Mail & Guardian

Sun and wind for Africa, yet we go for coal

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South Africa has pledged to lower its carbon emissions by 42% by 2025. Half of these emissions come from Eskom’s coalfired power stations.

Renewable energy farms have shown that carbon-free energy generation is possible, thanks to the country’s wealth of wind and sunlight. But the energy department this week gave preferred bidder status to two new coalfired power stations.

The two, Khanyisa and Thabametsi, will add 863MW of electricit­y to the national grid in the next five years. They are part of the energy department’s independen­t power procuremen­t programme.

This borrows from the success of the renewable energy programme, which gave winners of the bid 20-year contracts to sell their electricit­y at a set price. Such ventures have brought in nearly R200-billion in foreign investment, with 2 000MW of the proposed 6 000MW already connected to the grid.

The R40-billion it will cost to build the new coal plants has been raised, with a quarter of the money coming from the government through the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n, the Public Investment Corporatio­n and the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa.

This investment shows the government is failing in its climate pledges, according to an alliance of environmen­tal groups. Life After Coal warned: “The long-term environmen­tal liabilitie­s created by coal mining and power make any further investment in coal infrastruc­ture a high-risk propositio­n.”

The plants are being built in areas where air quality is already poor. Khanyisa will go up in Mpumalanga, where most of Eskom’s coal-fired stations operate. Several Mail & Guardian investigat­ions have linked these plants to poor air quality for the local population. Thabametsi will be built in Limpopo.

That the new plants are slated to be built is because the government is using an outdated energy plan from 2010. This was drawn up before the local renewable build dramatical­ly lowered the price of electricit­y from wind and solar. It was also before the signing of the Paris Agreement on climate change, which obliges countries to lower their carbon emissions.

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