The Assessment of Nuclear Energy as a Source of Electricity Generation in Kenya: Legal and Institutional Perspectives
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Date
2021Author
Mududa, Christine, A
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Electricity is vital for economic development. Sessional paper no. 10 of 2012 on Kenya Vision
2030 seeks, inter alia, to accelerate economic growth and increase productivity in all sectors.
Consequently, the country will require more electricity to realize the vision to meet the increase in
energy demand from growth in industrial and domestic needs. The government is in the process
of including nuclear energy in its electricity mix owed to the energy security it is capable of
providing. Despite the move towards nuclear energy, the existing legal and institutional framework
does not address some of the challenges with nuclear power generation, such as nuclear power
plant safety and non-proliferation of nuclear weapons. Therefore, the study analyses the role of
nuclear electricity in the emergence of clean energy to increase grid electricity to provide energy
security and the need to have changes in the legislative and institutional framework governing
nuclear electricity. Respondents from key government state departments and agencies, including
Nuclear Power and Energy Agency, Ministry of Energy, Ministry of Environment and Forestry,
National Environment Management Authority, Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority,
Kenya Power and Lighting Company, KETRACO, Rural Electrification, and Renewable Energy
Corporation, County Assembly of Mombasa and the National Council for Occupational Safety and
Health were interviewed across the energy and environment sectors using semi-structured
questionnaires. The methodology used included gathering primary and secondary data like books,
publications, journals, and speeches. This study found that the existing legal framework may
require review to address the challenges of the role of nuclear electricity to fulfil energy security,
the regulatory requirements for siting a Nuclear Power Plant, environmental consequences and
public perception and participation. Its recommendations highlighted the need to develop nuclear
management institutions like the Nuclear Safety Authority, Nuclear Radio-protection Authority,
Nuclear Radiological and Waste Authority, and even regulations for siting.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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