Audio By Carbonatix
The Chairman of the Ghana Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC), Professor Daniel Adzei Bekoe, says the possibility for Ghana to have a nuclear power plant to complement its current energy needs was high.
“If a decision is taken now to add a nuclear power plant to our sources of electricity, it will take at least eight years to deliver the first nuclear,” he said at a press conference in Accra on Nuclear Power and the current energy crises.
He said the establishment of a nuclear power plant was a sophisticated technology which required a corresponding sophisticated infrastructure and so would only serve as a long term purpose and not one for short term solutions.
Prof. Bekoe who is also the Chairman of the Council of State said from experience it was necessary to develop effective national policies and legislations before the project is undertaken, so that among other objectives, the safety of operators, the environment and the general population was assured and that they were protected from radiation.
He said with the existing infrastructure at the GAEC, expansion work could take a maximum of two years in matters relating to safety, security, legal and regulatory framework with “the rest of the planning and implementation taking another five to six years”.
Prof. Bekoe said if the decision to build the Nuclear Power station was agreed upon by government, the issue of location would have to be seriously considered before the project took off, taking into consideration the encroachment of the GAEC lands.
He said the generation of nuclear power was however environmentally friendly compared to hydro and thermal, except that it had high capital cost, though it produced electricity at a cost lesser than that from oil-fired stations.
Talking about environmental friendliness, he said dams were noted for their submersion of vast agricultural and mineral-rich lands, the displacement of settlements and the propagation of water-borne disease.
“Thermal generators produce a lot of green house gases which lead to climate change which the whole world is watching with some concern”, he said, adding that, the use of those sources had to be limited although Ghana was nowhere near the league of high generators of green house gases.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
The Oscars to leave ABC and stream on YouTube starting in 2029
51 seconds -
Starmer tells Abramovich to ‘pay up now’ or face court
5 minutes -
FIFA video game to return after four years in Netflix exclusive
13 minutes -
Ghana’s programme performance has been broadly satisfactory – IMF Board
16 minutes -
Former chancellor George Osborne joins OpenAI
25 minutes -
No bank has been cited, sanctioned by any regulatory or law enforcement agencies – Association of Banks
30 minutes -
Ghana’s GH₵10m relief support to Jamaica grounded in compassion and solidarity – Ablakwa
33 minutes -
Speaker, Ga Mantse to headline GJA Dinner Night
40 minutes -
JoyNews to host National Dialogue on declining adherence to standards on Thursday
43 minutes -
Newmont to fully fund 13 kilometers Ntotroso–Kenyasi road in 2026
53 minutes -
Lands Ministry engages Ewoyaa chiefs, residents in successful lithium agreement talks
1 hour -
Cirque De Soir opens in Accra, adds sparkle to festive season
1 hour -
Adom Kiki wins Worship Artiste of the Year at 4th Praise Achievement Awards
1 hour -
Economic Fighters League urges inclusion as Constitutional Review Report nears completion
1 hour -
Walewale NPP delegates show love to Bawumia, refuse to let him “waste time” campaigning
2 hours
