Should Africa Go Nuclear ???

QueEx

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<font size="4">Should Africa adopt nuclear technology?

Namibia is in talks with Russia to see whether nuclear technology can help meet the country's energy needs.

As Namibia struggles to provide enough electricity for all due to drought and falling water levels it is considering following the path of South Africa, the only African country that generates nuclear energy.

Currently, only a quarter of people in sub-Saharan Africa have access to power.

Should other African countries adopt nuclear technology as a way of resolving power supply problems?

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Fuckallyall

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Yep, I think so. Disposing of nuclear waste is not as big of adeal as many make it out to be, and Nuclear power would go a loooong way to providing basic needs.
 

QueEx

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I tend to agree with you F.A.Y. However, the article below makes me wonder about security. Of course, shit goes missing everywhere all the time.

QueEx
 

QueEx

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<font size="5"><center>Congo arrest over missing uranium </font size>
<font size="4">The Democratic Republic of Congo's top atomic energy
official is being held over allegations of uranium smuggling.
Atomic energy centre director Fortunat Lumu and an aide
have been questioned since their arrest on Tuesday. </font size></center>



_42655481_uraniumore_ap203b.jpg

Enriched uranium is used for nuclear
power generation and weapons


BBC News
March 8, 2007

A large quantity of uranium is reported to have gone missing in recent years, although state prosecutor Tshimanga Mukeba did not reveal any figures.

He told the BBC an "important quantity" of uranium was taken from the nuclear centre and they were investigating.

DR Congo's daily newspaper Le Phare reported that more than 100 bars of uranium as well as an unknown quantity of uranium contained in helmet-shaped cases, had disappeared from the nuclear centre in Kinshasa as part of a vast trafficking of the material going back years.

But the BBC's Kinshasa correspondent, Arnaud Zajtman, says that as of yet, no evidence has been made public to support the allegations made by the newspaper.

Creation of centre

A mine in Congo's southern province of Katanga supplied the uranium that was used in the atomic bombs that were dropped by the Americans on the Japanese town of Hiroshima in 1945.

To thank and reward Congo, the Americans funded the creation of Congo's nuclear centre in 1958.

It was established on the university campus and only for research purpose.

But in the late 1970s, a bar of uranium disappeared from the centre, raising concern about security at the site.

Moreover, the site of the centre is facing some erosion problems. And people fear a landslide that could lead to a wider disaster, our reporter says.

In recent years, the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency has visited the centre and security was believed to have improved.

Last year, a partnership was also signed between Congo's atomic energy centre and British company Brinkley Mining, aiming at prospecting for uranium deposits in the Congo.

But our correspondent says that this new allegation of uranium smuggling might tarnish DR Congo's ability to handle dangerous and expansive products such as uranium and raise concerns about who might benefit.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6430031.stm
 

modified

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QueEx said:
<font size="4">Should Africa adopt nuclear technology?

Namibia is in talks with Russia to see whether nuclear technology can help meet the country's energy needs.

As Namibia struggles to provide enough electricity for all due to drought and falling water levels it is considering following the path of South Africa, the only African country that generates nuclear energy.

Currently, only a quarter of people in sub-Saharan Africa have access to power.

Should other African countries adopt nuclear technology as a way of resolving power supply problems?

`

They will need to adapt and embrace Nuclear technology. The problem lies in the stability of the governments and their ability to secure their public works from militia's or other rogue groups.
 

QueEx

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modified said:
They will need to adapt and embrace Nuclear technology. The problem lies in the stability of the governments and their ability to secure their public works from militia's or other rogue groups.
... and the politicians ....

QueEx
 
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