Projects to help South Africa’s electricity crisis are stalling – here’s why

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Some private energy producers who initiated renewable energy projects more than a year ago are facing difficulties in securing financial closure and contributing to the already limited grid capacity.

South African renewable energy projects selected over a year ago to add generation from private producers and help end electricity shortages are struggling to reach financial close due to an escalation in costs and grid capacity, according to one of the developers.

A dozen projects, with a combined capacity of more than 1,000 megawatts, remain hamstrung because of increases in financing and other charges, said Globeleq Chief Executive Officer Mike Scholey.“In South Africa, we’re struggling to deliver due to costs,” he said in an interview on the sidelines of the Africa Energy Forum in Nairobi.

The delays come as the most industrialised nation on the continent suffers from record power cuts due to breakdowns of state-owned Eskom’s ageing coal-fired units.Projects have also been sidelined due to a lack of connections to the national grid. Wind stations were spurned in the sixth round, limiting projects advancing to the next stage as a lobby for the technology warned that the problem could limit investment.

For Globeleq, selling the electricity to private consumers rather than Eskom is one potential solution, Scholey said. “In the short term, this is the way forward: allow direct sale to end-user customers.” The company won the preferred bids in the fifth round as the majority partner in the Ikamva Consortium, which includes Mainstream Renewable Power, Africa Rainbow Energy & Power and H1 Holdings.

 

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