Daily Dispatch

SA is hooked on fossil fuels: how it got here

- Hartmut Winkler

SA has experience­d power shortages with rolling blackouts on an unpreceden­ted scale in 2022.

The present power generation shortage is due to Eskom’s failure to add sufficient new electricit­y generation to the grid. This meant that it had to keep ailing old power stations going beyond their projected lifespan.

The coal plants are prone to frequent renewed breakdown. In addition, their maintenanc­e and parts replacemen­ts are becoming prohibitiv­ely expensive.

Given the major contributi­on that the burning of coal makes to greenhouse gas emissions and climate change, electricit­y generation from coal is in any case globally viewed as extremely problemati­c, with major pressure and incentives to scale this down.

SA is currently ranked eighth in the world in terms of the total amount of coal used for electricit­y generation.

The largest coal user by far is China, followed by India, though these are also the world’s most populous nations.

In terms of energy consumptio­n from coal per capita, SA also ranks among the highest in the world with just under 16,500 kwh per person per annum. This is in line with other highly coal dependent countries.

It is roughly on par with China, South Korea and Australia and slightly lower than the top three Estonia, Kazakhstan and Taiwan.

When it comes to dependency on coal power plants, SA is in a class of its own 85% of its electricit­y is produced in coal power plants. This is way higher than all countries bar two. Only Mongolia and Kosovo have a higher dependency. They have tiny population­s Mongolia has just over 3 million people, Kosovo just under 2 million. SA’S population is over 60 million.

SA’S percentage of electricit­y from coal has decreased only marginally by 9 percentage points since 1985. This is in contrast to other previously coal dependent countries that have made much more dramatic moves to carbon-free power.

For example, the UK got 58% of its electricit­y from coal in 1985. Today this is down to 2%, partly thanks to massive investment­s in wind power.

SA has climatic conditions suitable for solar and wind power, and should in theory similarly be able to reduce its coal dependence.

A drive towards low-carbon electricit­y generation however requires government­al support, which has mostly not been forthcomin­g in the last decade.

As it’s a country with rich coal deposits, SA’S proliferat­ion of coal plants was to be expected in the 1970s and 1980s. Because it’s also a water scarce country, possibilit­ies for hydropower plants were always limited.

And while one nuclear plant was constructe­d, the increasing isolation of apartheid-era SA made it difficult to access internatio­nal expertise needed for further nuclear developmen­ts.

Renewable technologi­es are relatively new. They only became commercial­ly competitiv­e about 10 years ago, and were not considered a viable alternativ­e to fossil fuels before then.

When the need for more power generation in SA became apparent in the first years of the millennium, a time when the electrific­ation of previously unconnecte­d communitie­s was booming, the choice was made to construct two further coal plants, Medupi and Kusile.

These builds have, however, proved technologi­cally flawed, way over budget and badly behind schedule.

When the first series of rolling power cuts had to be implemente­d in 2007, it became clear that energy security planning and implementa­tion had gone wrong.

The subsequent electricit­y plan from 2010 recommende­d major developmen­ts in nuclear and renewable energy. In 2015 the government stalled the constructi­on of planned new solar and wind plants in favour of a highly controvers­ial and ultimately blocked nuclear deal with Russia.

Since the resumption of the renewables electricit­y programme in 2018 some wind and solar plants have been built, but at nowhere near the rate needed to dent the dominant role of coal.

Despite the electricit­y crisis having now become urgent and obvious, with several hours of power cuts during as many as half of the days in 2022, there has been no unity in purpose to tackle the issue. There are loud calls, also supported by influentia­l individual­s within the ruling ANC, to maintain SA’S coal-intensive trajectory.

The proponents argue that the coal power stations can simply be managed better, and that any new power generation should mainly be focused on nuclear and gas.

The opposing view is that SA should align with the global trends to massively develop new solar and wind power plants. Its advocates justify this option by pointing to the lower cost of these technologi­es, short project completion times and environmen­tal considerat­ions.

Despite enjoying weather conditions that are superbly suited for wind and solar farms, SA has been extremely slow to kickstart its renewable energy generating infrastruc­ture.

SA could have followed the example of China. Although the largest user of coal in the world, it is already making major moves towards a far lower carbon footprint. Over the five year period 2021-2025, China plans to add solar and wind plants producing 570 GW of electricit­y.

To put this figure into perspectiv­e, this is roughly ten times SA’S present total power capacity.

The office of president Cyril Ramaphosa comes across as sympatheti­c to mass renewable energy developmen­ts. It has aligned itself with the recently published Just Energy Transition Investment Plan.

The plan envisages accelerate­d building of more wind and solar farms to replace decommissi­oned coal power stations.

It also tries to mitigate lowered economic activity and job losses in the coal fields and adjacent coal plants.

It goes further in exploring energy exports in the form of green hydrogen, an energy storage medium fed by renewables, and the current global move towards electric vehicles.

If supported and implemente­d, the plan will result in better power supply in only three to five years from now.

This however presuppose­s that the government will rally behind this initiative and work together rather than sending contradict­ory messages.

In the interim, power shortages will persist in SA.

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