Cape Times

Government erred in IRP draft

Sarec says concentrat­ing solar power should have been included in plan

- Siseko Njobeni

THE DEPARTMENT of Energy erred by excluding concentrat­ing solar power (CSP) in the draft integrated resource plan (IRP 2016) generation mix in the period up to 2050, according to the SA Renewable Energy Council (Sarec).

Last November, the department released a draft update of the IRP and announced a public consultati­on process on the plan amid concerns that the IRP 2010, which was promulgate­d in 2011, had been outdated since 2013.

The IRP 2016 guides future energy infrastruc­ture investment­s up to 2050.

In a submission to the department, Sarec, the umbrella body that represents the interests of the solar and wind industries, said the exclusion of CSP technology in the IRP 2016 seemed to be based on outdated modelling assumption­s and did not reflect “the current market reality”.

It said the move did not acknowledg­e the dispatchab­ility and operationa­l flexibilit­y of CSP power stations.

“We recommend and refer the (department) to an independen­t consensus statement on the significan­t role CSP technology can play in a cost optimised South African power system that came out of a workshop convened by Stellenbos­ch University and the CSIR on January 16 (this year) in response to the exclusion of CSP in the draft IRP 2016 base case,” Sarec said.

The prices of wind and solar photovolat­ic have fallen… since the start of Reippp.

It said CSP, with integrated thermal storage, provided dispatchab­le and flexible electricit­y that complement­ed other electricit­y generation which allowed higher penetratio­n of least cost of electricit­y from wind and solar photovolta­ic plants. The global CSP price had been falling and could reach 90c a kilowatt-hour (kWh). Sarec said similar reductions could be expected in South Africa “with a… large allocation in the IRP”.

The prices of wind and solar photovolta­ic have fallen significan­tly since the start of the renewable energy independen­t power producer procuremen­t (Reippp) programme in 2011.

The body also criticised the imposition of limitation­s on annual build of wind and solar photovolta­ic. It said such limitation­s should be accompanie­d by “rational” explanatio­ns.

Credible argument “These constraint­s were applied with no explanatio­n,” it said. Wind and solar photovolta­ic were the only technologi­es with annual build constraint­s in the IRP update base case. “Sarec is therefore of the view that (the department has) failed to set out a credible argument for the use of annual build limits for wind and solar (photovolta­ic).”

Sarec’s chairperso­n Brenda Martin said the public participat­ion process was an opportunit­y to influence long-term investment choices.

“We don’t often have an opportunit­y to influence government policy, so this is a significan­t moment, not just for the energy industry, but for all South Africans.

“The general public have become well informed as to the long-term implicatio­ns of various power supply options and are thus well-placed to influence the energy investment choice pathways up to mid-century,” said Martin.

Sarec said the process should adhere to predictabl­e timelines.

 ?? PHOTO: NICHOLAS RAMA ?? PiA solar farm in De Aar. Sarec says CSP, with integrated thermal storage, provides dispatchab­le and flexible electricit­y.
PHOTO: NICHOLAS RAMA PiA solar farm in De Aar. Sarec says CSP, with integrated thermal storage, provides dispatchab­le and flexible electricit­y.

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