needed beyond these two outages,” Eskom said. — Jonathan Tirone and Paul Burkhardt, (c) 2023 Bloomberg LP