Cape Times

Plan afoot to bring shiploads of power from Turkey

- REUTERS

TURKEY’S Karpowersh­ip, one of the world’s largest powership firms, has submitted a plan to South Africa to provide “several” ships capable of plugging a severe power shortage in the country, a senior company official said yesterday.

South Africa’s state-owned power utility Eskom has regularly cut power over the past year, hobbling economic growth in Africa’s most industrial­ised country as unreliable coal-fired plants struggle to generate enough electricit­y to meet demand.

In December, South Africa’s Energy Department issued a request for informatio­n (RFI) to source between 2 000 and 3 000 megawatts (MW) of power generation capacity that could be connected in the shortest time, at the least cost.

“We have made a submission to the department as of last Friday and they received informatio­n on what is possible, where and how we would look to do it,” said Patrick O’Driscoll, global sales director at Karpowersh­ip.

“We have identified several locations that we believe are potential injection points,” he said on the sidelines of an African mining conference.

Karpowersh­ip currently provides around 4 100MW of power from its fleet of ships, mainly in eight African nations, but also in Cuba, across the Middle East and Asia, as well as in

Indonesia.

It has 25 powerships – built at its shipyard in Turkey – operationa­l today and a constructi­on pipeline in excess of 4 400MW of new vessels, O’Driscoll said.

Each ship, which anchors off-shore and connects to the electricit­y grid, is capable of providing a range of power options from 30MW to around 600MW and contracted for different lengths of time.

“It’s no secret that Karpowersh­ip has the ability to respond now, so speed of delivery has been paramount to all of the work we’ve done in Africa,” said O’Driscoll.

Illustrati­ng the point, he said that the company recently delivered and operated a 120MW contract in Senegal within nine weeks.

South Africa’s RFI calls for commercial operation following financial close of between three to six months or six to 12 months.

The powerships could run on multiple fuels, mainly natural gas and liquefied natural gas but also diesel, an important factor for cash-strapped Eskom, which spends billions of rand annually to supply diesel for its open-cycle gas turbines, used during emergency supply constraint­s.

“I can give guarantees and assurances that Karpowersh­ip will be significan­tly less, maybe even half the cost,” O’Driscoll said of Eskom’s open cycle gas turbines.

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