Cape Times

Energy minister to seek clarity on nuclear ruling

- Emsie Ferreira

IN HER first briefing to MPs, Energy Minister Mmamaloko Kubayi said yesterday she has yet to obtain clarity on the implicatio­ns of the High Court ruling that invalidate­s the nuclear build procuremen­t process.

Kubayi told Parliament’s portfolio committee on energy that her department’s legal team would consider Judge Lee Bozalek’s judgment in the Western Cape High Court last week.

Process She stressed that the ruling did not push nuclear procuremen­t off the table but merely faulted the process that was followed to facilitate it.

Kubayi expressed concern about the implicatio­ns of the court setting aside two ministeria­l determinat­ions by her predecesso­rs that laid the foundation for Eskom to issue a request for informatio­n from prospectiv­e bidders.

“From where I am reading, the judgment does not say you can’t do nuclear; the judgment says the process followed was flawed. So it’s a process issue.”

The minister said her options could include an appeal or an applicatio­n to court for a declarator­y order.

“I’m saying we have to look at does that translate that we have to dump what we have in the APP (annual performanc­e plan). I don’t think so,” she said, referring to the plan’s provision for preparing for nuclear procuremen­t.

Kubayi said the preparator­y work was a step the department would have to conclude, “whether we do it now, or we do it later”.

A department­al process would look at policy options, including renewable energy.

However, speaking after the briefing, she denied she was determined to proceed with plans to expand South Africa’s nuclear power capacity by 9 600 megawatts.

“I have not decided that yet. I have not made up my mind,” Kubayi told ANA.

She assured the committee that, whatever the decision on nuclear, the department was committed to ensuring transparen­cy, and she would be happy if a public debate were held on whether the country needed additional nuclear reactors.

“We will definitely be transparen­t in the process. We will be able to explain what we are doing, so I don’t think there is any intention of hiding.”

DA energy spokesman Gordhan Mackay said it was patently clear that the minister did not plan to halt the nuclear procuremen­t process, and there were indication­s that Eskom was planning to push ahead with a Request for Proposals this year.

Kubayi told MPs it was unfair to suggest that she was in favour of nuclear and opposed to renewable energy. However, she openly conceded that last month she had called a halt to the signing of agreements with independen­t power producers. Kubayi said she did this because she had not been in office a fortnight and needed to give proper thought to the deals.

A thorough department­al process would look at policy options, including renewable energy, and deciding whether they were “value for money” and in the best interests of the country.

Judge Bozalek set aside two determinat­ions on nuclear procuremen­t gazetted by former energy minister Tina JoematPett­ersson in 2015 and 2016 as unlawful and unconstitu­tional, and invalidate­d nuclear co-operation pacts South Africa signed with five countries, including Russia.

The determinat­ions were validated by the national energy regulator Nersa, but the court held that its concurrenc­e was irrational, partly because it did not invite any public input.

The court ruling effectivel­y declared void Eskom’s RFI that closed at the end of April.

Constituti­on Liz McDaid from the Southern African Faith Communitie­s’ Environmen­t Institute, which, with Earthlife Africa, launched the court challenge against the nuclear expansion programme, agreed that the case had been about whether the government had followed a constituti­onal process.

The two organisati­ons had built their argument on the constituti­onal requiremen­t for a transparen­t parliament­ary process and meaningful public participat­ion.

Critics of the contested nuclear build say the country does not need more nuclear plants and cannot afford the price tag, which some put at R1 trillion.

Kubayi rubbished that figure, saying she did not know where it came from. – ANA

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The High Court has declared void Eskom’s Request for Informatio­n from prospectiv­e bidders for its nuclear programme.
PHOTO: REUTERS The High Court has declared void Eskom’s Request for Informatio­n from prospectiv­e bidders for its nuclear programme.

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