Rosatom advances uranium mining plans for Namibia aquifer

The Russian state atomic energy corporation Rosatom is seeking permits to extract uranium from the Stampriet Artesian Basin in Namibia by injecting sulphuric acid into the ground. The transboundary aquifer supplies drinking water and irrigation across Namibia, Botswana and South Africa.

Rosatom subsidiary Headspring Investments has already drilled exploration wells near Leonardville as part of its Project Wings proposal. The company plans to use in-situ leaching to dissolve uranium from sandstone deposits and pump the solution to the surface.

Rosatom maintains that the process uses weak chemicals comparable to red wine and that aquifers will self-restore after mining ends. It cites operations in Kazakhstan as evidence of minimal environmental impact.

Namibian geologist Dr Roy Miller and the International Groundwater Resources Assessment Centre have warned that the method risks irreversible contamination of the aquifer. They note fractures in the rock and high water pressure could spread pollutants to neighbouring countries.

Namibia cancelled Rosatom’s earlier drilling permits in 2021 after inspectors found violations. Local politician Tobie Aupindi is now urging the government to reissue permits quickly for economic reasons.

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Illustration of Uniper rejecting new nuclear reactors at Barsebäck power plant.
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Uniper rejects new reactors at Barsebäck

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German company Uniper, owner of Barsebäck, has rejected an application to build two new boiling water reactors at the site. The application comes from Nordic Baseload Power which is also seeking government support.

Prospect Lithium Zimbabwe exported the first lithium sulphate produced on the continent from its Arcadia mine near Harare last month. The shipment follows a government ban on raw mineral exports introduced in February.

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Egypt and Rwanda discussed expanding cooperation on water projects during meetings in Cairo this month, building on the executive action plan signed earlier this year. Officials reviewed progress on a bilateral memorandum and agreed on new initiatives for rainwater harvesting and groundwater exploration.

Kenya's High Court has cleared a class action lawsuit by 299 residents against a multinational British oil company accused of toxic waste dumping in the 1980s. Petitioners link over 500 deaths to contaminated drinking water in the Chalbi Desert. The suit also names Kenyan government ministries for failing to act.

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The national government announced the construction of a modular nuclear reactor at the Atucha complex with private US funding.

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የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
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