The Citizen (Gauteng)

Shortfall hits Eskom supply

PEAK: UTILITY ‘NOT GENERATING ENOUGH ELECTRICIT­Y’ Here’s how it was able to keep lights on.

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Data published by Eskom this week shows that the utility has not been able to generate enough electricit­y to adequately meet peak evening demand.

On Monday night it fell 254 megawatts (MW) short of peak demand at 6pm, and on Tuesday night it was 158MW short.

These shortfalls existed even after it interrupte­d load supply to large customers (and, on Monday evening, to the aluminium smelters through a mechanism called “virtual power station”).

Eskom spokesman Sikonathi Mantshants­ha explained on Twitter that the virtual power station “is a regulated mechanism in which Eskom can ask certain preagreed customers … to switch off power for about two hours when it has shortages”.

“The customer gets compensate­d for the loss of production, at a rate approved by Nersa [National Energy Regulator of SA],” he said.

On both nights, Eskom used almost all available open cycle gas turbines (OCGTs), both its own and those from independen­t power producers (IPPs) – 14 in total on Monday, and 20 in total on Tuesday. From 4pm on Monday, it ramped up generation from its pumped storage schemes to help meet the evening’s higher demand – and by 6pm was generating 2 254MW of electricit­y from these schemes. (There was a further 554MW of generation from hydro schemes.)

It is important to note that pumped storage schemes were explicitly designed for this purpose: they exist to generate electricit­y during the peak.

Where Eskom often gets into trouble is when breakdowns in the coal fleet force it to use pumped storage as baseload power throughout the day. This leaves it in a situation where it simply doesn’t have the capacity from pumped storage during the peak.

The limit of the coal fleet over the past week has been about 23 900MW; it has not been able to produce more power than this.

It has relied on non-commercial generation (the units at either Kusile or Medupi that have not yet achieved commercial operation to augment supply).

In the first half of last week, this contribute­d around 700MW during the daily peak. But from last week Thursday this dropped to 110MW, with zero contribute­d from these sources on Friday, Saturday or Sunday. That it was not able to meet peak demand is of concern given the very fine – and sometimes non-existent – reserve margins that the utility operates with.

At the peak on both evenings, Eskom would’ve had a negative operating reserve margin.

How, then, was Eskom able to keep the lights on and not implement load shedding when it wasn’t able to meet demand?

Very simply, it allowed this shortfall to be covered by its roughly 2 000 to 2 200MW operating reserve.

This margin exists as a safety mechanism to allow Eskom to still be able to keep the system in balance if it loses generation (in other words, if units trip) unexpected­ly.

On both evenings it took a chance that using up to about 10% of the reserve margin for the hour-long peak was appropriat­e.

On the upside …

The good news is that the outlook for the remainder of the year has improved significan­tly.

From a situation where it forecast that it would likely be more than 2 000MW short to meet its demand and reserves for more than half the weeks to October, it no longer forecasts a significan­t shortfall until next April. This picture has continued to improve from January.

It no longer forecasts a significan­t shortfall until next April

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? BRIGHTER FUTURE. The good news is that the outlook for the remainder of the year has improved significan­tly.
Picture: Bloomberg BRIGHTER FUTURE. The good news is that the outlook for the remainder of the year has improved significan­tly.

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