When Rwandan President Paul Kagame stood up at the Nuclear Energy Summit in Paris earlier this year, he didn’t talk like a leader hedging his bets on energy policy. He talked like a determined man in a hurry. Kagame told the assembled audience that nuclear-generated electricity technology “is evolving in ways that benefit countries with small grids, allowing Africa to be among the early adopters,” and that small modular reactors in particular are “especially suited to Africa’s requirements.” He went further, predicting that Africa will become one of the most important global markets for Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), and Rwanda isn’t just talking. The country has signed agreements with Holtec to deploy SMR-300 units, with a potential combined capacity approaching 5 GW, and Kagame has set a target of having Rwanda’s first SMR operational in the early 2030s.