NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The Iran war’s global energy shock is forcing governments across Asia and Africa to scramble for power, with some boosting nuclear generation and others rushing into new atomic plans that could lock them into decades of dependence. Asia, where most of the Middle Eastern oil and natural gas was headed, was hit first and hardest by disruptions to shipping routes carrying those fuels, followed by Africa. The U.S. and Europe are also feeling the pinch as the conflict drives up energy costs.
Who Pays When Fuel Routes Break
African and Asian nations with nuclear plants are increasing their output as they scramble for short-term energy supplies, while non-nuclear countries are accelerating long-term nuclear plans to safeguard against future fossil fuel shocks. Nuclear power is not a quick fix for the current energy crisis, and developing atomic energy can take decades, especially for nuclear newcomers. Joshua Kurlantzick of the Council on Foreign Relations said long-term commitments to nuclear power made now will likely lock it in to countries’ future energy mixes.
In Asia, the Iran war is pushing South Korea to increase nuclear power generation, while Taiwan is debating restarting mothballed reactors. In Africa, future plans to build reactors have taken on urgency, with Kenya, Rwanda and South Africa affirming their support. Nuclear power takes advantage of the energy released when the nucleus of an atom, such as uranium, splits in a process called fission. Unlike fossil fuels, it does not release climate change-causing carbon dioxide, but it creates potentially dangerous radioactive waste, one reason many countries are cautious about nuclear power.
Rachel Bronson of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists said the war has accelerated a global “nuclear renaissance,” as countries seek an out from the risks of fossil fuel markets. The International Atomic Energy Agency says there are 31 countries that use nuclear power, which provides about 10% of global electricity, and another 40 nations are either considering the technology or preparing to build a plant.
The New Energy Order
In Asia, where energy triage efforts range from increased coal use to purchases of Russian crude oil, countries with nuclear plants are seeking to get more out of their existing reactors. South Korea is increasing generation at its nuclear plants and speeding up maintenance at five offline reactors, with restarts planned in May. Taiwan and Japan are reversing policies that shuttered nuclear sites following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear meltdown, triggered when an earthquake and tsunami disabled the power supply that cooled the reactors.
Taiwan is considering the years-long process of restarting two reactors because of the current crisis, which will require meticulous inspections, safety checks and control system verifications. In Japan, since the start of the war, Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae has signed a $40 billion reactor deal with the U.S., a nuclear fuel recycling agreement with France and promised Indonesia nuclear cooperation. Japan restarted the world’s largest nuclear plant, the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa site, in January.
Michiyo Miyamoto of the U.S.-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis said renewables, like solar and wind, make more sense than nuclear for energy affordability and security. She also said the Iran war is driving consumer and government interest in renewable energy globally and in Japan, but historically high electricity costs combined with the current crisis is swinging Japanese public opinion toward acceptance of nuclear power.
In South Asia, Bangladesh is racing to turn on new reactors built by Russia’s state-owned nuclear corporation Rosatom. Dhaka hopes they will supply the national grid with 300 megawatts by this summer, relieving some pressure from current gas shortfalls. Vietnam signed a deal with Moscow in March for two Russian-designed reactors. The Philippines, which recently declared a national energy emergency, is also considering reviving a nuclear plant built in the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis but never turned on.
Alvie Asuncion-Astronomo of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute said, “I hope we learned our lesson,” and added that the Iran war is “providing a needed push for nuclear.”
Africa as an Atomic Growth Market
Soaring energy prices and power shortages in Africa, triggered by the Iran war, are leading to public calls for nuclear cooperation and re-invigorated interest in long-term nuclear energy plans, which are underway in more than 20 of the 54 African countries. With Africa seen as an atomic energy growth market, nuclear nations including the U.S., Russia, China, France and South Korea are pitching advanced technology such as small modular reactors, or SMRs, as a solution to energy shortages. These modular reactors are a cheaper, more compact alternative to large-scale plants.
Proponents say SMRs are a faster option, but projects can still take years. Kenya, for instance, plans to bring a small modular reactor online in 2034 after starting the first phase in 2009. Last month, Justus Wabuyabo of Kenya’s Nuclear Power and Energy Agency said, “nuclear energy is no longer a distant aspiration for African countries; it is a strategic necessity.” During a March summit convened by the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency, Rwandan President Paul Kagame said Africa will be “one of the most important global markets” for the smaller reactors in the years ahead.
Smaller reactors, which can offer scalable, low-emitting base load power, are considered a solution to Africa’s rising electricity demand, weak grids and over reliance on imported diesel. Similarly, Loyiso Tyabashe of the South African Nuclear Energy Corporation said SMRs could “fulfill our strategic objective of positioning South Africa at the forefront of advanced nuclear technologies.” South Africa, which has the continent’s only existing nuclear plants, wants nuclear to go from making around 5% of its energy mix now to 16% by 2040.
The energy disruptions come as competition for influence in Africa intensifies between Washington and Moscow. Russia’s Rosatom is building Egypt’s first reactor and has cooperation agreements with Ethiopia, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Tanzania and Niger, spanning major projects, research centers, uranium processing facilities and training programs. While only Kenya and Ghana have joined an American-led modular reactor initiative, Washington is trying to catch up.
The U.S. and South Korea sponsored a nuclear conference in Nairobi last month. Ryan Taugher of the U.S. State Department said Washington is working with African nations to rapidly develop secure and safe civil nuclear reactors. Ghana, which aims to begin building a nuclear plant in 2027, is in the market for foreign suppliers.
Risks like meltdowns and mismanaged waste remain, even as interest builds. Nuclear energy could also be a step toward building nuclear bombs. Ayumi Fukakusa of the advocacy group Friends of the Earth Japan said, “nuclear is very risky” and will keep countries reliant on imported fuels such as enriched uranium. Given that nuclear sectors take years to develop, governments should stay focused on building out renewables for long-term energy security, said Rex Amancio of the Global Renewables Alliance.
Bronson, with the atomic scientists group, also said nuclear plants are vulnerable during conflicts, citing recent instances where reactors were specifically targeted during the Iran war and the Russia-Ukraine War. She said, “All of this comes into the mix of how we think about energy security. Countries are now weighing those kinds of risks against the other risks, which Asia and Africa are seeing first and foremost, about what happens when gas and oil stops.”
Delgado reported from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Kim Tong-hyung in Seoul, South Korea, Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo, Japan and Aniruddha Ghosal in Hanoi, Vietnam contributed to this report.