Daily News

NDZ SLATES COAL SHAM

- LEHLOHONOL­O MASHIGO AND ITUMELENG MAFISA

ANC NEC member and presidenti­al hopeful Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma has flayed Western countries for seemingly bullying South Africa into dumping coal in favour of renewable energy.

This comes after President Cyril Ramaphosa’s utterances in Egypt at the COP27 conference where he said South Africa was planning to close a number of ageing coal-fired power stations as part of the country’s energy transition process.

Ramaphosa also said a number of European countries would be investing sizeable amounts of money in the process.

Dlamini Zuma said it was ironic that some Western countries were pushing for South Africa to dump coal in favour of renewable energy while their economies were built on the use of coal.

“Why do we think that those trucks on the N3 and N2 are full of coal going to the port? Are those people going to eat that coal, they are going to burn it and make energy, then they say we must stop it. No,” she said.

Dlamini Zuma stressed the importance of using innovative, cleaner ways of producing energy through coal.

“In Japan they have coal power stations which are very clean, so we must be doing that. We had this technology, the pebble-bed modular reactor. We abandoned it and other countries took it.

“They are using it now to generate energy. I disagree that your grid can be solar and wind, I completely disagree. Does it make sense? It will not make sense, it doesn’t matter who is saying it,” said Dlamini Zuma.

She spoke about the need for more nuclear power stations, especially because of South Africa’s abundance of uranium . “We do have a nuclear station, so we need to just add to that,” she said.

It was possible to have nuclear, coal and hydro power that would be reliable, with wind and solar energy adding support to the grid.

“It can’t be the base for your grid/ Let’s say that we use solar, where are (we) going to store the batteries that are going to be enough for the grid?”

Yesterday, during a parliament­ary debate on just energy transition, Minerals and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe said there ought to be a guaranteed base-load energy supply through a combinatio­n of gas, nuclear, coal and hydro.

“A pendulum swing from coal-powered energy generation to renewable energy does not guarantee base-load stability. It will sink the country into a base-load crisis,” he said.

Mantashe said the work done by the Council for Geoscience in collaborat­ion with the World Bank on Carbon Capture, Utilisatio­n and Storage gave hope and belief that coal would continue to play a critical part in a just energy transition.

“Therefore, any suggestion that coal has reached its sell-by date is a myth,” he said.

 ?? | TIMOTHY BERNARD ?? NKOSAZANA Dlamini Zuma stressed the importance of employing cleaner ways of generating energy.
| TIMOTHY BERNARD NKOSAZANA Dlamini Zuma stressed the importance of employing cleaner ways of generating energy.

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