The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Moza seeks to end 50-year South Africa hydropower pact

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MOZAMBIQUE plans to end half a century of hydropower supply to South Africa’s state-owned electricit­y utility, raising risks for the continent’s most industrial­ised economy and threatenin­g the viability of Africa’s second-biggest aluminum smelter.

In the country’s yet-to-be-published energy transition strategy, a copy of which Bloomberg has seen, Mozambique details the plan to secure the 1 150 megawatts of power it sells to South Africa from its Cahora Bassa plant for its own use.

“The main short-term hydro priority is the repatriati­on of electricit­y from Hidroelect­rica de Cahora Bassa currently exported to South Africa” when the contract ends on December 31, 2030, the government said in the strategy document. Mozambique’s energy ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The decision creates a headache for both South Africa — which is battling power cuts that are holding back economic growth — and South32 Ltd, which operates the Mozal aluminum smelter near Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, but uses electricit­y bought from South African utility Eskom.

South32 needs about 900 megawatts of electricit­y for Mozal’s output of aluminum, which the company markets as having been made with clean energy.

Because Mozambique’s grid isn’t linked nationally, Mozal — which produced 345 000 tonness last year — can’t get direct power supply from Cahora Bassa.

Instead, the 2 075-megawatt plant — Africa’s third-biggest for hydropower — sends electricit­y along 1 400 kilometers (870 miles) of transmissi­on lines to Eskom in South Africa, which then sells power to Mozal. The sales arrangemen­t has been in place since 1979, when the last of the turbines was completed.

Past disruption­s to supply — for example, when violent storms have toppled transmissi­on lines — have worsened power cuts in South Africa.

“HCB’s electricit­y is cheap and clean,” the government said in the strategy document. “Important decisions will have to be made regarding HCB’s clean-energy trading end-destinatio­n.”

Mozambique plans to push for its renewable energy to be used in industrial parks to add value to its production of so-called green minerals such as lithium and graphite.

Eskom said it’s unaware of the desire to not renew the contract.

Should the contract not be renewed, Eskom may need to buy power from elsewhere and South32 will need to find another source of electricit­y, preferably from renewable sources. That’s so it won’t be subject to European Union taxes on exports under the bloc’s carbon border adjustment mechanism, which levies duties on carbon-intensive goods such as fertiliser­s, cement, iron, steel, and aluminum imported into the bloc.

South32’s supply deal with Eskom expires in 2026.

The company has formed a working group with Eskom, HCB and the Mozambican government to extend the contract “as there are no viable alternativ­e suppliers of renewable energy at the necessary scale,” it said in its 2023 sustainabl­e-developmen­t report.

While Mozal buys power from Eskom, which produces almost all of its power from coal, there’s no guarantee that it’s the same electricit­y transmitte­d from Cahora Bassa. South32 has also proposed ring-fencing power from South Africa’s sole nuclear plant for its Hillside aluminum smelter in that country.

South32 didn’t respond to a request for further comment. Mozal is 63,7 percent owned by South32, 24 percent held by South Africa’s Industrial Developmen­t Corp., 8,4 percent owned by Mitsubishi Corp. and the Mozambican government holds 3,9 percent.

“To avoid a situation where the country’s largest electricit­y producer, the Cahora Bassa hydroelect­ric plant, exports energy to the region while the largest consumer imports Mozambique needs a unified electricit­y grid,” the government said in the document.

The Mozal plant employs too few people and benefits to the government in the form of taxes are limited, according to a person familiar with the government’s thinking.

Mozal employs about 1 000 people, accounts for 4 percent of Mozambique’s gross domestic product and paid US$16 million in royalties and dividends to the government in South32’s last financial year, the company said in its sustainabi­lity report.

Eskom said it’s pursuing the option of importing power from other sources. The utility scrapped a plan to import an additional 100 megawatts of electricit­y from Mozambique recently because of disagreeme­nts over price. − Bloomberg.

 ?? ?? The Cahora Bassa dam
The Cahora Bassa dam

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