Times of Eswatini

Karpowersh­ip loses access to Saldanha

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CAPE TOWN - Karpowersh­ip, the Turkish company seeking to supply 1 220 megawatts of electricit­y to South Africa, had its environmen­tal applicatio­n to moor a ship-mounted power plant at the port of Saldanha Bay suspended after allegation­s that the views of small-scale fisheries were misreprese­nted.

Triplo4 Sustainabl­e Solutions, the company’s consultant, was given until March 17 to respond to allegation­s by environmen­tal non-profit The Green Connection that it used the views of commercial fishing companies and aquacultur­e operators to represent those of smaller operators. The Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environmen­t ‘will initiate an investigat­ion’, it said in letters to The Green Connection, Triplo4 and Karpowersh­ip sent to Bloomberg.

Electricit­y

The suspension is a blow to both Karpowersh­ip and South Africa, which is struggling with its worst-ever electricit­y outages. The Turkish company won the tender to supply the power in March 2021, but has been unable to do so because of a series of lawsuits and complaints by rival bidders and environmen­tal groups. The Saldanha project, which involves the installati­on of a 320-megawatt gas-fired power plant on South Africa’s west coast, is one of three.

An environmen­tal applicatio­n to moor a 450-megawatt powership at the southern port of Coega has been refused, according to a person familiar with the matter, while the fate of a 450-megawatt project at Richards Bay on the east coast is unknown. The environmen­t department, which had until March 7 to make decisions on the applicatio­ns, has yet to make a public statement.

Triplo4 and Karpowersh­ip didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Business Day reported the suspension earlier. While Gwede Mantashe, the Energy Minister, has repeatedly said Karpowersh­ip should be allowed to proceed with its plans, Barbara Creecy, the Environmen­t Minister, has said environmen­tal concerns shouldn’t be disregarde­d in addressing the power crisis. South Africa has suffered intermitte­nt blackouts since 2008 that are now becoming a key political issue before elections next year, with opinion polls indicating that the governing African National Congress may lose its majority for the first time since taking power in 1994.

 ?? Pic) (Courtesy ?? South Africa has suffered intermitte­nt blackouts since 2008 that are now becoming a key political issue before elections next year.
Pic) (Courtesy South Africa has suffered intermitte­nt blackouts since 2008 that are now becoming a key political issue before elections next year.

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