Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Project achieves financial close

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Independen­t power producer EDF Renewables achieved commercial and financial close on its Umoyilanga project on November 28, 2023, reaching commercial close with the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE), and then concluding financial close with financial institutio­ns Nedbank, Rand Merchant Bank and the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa.

This was consequent to its attaining legal close on August 30, 2023, with the signing of the power purchase agreement (PPA) with Stateowned power utility Eskom, and the implementa­tion agreement with the DMRE, for the hybrid renewablep­ower facility to be built in South Africa.

Legal close followed in the wake of the consortium of EDF Renewables, and privately held investment company Perpetua Holdings, winning the Umoyilanga project bid in the South African government’s Risk Mitigation Independen­t Power Producer Procuremen­t Programme, in March 2021.

Early works have started, and the constructi­on period under the PPA is expected to start immediatel­y after attaining financial close, with commercial operation expected in May 2025.

The bespoke project combines solar, wind and battery storage technologi­es to offer dispatchab­le and reliable power to the national electrical grid.

The project will operate as a virtual power plant, combining generation from two sites which are 900 km apart – namely Avondale in the Northern Cape, with 115 MW of solar photovolta­ic (PV) and 30 MW of battery storage, and Dassiesrid­ge in the Eastern Cape, with 63 MW of wind and 45 MW of battery storage.

The unique combinatio­n of wind and solar resources with batteries, enables Umoyilanga to provide 75 MW on demand from 05:00 to 21:30 as per the requiremen­ts of the PPA, and demonstrat­es that renewable energy can provide reliable, dispatchab­le power at a competitiv­e price.

To achieve this, batteries at Dassiesrid­ge will generally charge from the wind energy at night, dischargin­g power in the morning until the sun rises. The solar installati­on at Avondale will supply the bulk of the energy during the day, supplement­ed by wind energy from Dassiesrid­ge.

Excess solar energy will be used to charge the batteries at Avondale, which will discharge after sunset.

An energy management system will give instructio­ns to assets across both sites to optimise the power supply in real time, depending on weather forecasts and Eskom’s requiremen­ts.

The lowcarbon electricit­y produced will help to meet the electricit­y needs of 120 000 households for 20 years, based on the Eskom residentia­l consumptio­n average of 3 319 kWh a household.

Working as a Collective

To deliver the Umoyilanga project, EDF Renewables has signed contracts with major contractor­s for each technology including a turnkey engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on agreement with energy company China Energy Engineerin­g Corporatio­n, which will proceed with the final design, procuremen­t and constructi­on of the 115 MW Avondale PV plant.

Further, it signed a turbine supply and installati­on agreement with sustainabl­e energy solutions provider Vestas, to proceed with the erection of 14 wind turbines of 4.5 MW each on Dassiesrid­ge.

The balance of plant contract, to build all required infrastruc­ture on Dassiesrid­ge has been appointed to civil engineerin­g firm Power Constructi­on and electrical engineers Adenco Constructi­on.

Finally, the battery energy storage system supply agreement with energy solutions provider Sungrow Power Supply, will ensure delivery of battery systems to both sites.

The project has committed to providing around 890 job year opportunit­ies for South African citizens – measured in job years – during the constructi­on period across Dassiesrid­ge and Avondale.

Further, the project has committed to contributi­ng more than 40% of the capital expenditur­e to local content, including procuremen­t of South African goods and services.

Over the 20year operationa­l period, 1% of revenue will be dedicated to local communitie­s through socioecono­mic initiative­s.

“The commercial and financial close of the project is a crucial milestone before the launch of the constructi­on phase, so today is the achievemen­t of a long journey,” said EDF Renewables CEO Tristan de Drouas.

Further, he noted that the company is looking forward to implementi­ng this project, and in doing so, supporting the South African government’s and EDF Renewables’ ambitions to develop lowcarbon energy solutions for the future, which will also help to solve the loadsheddi­ng crisis.

“We have forged a solid collaborat­ion and true sense of partnershi­p with EDF Renewables [. . .] and we are collective­ly confident it will deliver [value] to South Africa,” Perpetua Holdings director Logan Govender concluded.

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Wind, solar and battery storage will be used at the Umoyilanga project
KILLER COMBO Wind, solar and battery storage will be used at the Umoyilanga project
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