News

In Nuclear Drive, Ethiopia Balances Russian Backing With European Regulatory Support

In Nuclear Drive, Ethiopia Balances Russian Backing With European Regulatory Support
Sunday, 18 January 2026 15:49

Ethiopia said earlier this week it aims to build its first nuclear power plant by 2036. Success will depend on Addis Ababa’s ability to secure key technology and regulatory partnerships in a civil nuclear sector dominated by a handful of major players, including Russia.

Ethiopia’s civil nuclear programme is becoming a tool for diplomatic leverage, not just a bid to strengthen energy security. The country says it aims to bring its first nuclear power plant online by 2036, a plan backed by closer cooperation with several foreign partners, led by Russia.

Although developing nuclear technology usually takes between 10 and 15 years, Ethiopia plans to commission a plant in less than 10 years based on current progress,” said Abdulrezak Omar, deputy commissioner of the Ethiopian Nuclear Energy Commission (ENEC).

The government set up the ENEC in October 2025 to coordinate national efforts on nuclear technology for electricity generation and industrial development.

The agency was created shortly after Ethiopia signed an agreement with Russia about a month earlier on planning and building a nuclear power plant. The two countries agreed to work together on technical details and the project’s financing structure, as well as training the staff expected to operate the future facility.

Rosatom talks in Moscow

Rosatom, Russia’s state-owned nuclear group, is supporting Addis Ababa’s plans. In December 2025, an Ethiopian delegation led by ENEC chief commissioner Sandokan Debebe travelled to Moscow for further talks with Rosatom executives. Details were not disclosed.

“Rosatom is ready to share its most advanced technologies, support workforce training and help build the necessary infrastructure,” said Alexey Likhachev, Rosatom’s director general. He said it was an honour to take part in a project he described as key to Ethiopia’s long-term energy future and that of the wider region.

Other partnerships in the works

Ethiopia is not the first African country to turn to Rosatom to develop a civil nuclear programme. Egypt is currently the only country on the continent where the Russian group is building reactors.

Other countries, including Niger, Mali and Uganda, have signed agreements with Rosatom to study or prepare civil nuclear projects, but these efforts remain at an early stage.

Ethiopia says it does not want to rely on a single partner. In early 2026, Debebe held a working session with European, French and Finnish diplomats based in Ethiopia. He said the participants agreed to explore cooperation on regulatory frameworks, nuclear waste management and human resources development.

Emiliano Tossou

Read More: 16/01/2026- Ethiopia Plans First Nuclear Power Plant Within Decade To Diversify Energy Mix

On the same topic
World Bank announces $137 million to boost West Africa digital economy Program expands broadband, aiming connect 5.2 million people Initiative...
United States led arms exports to Africa with 19% share African arms imports fell 41%, mainly due to Algeria drop Sub-Saharan imports rose...
Africa's branded hotel pipeline reached a record 123,846 rooms across 675 projects in 2026, up 18.6% year-on-year, signalling sustained investor...
Since its 2019 IPO, Airtel Africa paid Deloitte over $37 million in audit and non-audit fees, with annual costs rising sharply due to growing...
Most Read
01

The BCEAO cut its main policy rate by 25 basis points to 3.00%, effective March 16. Inflation...

BCEAO Cuts Key Rate to 3.00% as WAEMU Faces Deflation
02

Ethio Telecom has signed a new agreement with Ericsson to expand and modernize its telecom netwo...

Ethiopia’s State-Owned Telco Teams Up With Ericsson to Expand and Upgrade Its Network
03

EIB commits over €1 billion for renewable energy in sub-Saharan Africa Funding supports Miss...

EIB Commits €1 Billion to Renewable Energy Under Africa’s “Mission 300” Initiative
04

MTN Zambia tests Starlink satellite service connecting phones directly from space Direct-to...

Satellite direct-to-device telecoms: promise, momentum and hard limits
05

Nigeria introduced a 1% flat tax on the turnover of informal-sector businesses under a new presump...

Nigeria Rolls Out 1% Tax on Informal Businesses Under New Fiscal Framework
Enter your email to receive our newsletter

Ecofin Agency provides daily coverage of nine key African economic sectors: public management, finance, telecoms, agribusiness, mining, energy, transport, communication, and education.
It also designs and manages specialized media, both online and print, for African institutions and publishers.

SALES & ADVERTISING

regie@agenceecofin.com 
Tél: +41 22 301 96 11 
Mob: +41 78 699 13 72


EDITORIAL
redaction@agenceecofin.com

More information
Team
Publisher

ECOFIN AGENCY

Mediamania Sarl
Rue du Léman, 6
1201 Geneva
Switzerland

 

Ecofin Agency is a sector-focused economic news agency, founded in December 2010. Its web platform was launched in June 2011. ©Mediamania.

 
 

Please publish modules in offcanvas position.