Africa: ECA Urges Adoption of Nuclear Energy in Africa’s Power Sector

Africa: ECA Urges Adoption of Nuclear Energy in Africa’s Power Sector


United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), has called on African countries to embrace nuclear energy as a strategic solution to the continent’s deepening energy crisis.

In a statement on Saturday, Executive Secretary of ECA, Claver Gatete, said that it was unacceptable that over 600 million Africans still lacked access to electricity.

Gatete described the issue as “power poverty” which he said hampered industrialisation, weakened health systems, and constrained economic transformation.

“While Africa accounts for 17 per cent of the global population, it generates less than three per cent of global electricity.

” Bridging this gap requires bold decisions, including exploring nuclear energy as a reliable, scalable, and long-term power solution.

“Our continent cannot afford to crawl its way out of energy insecurity.

“As we invest in renewable energy, we must also advance nuclear energy development to unlock Africa’s full potential,” he said.

Highlighting global examples, Gatete noted that countries like South Korea and France had successfully harnessed nuclear energy to drive industrialisation and reduce emissions.

He cited South Africa’s 40-year-old Koeberg nuclear plant as proof that nuclear energy could work on the continent.

Gatete also pointed to ongoing projects such as Egypt’s El Dabaa nuclear power plant and Ghana’s partnership with NuScale Power on Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), as signs that some African countries were already taking steps in the right direction.