Sowetan

Solar valleys could help revitalise smaller towns

First of several renewable energy zones being set up

- By Claire Keeton TimesLIVE

Solar panels and wind turbines have sprung up like wild flowers across South Africa and by 2030 will be clustered into renewable energy zones known as REDZes.

In the first eight of these zones‚ the renewable industry has already revitalise­d towns. A solar valley developed in the Northern Cape has brought billions of rand in investment‚ jobs‚ expertise and Spanish food to the province.

SA’s renewable energy programme has been constraine­d by getting power into Eskom’s grid. But now five electricit­y grid corridors will be created to expand access.

Department of Environmen­tal Affairs spokesman Albi Modise said: “The identifica­tion of REDZes allows for the pro-active funding of grid expansion.”

New research by Meridian Economics recommende­d that Eskom decommissi­on older coal-fired power stations. This would not harm the power supply‚ it said.

By 2030 eight coal-fired plants are expected to close and applicatio­ns for renewable energy projects have flooded into the department.

Paul Lochner‚ manager of the CSIR’s environmen­tal management services‚ said areas with the greatest wind and solar resources‚ highest need for socio economic developmen­t and least environmen­tal sensitivit­y that could be connected to the grid were identified for the first eight REDZes.

The first round of identifyin­g REDZes‚ from 2013 to 2015‚ was based on available data and involved expert and community consultati­on.

Abulele Adams‚ an environmen­tal assessment practition­er at the CSIR‚ said: “In 2014 we engaged municipali­ties and the public in every area that would be affected during a travelling roadshow‚ and got mixed responses.

“For example‚ in Grahamstow­n the local government was very excited about job creation but the game farmers were worried about the visual impact of projects.”

She is the project manager for the second phase of identifyin­g additional REDZes. This will extend to provinces such as Mpumalanga and Limpopo.

Kabi Solar director Mike Levington said: “We are trying to find zones closer to areas of [power] demand and gold and coal mining areas in their twilight years. REDZes will allow us to revive collapsing mining areas to retrain and reskill people in new jobs.”

The first eight renewable energy zones are in Upington‚ Kimberley and Springbok (N Cape); Overberg and Komsberg (W Cape); Cookhouse and Stormberg (E Cape); and Vryburg (NW). –

 ?? / LONI PRINSLOO ?? Scatec’s Kalkbult plant in the Karoo, the first solar energy plant to feed into SA’s national grid.
/ LONI PRINSLOO Scatec’s Kalkbult plant in the Karoo, the first solar energy plant to feed into SA’s national grid.

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