China's Nuclear Exports and Assistance to Sub-Saharan Africa
There have been only a few scattered reports of important Chinese nuclear trade or cooperation with countries in sub-Saharan Africa. In November 1993, Waldo Stumpf of South Africa's Atomic Energy Corporation acknowledged that South Africa had imported low enriched uranium (LEU) from China for use in its nuclear weapons program. However, South Africa has publicly abandoned its nuclear weapons program, and there have been no reports of important South Africa-China nuclear trade since then. In December 1993, it was reported that China was negotiating an agreement with Ghana for the transfer of a research reactor. No nuclear transfers of proliferation concern have been reported.
For more in-depth information on open-source reports of Chinese exports and assistance, please consult the CNS Nuclear Abstracts database.
CHINA'S NUCLEAR EXPORTS AND ASSISTANCE TO SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
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| GHANA |
--30 kWth Miniature Neutron Source Reactor (MNSR) and enriched uranium (under IAEA safeguards--INFCIRC/468) (1995) |
| NIGERIA |
--30 kWth Miniature Neutron Source Reactor (MNSR) and enriched uranium (under IAEA safeguards--INFCIRC/526) (1996) --[US March 1996 statement to the IAEA Board of Governors on the transfer] |
| SOUTH AFRICA |
--for Koeberg-1 power reactor and/or pilot enrichment plant) (early 1980s) (supplied without safeguards) |
[CHINA'S NUCLEAR EXPORTS AND ASSISTANCE TO ALGERIA]
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