Cape Times

Eskom’s coal truckers in protest

- Siseko Njobeni

THE STAND-OFF between Eskom and the renewable energy industry took a bizarre turn yesterday when truckers who supply coal to Eskom staged a protest in Tshwane over fears that increased contributi­on of renewable energy to the electricit­y grid would lead to job losses.

The protest was a spillover of the brewing tension between Eskom and the industry over, among others, the cost of renewable energy and the pace at which Eskom is connecting the independen­t power producers (IPPs) to the national grid.

Eskom said that it was burning 3 million tons less coal due to the uptake of renewable energy, among other factors. It said this was expected to increase to 10 million tons in 2020. Eskom has attributed the reduced usage of coal to energy surplus and the contributi­on of renewable energy.

Since the start of the renewable energy independen­t power producer procuremen­t programme (Reippp) in 2001, Eskom had connected 62 renewable energy producers, contributi­ng 4 200 megawatts, said Eskom spokespers­on Khulu Phasiwe yesterday. The programme has so far procured combined generation capacity of 6 376MW.

Phasiwe said, owing to the additional output, the utility had to reduce its own power production to cater for the IPP power. “As a result, we no longer need to transport a lot of coal. We have told the coal truck companies that there will be additional capacity from the renewables. At a later stage we will also have capacity from gas IPPs,” said Phasiwe.

From 2021, Eskom planned to decommissi­on some of its power stations, he said. These included Komati, Grootvlei and Camden.

Expenditur­e costs

He said Eskom was committed to connect IPPs into the grid, but would do so “at a pace and scale we can afford”.

Thava Govender, the group executive for transmissi­on at Eskom, said on Tuesday that Eskom’s total capital expenditur­e costs for enabling IPP connection­s wasR3.7 billion for projects in bid windows (bid window one) to (bid window four) of the Reippp.

Govender said the utility was committed to the renewable energy programme and intended to sign power purchase agreements. “This commitment will be carried out within a framework that takes into considerat­ion the scale and pace of the roll-out of IPP procuremen­t programmes, the long-term financial sustainabi­lity of Eskom and the value-for-money criteria visà-vis whether South Africa’s customer base can afford the current IPP tariffs and their projected trajectory. The uncertaint­y on the cost recovery mechanism for IPPs’ energy costs remains a key concern to be clarified with Nersa and other relevant stakeholde­rs.”

The SA Renewable Energy Council (Sarec) said the reduced consumptio­n of up to 10million tons was part of the government’s policy and was consistent with South Africa’s climate change commitment.

Sarec said Eskom had performed a life-extension exercise for the rehabilita­tion of power stations earmarked for decommissi­oning. “In fact, Eskom plans to decommissi­on some 27.5 gigawatts of coalfired plant by 2040 which will result in a total of 12 thermal plants being closed.

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