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Can Nuclear Power Deliver Nigeria From Electricity Problems? by OneNaija(m): 6:51pm On May 15, 2009
TO achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) of cutting poverty by half in 2015, all sources of energy, including nuclear power, must come to play in meeting the electricity generation requirement of Nigeria.

The Director General of Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory Authority, Mr. S. Elegba, who made this assertion in Lagos recently, ascribed it to the projection that the national electricity demand would be above 50,000 Mega Watts (50GigaWatts) by the year 2020.

Acknowledging the former president Olusegun Obasanjo's move towards nuclear power initiative, Elegba said that this was premised to the fact that it was the only viable option since national reserves of conventional sources were dwindling and the total installed capacity could hardly fulfill national energy needs and therefore could not sustain national industrial and economic development.

His words: "The sorry state of our electricity generation is summarised by the fact that Nigeria has never scaled the four GigaWatts barrier in actual power generation for a population of over 140 million. This was aptly and sadly recounted again by the Director General of the IAEA at the International Conference on Nuclear Power in France in 2005."

Elegba quoted the IAEA as saying: "Per capital electricity consumption in Nigeria is closer to 70 kilowatt-hour per annum."

This, he said, translated to an average availability of eight watts, which is less than a regular light bulb for each Nigerian citizen.

Nigeria's present electricity generation is mainly from hydro and gas/thermal. This energy mix is limited and not comparable to a country like South Africa, which generates 40,000MW of electricity for a population that is less than half of Nigeria's.

It could be recalled that President Obasanjo, in May 2006 established the Nigeria Atomic Energy Commission with the vision of operating at least one nuclear power plant within the next 10-15 years. Nigeria needs to generate at least 3,000MW or 3G by 2020.

To him, generating power from nuclear is not peculiar to Nigeria alone, noting that about 440 power reactor were currently operational in 30 countries, while 40 were making move. These reactors, according to Elegba supply about 16 per cent of the world's electricity.

"Today, 40 developing countries have expressed the desire to develop nuclear power for electricity generation including eight from Africa; namely, Nigeria, Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Ghana and South Africa and 11 from Asia."

He stressed: "The country has invested the past 30 years in developing the physical and regulatory infrastructure for safe, peaceful, applications of nuclear energy. The power application of nuclear energy must now be developed to ensure adequate and reliable electricity supplies for industrialisation and national security."

Elegba, however, proffered a leeway from energy poverty. He said: "The way forward must necessarily be a hybrid of the two extremes, where the government regulates, the private sector generates, the government transmits while the private sector distribute. This is the 1010 model.

He gave the steps that would be required as regionalising of grids, generation of electricity by both private entrepreneurs and state governments. Others are

*introduction of modular nuclear power plants by the private sector operators,

*introduction of micro nuclear power plants (30-40MW) which can be completed in three years,

*introduction of mini 400-600MW which can be completed in seven to eight years, and

*introduction of the mainframe nuclear power reactors that will require 10-15 years to complete.
Re: Can Nuclear Power Deliver Nigeria From Electricity Problems? by blacksta(m): 7:15pm On May 15, 2009
I not sure about electricity but i know it will surely deliver mass death.
Re: Can Nuclear Power Deliver Nigeria From Electricity Problems? by asha80(m): 7:20pm On May 15, 2009
blacksta:

I not sure about electricity but i know it will surely deliver mass death.

Guy you harsh cheesy
Re: Can Nuclear Power Deliver Nigeria From Electricity Problems? by blacksta(m): 8:23pm On May 15, 2009
asha 80:

Guy you harsh cheesy

no be true

a country that generate electricity the primitive way but now wants to handle nuclear materials.
Re: Can Nuclear Power Deliver Nigeria From Electricity Problems? by SapeleGuy: 8:28pm On May 15, 2009
Blacksta - I agree with you, we never fit crawl but we wan fly.
Re: Can Nuclear Power Deliver Nigeria From Electricity Problems? by biina: 8:58pm On May 15, 2009
It is quite irritating when people in key positions are nothing more than evidence of the level of ignorance prevalent in the Nigerian government. Except for military purposes, Nigeria does not need Nuclear Power.

As a nation,  we have enough natural gas resources to generate power for several decades to come. The power problem is typical, like most other problems that Nigeria faces: the person in office is usually unqualified, and thus the question of competence does not arise. It is only in Nigeria (and possibly other African countries) that you would pay for repairs at twice the price of a new unit and still not have the repairs done.

Most nations that resort to Nuclear energy do so as a by-product of their military development and/or lack the natural resources be effectively supported by other means. They are often ahead of us in development. In our present state, we are in no position to manage the fallout from a failed nuclear project (both medically and environmentally)

Rather than try to catch the rain with a basket, we should develop our LNG network and populate relevant locations with thermal stations (with the national grid in place, there is less restriction of siting of stations). The residential power needs should be put on the back seat, and focus placed on the industrial centers (for which the distribution and revenue collections is much easier). At night, the excess power is then delivered to the residential areas. Power generation and delivery is not rocket science as the NEPA and the government make it seem. The only thing stopping us is corruption.

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