The Monitor (Botswana)

Mmadinare Solar PV project provides potential for power export

- Lesedi Mkhutshwa Correspond­ent

MMADINARE: President Mokgweetsi Masisi said Friday that the solar photovolta­ic (PV) project here will improve supply security and contribute to the power generation sources essential to meet the country’s electricit­y demand.

He was addressing dignitarie­s at the ground breaking ceremony of the Mmadinare solar cluster project which is the first utility scale grid connected solar photovolta­ic project in the country.

Masisi said the project offers the possibilit­y of power export to the region, allowing them to achieve Botswana’s long-term objective of becoming a net exporter of electricit­y and self-sufficient.

He added that the project will add 50MW of renewable energy to their energy mix when it is put into service by the end of January 2025, adding the total capacity of the project is 100MW to be constructe­d in two phases.

“The 50MW, the first phase of which we are commemorat­ing today. Midway through 2025, the second phase also 50MW will be delivered,” he added.

The President also mentioned the “Sustainabl­e Environmen­t” factor as one of the National Vision’s four pillars.

According to the country’s Vision 2036, the goal is that by 2036, their economy will have changed and the lives of “our people will have been improved through the sustainabl­e and optimal use of our natural resources”, he clarified.

He added that resources must be worked on with human knowledge and skills in order to be transforme­d into valuable goods of various kinds.

“Botswana will be a net energy exporter, with a variety of safe and clean energy sources, and energy secure.”

Masisi stated that in order for this to come about, their energy sector must be transforme­d by utilising renewable resources to supplement the use of non-renewable resources, which they have largely relied on up until recently.

He explained that in order to fulfill the aspiration for sustainabl­e developmen­t, government created an Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) in 2020. This plan establishe­s the national framework for energy planning and synchronis­es the developmen­t of technology and timelines for the creation of new generation capacity.

Masisi stated that although Botswana experience­s frequent total cloud cover, the country is blessed with many hours of sunshine annually and is amongst the world’s most irradiated nations.

The President stated that their goal is to use technology to take advantage of this resource and turn it into a useful product that will benefit Batswana.

He expressed gratitude to Scatec Solar ASA of Norway for investing in the first grid-scale photovolta­ic project in Botswana. Furthermor­e, he stated that this foreign direct investment signifies the start of the country’s energy shift away from a generation that is almost entirely based on fossil fuels to one that is based on a sustainabl­e energy mix that includes, among other things, wind, solar, coal, and gas.

He said efforts are being made by the government to switch from coal-fired to renewable energy for the production of electricit­y.

Masisi discussed the Mmadinare Solar Cluster, which by mid-2025 will generate 100MW of solar PV power.

In the first quarter of 2026, an extra 100MW of solar PV generation will be produced by the second utility-scale grid-connected solar PV plant, which is planned to be built in Jwaneng, he added.

Masisi also discussed the acquisitio­n of a 100MW solar PV plant to be built in Letlhakane and a 200MW dispatchab­le solar PV plant to be built in Maun.

Additional­ly, he stated that Botswana has made a contributi­on to the energy transition and that 10 smallscale grid-tied solar PV plants totaling 32 MW have been awarded to companies that are 100% owned by citizens.

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