Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Grid Partnershi­p

Independen­t transmissi­on project office to be set up to procure new grid using ‘build, operate, transfer’ model

- TERENCE CREAMER | CREAMER MEDIA EDITOR

Electricit­y Minister Kgosientsh­o Ramokgopa reports that government plans to establish an independen­t transmissi­on project office, located either at the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) or the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC), to procure new transmissi­on capacity using a ‘build, operate and transfer’ (BOT) model.

He used his latest briefing on the Energy Action Plan to again emphasise the importance of expanding the country’s electricit­y networks to help end loadsheddi­ng, which has been underminin­g the growth and developmen­t of the economy for some 14 years.

Inadequate grid investment is currently constraini­ng the ability of independen­t power producers (IPPs) to connect new generation projects in the Eastern, Northern and Western Cape provinces, where Eskom has indicated there to be no more connection capacity.

The utility has indicated that it is aiming to unlock some capacity through the introducti­on of a new curtailmen­t framework and a gated approach to the release of capacity for public and private procuremen­t cycles.

However, neither solution had been finalised by December 14, when the IPP Office released requests for proposals for 5 000 MW of new renewable energy, 2 000 MW of gas to power and 615 MW/2 460 MW of battery storage.

Ramokgopa, thus, forecast that the grid constraint would continue to weigh on current and future procuremen­t programmes unless new powerlines and substation­s were added at a pace that exceeded the schedule outlined in Eskom’s current Transmissi­on Developmen­t Plan (TDP).

During the sixth renewables bidding round in 2022, none of the wind projects that bid for a 3 200 MW allocation advanced to preferred bidder stage after Eskom said the gridconnec­tion capacity on which the projects were premised had been fully absorbed.

Under the TDP, only 1 675 km of line is planned for constructi­on by 2027, leaving the lion’s share of 14 218km proposed for constructi­on by 2032 to be implemente­d in the last five years of the plan’s horizon.

Besides it being insufficie­nt to connect new generation, the delayed investment profile has also been heavily criticised by local industry, which has warned that it will be unable to make the manufactur­ing and skills investment­s required to participat­e in the later steep rise in grid expenditur­e.

“We are looking at this to buttress the work that Eskom is already doing under the TDP,” the Minister said, adding that the intention was to inject “aggression” into the implementa­tion of the TDP.

Ramokgopa indicated that he would meet with the new board of the National Transmissi­on Company of South Africa (NTCSA) to ensure alignment between it and government on the plan to accelerate grid investment by attracting private finance, contractor­s and operators into an area currently monopolise­d by the Stateowned utility.

The NTCSA is currently being separated from within Eskom to create a level playing field between IPPs and Eskom and is expected to be operationa­lised once Eskom has received bondholder consent for its unbundling and its establishm­ent as an independen­t entity under Eskom Holdings.

The Minister said South Africa’s ambitions to attract private investment into the grid had been well received when canvassed recently with potential investors at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, as well as with the leaders of European missions in South Africa.

He added that funding could also arise from those government­s that were supporting the country’s Just Energy Transition Investment Plan, the implementa­tion plan for which was published late last year.

There was, he argued, an “insatiable appetite” within the private sector to support independen­t transmissi­on projects in South Africa and the focus currently was on finalising a procuremen­t architectu­re that did not place an additional burden on public finances but that was still attractive to investors.

“The issues that we need to resolve are the governance framework, which will inform how we go out and procure,” Ramokgopa said, while confirming that a BOTtype approach was being considered.

Before providing its final approval, Cabinet wanted the model fully canvassed with stakeholde­rs, including the NTCSA, as well as greater clarity on what financial resources were required to establish the procuremen­t unit, which would be “incubated” within either the DBSA or the IDC.

“We have done a comprehens­ive study, and we are not guinea pigs; many parts of the world have gone that route of [BOT].

“That’s the route that the private sector is also familiar with, that’s the route that confirms certainty that . . . [the grid] remains a public asset, because it gets to be transferre­d back to the State; so we are not relinquish­ing ownership of the grid.

“The system operator determines what the standards are [and still] operates the entire grid.”

 ?? ?? KGOSIENTSH­O RAMOKGOPA
The intention is to inject aggression into the implementa­tion of the Transmissi­on Developmen­t Plan
KGOSIENTSH­O RAMOKGOPA The intention is to inject aggression into the implementa­tion of the Transmissi­on Developmen­t Plan

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