The Mercury

100 days of loadsheddi­ng loom as Eskom battles infrastruc­ture

Likely negative impact on industries that are slowly regaining ground

- BANELE GININDZA banele.ginindza@inl.co.za

POWER utility Eskom yesterday warned South Africa faced a worse case scenario of up to 100 days of rotational load shedding over the winter period due to infrastruc­tures uncertaint­ies, while flagging that its operations in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) had been effected by the floods. This could have a dire reflection on the reputation of South Africa’s tentative economic recovery from the post-Covid 19 pandemic, which could be derailed if Eskom fails to manage its production capacity.

More loadsheddi­ng would likely impact on industries slowly gaining ground, including manufactur­ing, the automotive sector and food production.

Eskom’s National Control Manager, Gavin Hurford said in a media briefing yesterday that the utility anticipate­d about 100 days of loadsheddi­ng over the winter season, which would depend on grid capacity.

“We do not say it will be precisely 100 days, it could be far less than that, but we could lose between 12 000 to 15 000 megawatts (MW) in the worst circumstan­ces.

“This is just based on uncertaint­y of the fleet, especially during evening peaks,“he said. Hurford said that Eskom bases its prediction­s on certain unplanned outage thresholds.

Eskom said while it anticipate­d no issues with coal stocks, even with the extended rainy season, systems were constraine­d.

Chief executive Andre de Ruyter said the floods in KZN were a major cause for infrastruc­tural damage and that the utility had yet to assess infrastruc­tural issues, but could not as yet risk the safety of its workers and the general public.

According to reports, more than 200 millimetre­s of rain has fallen in the province over the past 48 hours, which has put a strain on infrastruc­ture, including that of Eskom.

Eskom, which has been trying to turn its business around, is always left on the back-foot when it sheds power, having to spend billions to keep the lights on.

That is not cheap as the cost of oil has spiked due to the Russian-Ukraine war, which has also caused South African and global inflation to rise.

Fitch Solutions last month warned that South Africa was vulnerable to oil price rises, with transport accounting for around 16 percent of the consumer price index, while Eskom has been using diesel-fuelled turbines as an emergency power-supply measure, and has warned that higher fuel prices could mean that it is unable to run the emergency units.”

An economist yesterday, who declined to be named, said: “There is just no getting around it, the economy needs to run at full tilt, but if there is not going to be power when its needed it will stall the recovery. There was optimism of an economic upsurge, but Eskom’s announceme­nt is a damp squib on growth.“

However, yesterday amid its gloomy outlook, Eskom also announced it had issued requests for proposals for renewable energy companies to operate off its land in the heartland of the coal belt, which would unlock at least 1 000MW for starters, leading up to 5 000MW at full tilt in the next 18 months as the beginning of projects to produce power to be instantly stapled on to the grid.

“This is the first-of-its-kind-type of process that we are running, we anticipate that we will get some 1 000MW as a consequenc­e of this process,” Eskom’s chief executive Andre de Ruyter said, indicating that the first new capacity could be introduced in about 18 to 24 months.

Eskom estimates the potential generation capacity for the different land parcels being made available to be 0.45MW/h and confirmed that highlevel grid access capacity studies had been conducted for the different sites, which surround Majuba and Tutuka.

Under Eskom’s plan, the state-owned company will lease parcels of land in Mpumalanga – home to many of its coal-fired power stations – so that private power producers can build renewable energy capacity at these sites.

“The commercial process is based on auctioning suitable land at or near power stations for the developmen­t of renewable electricit­y generation sites, with the evaluation process favouring quick delivery of additional generation capacity to the system.

“This initiative is intended to allow investors accelerate­d access to our existing grid, and to enable investment in renewable energy next to our coal-fired power stations, to demonstrat­e our commitment to be part of the ‘just energy transition’ to renewables,” De Ruyter said.

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