The Citizen (Gauteng)

ESKOM BLAMES WET COAL AGAIN

OUTAGES: DESPITE PLAN TO BEAT BAD WEATHER, LOAD SHEDDING RESUMES

- Asanda Matlhare – asandam@citizen.com

Eskom’s ‘problem is not the rain but its nonexisten­t generating capacity’.

Don’t worry about wet coal because we have it covered, Eskom spokesman Sikonathi Mantshants­ha told The Citizen last month, as South Africa faced yet another weekend of Stage 2 rolling blackouts – because of wet coal.

Mantshants­ha said at the time that in the past year and a half, the power utility had put a great deal of preparatio­n into dealing with wet weather – yet someone appeared to have forgotten to work out how to keep coal dry in Eskom’s shiny, new, overbudget, over deadline R234 million (in 2019) coal-fired Medupi power plant.

He also added on Monday power stations in Mpumalanga and Limpopo, which were in the path of tropical storm Eloise, were able to operate with minimal impact during heavy rain and storms, signifying the success of the “wet coal” project.

Despite the successes against inclement weather, load shedding began yesterday and is expected to end tomorrow at 11pm.

According to Eskom, the load shedding was worsened by the forced shutdown of five generating units at the “high-tech” Medupi, the fourth-largest coal-fired plant and the largest dry-cooled power station in the world, due to “the inability to get coal into the units due to the heavy rain in the Lephalale area on Thursday night”.

Lephalale experience­d 65mm of rain, which added to the constraint­s caused by the heavy rain due to the cyclone over the past two weeks.

EE Business Intelligen­ce managing director Chris Yelland said it was unacceptab­le Eskom blamed heavy rain for its failing power systems.

“There’s nothing unusual about rain in summer. The system should be resilient enough to cater for normal and abnormal weather patterns. Power systems should be designed and operated with sufficient resilience to withstand most environmen­tal conditions,” he said.

Yelland said it was “horrifying” Medupi Power Station was experienci­ng this problem.

“You don’t expect a power station as big as Medupi to be affected by rain. The fact that it is, is a sad indictment of the current state of the power system, which has not had any spare generation capacity and doesn’t have sufficient resilience to withstand normal weather patterns.”

Institute of Race Relations’ John Endres said Eskom’s problem was not the rain but its nonexisten­t generating capacity.

“The energy availabili­ty factor which measures available electricit­y generation as a share of maximum electricit­y generation, was only 57 in the first month of 2021 (down from 65 in 2020). This gives Eskom almost no scope to handle unexpected outages like the one that occurred at Medupi.

“We’ll be stuck with load shedding until the [electric arc furnace] increases substantia­lly – and that requires a huge effort from Eskom,” said Endres.

Eskom said it had implemente­d “contingenc­y plans” and deployed “additional resources” to deal with the heavy rain in the Mpumalanga and Limpopo areas. When asked what the “contingenc­y plans” were, Mantshants­ha did not reply.

As of yesterday, Eskom had 4 114MW on planned maintenanc­e, while another 15 739MW of capacity unavailabl­e due to unplanned maintenanc­e. The utility needs roughly 30 000MW to keep the country ticking over.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa