Sunday World (South Africa)

Coal power stations remain key to SA’S economic recovery plan: Ramaphosa

President assures investors energy sector is cardinal

- By Tshwarelo Hunter Mogakane

President Cyril Ramaphosa has assured investors that his administra­tion was at the forefront of turning coal-fired power stations around in order to re-establish a conducive environmen­t for investment in the country.

Although the president acknowledg­ed the economic challenges South Africans have faced over the past five years, he has indicated there were signs that the country’s economy is on a recovery path.

Ramaphosa was addressing investors at the 5th South Africa Investment Conference in Johannesbu­rg on Thursday. The conference brought together local and internatio­nal investors, cabinet ministers, government officials and other role players to discuss investment opportunit­ies in South Africa.

“The energy sector remains our foremost priority. The lack of reliabilit­y in electricit­y supply weakens business and consumer confidence, taints internatio­nal perception­s about our country and affects investment sentiment and decisions. Our immediate focus is on improving the performanc­e of our existing coal-fired power stations as they continue to provide the baseload of our energy, he said.

The government has come under fire from some quarters, including trade union the National Union of Metalworke­rs of SA

(Numsa) and the EFF, who accused him of putting the country’s energy security at risk by prematurel­y abandoning coal in favour of renewable energy. Some went as far as to accuse Ramaphosa and former Eskom CEO Andre de Ruyter of prematurel­y decommissi­oning power stations to pave the way for independen­t power producers.

Ramaphosa told the conference the country’s clean energy drive had not been abandoned. Instead his government was implementi­ng wide-ranging reforms in the electricit­y sector. This is to enable private investment in electricit­y generation and accelerate the procuremen­t of new generation capacity from solar, wind, gas and battery storage. “One of these reforms regarding the removal of the licensing

threshold for embedded generation has facilitate­d considerab­le private investment in the electricit­y sector.

“This reform ... has enabled a surge of new projects, with the pipeline of committed projects now representi­ng over 10000MW of new capacity.

“Several municipali­ties are making use of regulatory changes to procure power independen­tly. We have introduced tax incentives for households and businesses to invest in rooftop solar.”

He said necessary investment in the transmissi­on network and the maintenanc­e of Eskom’s generation fleet relied on the utility’s debt transfer package and efforts to unbundle the state-owned company.

“We expect the National

Transmissi­on Company to be fully operationa­l shortly. Through our renewable energy programme, we have signed agreements for approximat­ely 2 800MW from bid windows 5 and 6, with several large projects already in constructi­on and others on track to reach financial close. We recently released a request for proposals for over 500MW of battery storage, and will soon open further bid windows for wind and solar, battery storage and gas power.

“As we work to close the electricit­y supply shortfall and end loadsheddi­ng in the short term, we are laying the foundation for a fundamenta­l reform of the energy sector in the longer term.”

Ramaphosa added that the conference had continued to evolve and grow over the past five years. “In 2018, we set a bold and ambitious target to raise R1.2-trillion in investment over a five-year period. This year’s conference is an opportunit­y to reflect on progress we have made to achieve that goal.

“Given the state of the economy in 2018, and given that we were emerging from a decade of state capture, many thought it was an unattainab­le target. We moved with speed, appointing the first of our special envoys to engage with domestic and foreign investors.”

Ramaphosa said R300-billion was raised in pledges from the first conference. “The value of investment pledges has continued to grow. Since April 2018, we have had to contend with a devastatin­g global pandemic, causing social unrest, several natural disasters and a cost-ofliving crisis worsened by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.

“In addition, we are now confronted with the consequenc­es of years of under-investment, mismanagem­ent and corruption in our electricit­y, rail and logistics sectors... it is understand­able that investor confidence has been sorely tested,” Ramaphosa said.

“Doubters have had reason to be sceptical. We are on a long journey to rebuild our country and recover the ground we have lost. Our recovery is a mission that will take time to accomplish,” the president said.

Ramaphosa said R300-billion was raised from the first conference

 ?? / GCIS ?? Addressing the 5th South Africa Investment Conference, president Cyril Ramaphosa has assured investors that his administra­tion was at the forefront of turning coal-fired power stations around.
/ GCIS Addressing the 5th South Africa Investment Conference, president Cyril Ramaphosa has assured investors that his administra­tion was at the forefront of turning coal-fired power stations around.

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