Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09LUANDA11
2009-01-08 15:54:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Luanda
Cable title:  

ANGOLA HAS NO CIVIL NUCLEAR PROGRAM

Tags:  AO BEXP BTIO EMIN ENIV ENRG PGOV PREL 
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R 081554Z JAN 09
FM AMEMBASSY LUANDA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 5257
INFO DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC
UNCLAS LUANDA 000011 


DEPARTMENT PASS TO T MARC HUMPHREY
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE PASS TO SARAH LOPP

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: AO BEXP BTIO EMIN ENIV ENRG PGOV PREL
SUBJECT: ANGOLA HAS NO CIVIL NUCLEAR PROGRAM

REF: 08 STATE 127423


UNCLAS LUANDA 000011


DEPARTMENT PASS TO T MARC HUMPHREY
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE PASS TO SARAH LOPP

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: AO BEXP BTIO EMIN ENIV ENRG PGOV PREL
SUBJECT: ANGOLA HAS NO CIVIL NUCLEAR PROGRAM

REF: 08 STATE 127423



1. (U) This cable is in response to Department requests for
information on in-country developments regarding civil
nuclear energy in reftel.


2. (U) SUMMARY and COMMENT: Angola has no existing civil
nuclear industry, but GRA officials have stated a desire to
pursue nuclear energy for power generation and in the health
care industry. At present, there are no existing or planned
nuclear power related facilities or uranium mining, but the
GRA's brief statements about a potential nuclear industry
call for the exploitation of Angola's uranium deposits.
Current GRA plans are currently limited to developing the
capacity to use nuclear technology in medicine, and
agricultural research, and to the development of nuclear
physics education programs at the Ministry of Science and
Technology's Science and Nuclear Technology Unit.


3. (U) Future nuclear power generation would ostensibly be
used to replace the thirty-three percent of its electricity
that is generated by thermal sources, mostly diesel
generators. The remaining sixty-seven percent is generated
by hydro, with an existing hydro development project set to
double Angola's entire electrical generating capacity in the
coming years. Given this and the other hydro projects
currently under development, as well as state controls on
electricity prices, Post deems it highly unlikely that a
private sector driven nuclear power industry could currently
take hold in Angola. Any future nuclear power industry would
likely follow Angola's current statist model for the existing
power sector, however, given the country's pressing
development needs in the wake of its twenty-seven year civil
war, and a lack of related technical and manufacturing
capacity, Post deems any state-run nuclear power industry
equally unlikely for the foreseeable future. END SUMMARY and
COMMENT.


4. (U) TEXT CONTAINS RESPONSES TO SPECIFIC QUESTIONS FOUND IN
PARAGRAPH 8 OF REFTEL NOT OTHERWISE ANSWERED IN SUMMARY:

--Key nuclear decision making government body would likely be
the Ministry of Science and Technology, headed by Minister de
Candida Pereira Teixeira, if Angola had a nuclear industry.

--Angola has no nuclear regulatory authority, but did pass an
Atomic Energy Law in 2007 that calls for the peaceful use of
nuclear energy in power generation and medicine.

--Angola has no domestic nuclear liability law.

--Angola's limited manufacturing base is not involved in any
nuclear related products or services.

--Angola has no nuclear trained workforce aside from a small
handful of radiotherapy technicians at two hospitals.

--Angola has no current or anticipated nuclear tenders of any
kind.

--There are no other nuclear supplier countries currently
engaging Angola.

--Were Angola to pursue nuclear energy it may be inclined to
partner with China, given the increasing economic and
political ties between the two countries.

END TEXT

MOZENA