Opinion and Comment Feature
- Citizens and taxpayers in South Africa continue to labour under the misguided belief that Eskom and the Nuclear Energy Corporation of South Africa (Necsa), make real funding provisions monthly, over the operating life of their nuclear reactors, to cover the costs of decommissioning and disposal of high-level nuclear waste from their nuclear plants, in terms of the โpolluter paysโ principle.
Page 69 of the 8th National Report prepared by the South African Department of Energy (DoE) and National Nuclear Regulator (NNR), and presented to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in August 2019 in terms of South Africaโs obligations to the Convention of Nuclear Safety, states in respect of Eskomโs Koeberg nuclear power station:
โFinancial provision for decommissioning (as well as spent fuel management) continues to be accumulated on a monthly basis since commercial operation of the installation began in 1984. The financial provision is reflected in the annual financial statements of Eskom. These financial statements are audited in accordance with South African national legislation.
โIn terms of decommissioning financial plans, the amount of decommissioning and spent fuel provision made each month is determined by the present value of future estimated cash flows. These financial plans are reviewed regularly and adjusted annually, and informed by the South African inflation rate.โ
However, the problem with these fine words to the IAEA is that they are misleading, perhaps deliberately so, and that the so-called โprovisionโ is actually something ofย a โPotemkin villageโ to placate and impress the IAEA and the public at large that all is well and under control.
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In fact, no real money, securities or investments of any kind have actually been set aside monthly, annually or at stage and in any fund during operation of South Africaโs nuclear facilities as provision for decommissioning, long-term storage and final disposal of high-level nuclear waste, and/or the construction and operation of a high-level nuclear waste repository.
The National Radioactive Waste Disposal Institute (NRWDI) has confirmed that since Necsaโs SAFARI-I research reactor was inaugurated in 1966, since Koeberg commenced operation in 1984, and since the National Radioactive Waste Disposal Institute Act No 53, 2008 was promulgated in early 2009, not one Rand has been put into the proposed Radioactive Waste Disposal Fund that has long been envisaged for this purpose.
The National Radioactive Waste Disposal Institute (NRWDI) is a South African state-owned entity reporting to the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE), responsible for nuclear waste management and disposal services in terms of its enabling legislation.
โThe Radioactive Waste Management Fund falls within the ambit of the DMRE. The Fund has not yet been set up, and therefore no payments can be made to the Fund at this stageโ, commented Mr. Alan Carolissen, the acting CEO of NRWDI.
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Mr. Carolissen further advised that the DMRE is currently finalising the draft Radioactive Waste Disposal Fund Bill, which will be gazetted for public comments in due course. However, no timelines were given in this regard, and the matter has been dragging on for years.
ย In reality, Eskom explains, the so-called โprovisionโ made for decommissioning and disposal of high-level nuclear waste from the Koeberg nuclear power station is simply an accounting book-entry for future obligations estimated at R16,2-billion, expressed in 2020 Rands, and reflected as a liability on Eskomโs heavily over-indebted FY 2020/21 balance sheet, as opposed to any realisable assets held in a ringfenced fund for this purpose.
Mr. Riedewaan Bakardien, the chief nuclear officer (CNO) at Eskom says that of the R16,2-billion liability shown on Eskomโs 2020/21 balance sheet, some R8-billion is Eskomโs estimated liability for Koebergโs decommissioning, and disposal of low- and intermediate-level nuclear waste at the existing Vaalputs repository.
The balance of R8,2-billion is Eskomโs estimated liability for long-term storage of spent fuel on site, for a centralised interim storage facility, and for developing, constructing and operating a deep geological final repository for high-level spent fuel waste from Koeberg, and associated transport costs.
However, based on international benchmarks, it would appear that Eskom, as the operator, not surprisingly significantly underestimates its liabilities for decommissioning and disposal of high-level nuclear waste from its Koeberg nuclear power station.
In Germany, provisions made for nuclear decommissioning and waste disposal by the big four utilities ranged from โฌ1300 per kW of installed capacity at RWE, to โฌ1700 per kW at EnBW, โฌ1800per kW at E.ON, and โฌ2000 per kW at Vattenfall.
Based on the above, one may have expected that Eskom would have set aside funds for high-level nuclear waste disposal and decommissioning of the 1800 MW Koeberg nuclear power station of somewhere between โฌ2,34-billion and โฌ3,6-billion i.e. between R42-billion and R64-billion (using an exchange rate of
โฌ1 = R17,80), instead of only R8-billion.
An article in energypost.eu indicates that EDF in France makes provision of โฌ300 per kW of installed nuclear capacity for decommissioning, Germany provides โฌ1400 per kW, and the UK provides โฌ2700 per kW. Eskomโs liability for decommissioning and disposal of high-level spent fuel waste from Koeberg, on the other hand, amounts to only โฌ250 per kW of installed nuclear capacity.
The French National Assembly Commission has found that the clean-up of French reactors will take longer, be more challenging and cost much more than EDF anticipates, and the Commission is quoted as saying:
โOther countries have embarked on the dismantling of their power plants, and the feedback we have generally contradicts EDFโs optimism about both the financial and technical aspects of decommissioningโ.
When questioned whether the R16,2-billion liability reflected on Eskomโs balance sheet for decommissioning, long-term storage and disposal of high-level waste, and construction and operation of a final repository, the spokesman for the National Nuclear Regulator (NNR), Mr. Gino Moonsamy responded:
โWhilst Eskom makes financial provisioning for decommissioning in its annual financial statements, the NNR is currently reviewing all relevant provisions for decommissioning. The NNR is engaging Eskom in this regardโฆโ, andโThe NNR is reviewing the regulatory framework including conditions of authorisation with a view to strengthening conditions relating to decommissioning.โ
Eskom has confirmed that provision for future decommissioning, waste storage and disposal is built into and forms an integral part of the internal transfer pricing (Rands per kWh) of electricity generated by Koeberg into the Eskom grid. As such, these provisions are therefore ultimately recovered from customers via Eskomโs Nersa approved electricity tariffs.
The acting CEO of NRWDI, Mr. Alan Carolissen also indicates that in due course, once the Radioactive Waste Disposal Fund is set up, Eskom and Necsa will have to discharge their decommissioning, waste disposal and final repository liabilities, by paying real money into the Fund.
However, as indicated above, the problem is that Eskom and Necsa have no ringfenced funds set aside for this purpose. Both companies are technically insolvent and not going concerns, and only continue operations through regular ongoing bailouts by taxpayers via the sole shareholder, the state.
Questions we should therefor all be asking of government, DMRE, NNR, Nersa, NRWDI, Necsa, Eskom and the South African nuclear sector are:
- Who should be bear the cost of nuclear plant decommissioning and long-term storage and disposal of high-level nuclear waste โ the polluter, the customer or the taxpayer?
- Where are the real asset-based funds set aside within Eskom and Necsa for future decommissioning and long-term storage and disposal of high-level nuclear waste?
- Does the โpolluter paysโ principle apply in practice, or will the customer and taxpayer end up paying twice through government bailouts at the end of the day?
One can only guess who may end up bearing the real decommissioning, high-level waste storage, disposal and final repository costs in due course โ perhaps not the polluter at all, but our children’s children as taxpayers in the next generation.
Author:ย Chris Yelland, managing director, EE Business Intelligence