Daily Dispatch

Nuke power plant plans for Witbank

Eskom considers site in drive to phase out coal-fired stations

- By CHARLOTTE MATHEWS

ESKOM was considerin­g building nuclear power plants in the Witbank area to use existing infrastruc­ture as it phased out 34 000 megawatt (MW) of old coalfired power over the next decades, the electricit­y utility’s chief nuclear officer Dave Nicholls says.

The Department of Energy has delegated the task of nuclear procuremen­t to Eskom, which will be the owner and operator of the new nuclear power stations.

Under the Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) 2010, SA plans to procure 9 600MW of new nuclear power.

Under the updated IRP 2016, under discussion, the plan is to add 20 385MW of nuclear power by 2050, equivalent to about one-third of the total generation mix.

Nicholls told the Nuclear Africa conference in Centurion the first four units of the new nuclear build programme would be at Thyspunt.

Another unit was likely to be placed at Duynefonte­in in the Western Cape where Koeberg power station is located. The next priority area for nuclear, as old coal-fired power was taken off-line, would be somewhere in KwaZulu-Natal, which depended for most of its power on the Witbank coal fleet.

No detailed work has been done on a site in KwaZulu-Natal yet, he said.

Eskom hoped that the department of environmen­tal affairs would approve its environmen­tal plan for Thyspunt by May or June.

He said the intention was to select a single nuclear vendor to avoid delays and technical problems in matching different technologi­es.

The request for informatio­n was issued in December and the request for proposals would be issued by the middle of 2017. By early 2018 the preferred bidder should have been selected and negotiatio­ns would begin on a contract, which was likely to be signed by 2018-19.

The cost of nuclear power depended on which vendor and technology was selected and the cost of capital, since 70% of the cost of nuclear power was capital and the remainder was operating and fuel.

Nicholls said studies that showed the cost of nuclear power was considerab­ly higher than that of renewable power ignored Eskom’s huge investment to strengthen the grid in the Northern Cape to take renewable power from independen­t power producers as well as the fact that renewable power could not be switched on and off to follow demand.

Nuclear power stations could be modified to cycle up or down although Eskom did not consider it necessary with Koeberg as its fuel cost was the lowest in the fleet, Nicholls said.

The National Union of Mineworker­s, which has demonstrat­ed against the loss of jobs around Witbank as the first four coal-fired power stations are due to close, said it was not convinced that renewable energy was the best option for SA and it feared that the high cost of renewable energy would bankrupt Eskom.

Nicholls said Eskom’s intention in nuclear procuremen­t was to achieve the lowest credible cost with the highest possible local content, partly to protect against exchange rate fluctuatio­ns.

Eskom would insist that vendors quote on a machine currently under constructi­on that was close to Eskom’s specificat­ions and the vendor would be required to lead constructi­on for the early units. — TMG

 ??  ?? POWER STRUGGLES: Eskom is facing major challenges in funding and power generation and must retire 12 power stations by 2030
POWER STRUGGLES: Eskom is facing major challenges in funding and power generation and must retire 12 power stations by 2030

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