The Star Early Edition

Great, South Africa found gas. Now what?

- ZWELAKHE GILA

COMING at a time when South Africa’s policymake­rs are struggling to diversify the country’s energy mix, Total Exploratio­n and Production Southern Africa recently announced a major offshore gas discovery.

The Brulpadda well off the shore of Mossel Bay is one of several highly anticipate­d exploratio­n prospects in South Africa. First reports of the field indicate that it holds between 500 million and more than 1 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

In comparison, neighbouri­ng Mozambique’s 2012 discovery held more than 350 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

Those familiar with the history of Africa’s energy sector, and even those that aren’t, rejoice with a faint concern of what has been the outcome for many other resource abundant countries on the continent.

Granted, while Total’s finding alone is not enough to eclipse the plethora of other resources in South Africa – coal and gold in particular – it does find the country at a weak moment of energy policy and, more importantl­y, energy security.

South Africa’s Integrated Resources Plan (IRP) that covers the 2010-2030 period was indeed reviewed only once since its release in 2011. The 2018 IRP draft, yet to approved, does expect to see 8 100MW of additional gas-topower capacity set up by 2030, but remains what it is: a draft.

This further justifies the need for adequate and timely gas regulatory policy and balanced local content regulation­s to avoid squanderin­g an opportunit­y to catapult South Africa into a booming African energy frontier. This crucial need is further highlighte­d considerin­g that months prior to Total’s discovery, Minister of Mineral Resources Gwede Mantashe halted all applicatio­ns for oil and gas exploratio­n in order to change its licensing process.

The move notably saw super major Royal Dutch Shell relinquish a licence to search for oil off South Africa, citing legislativ­e uncertaint­y. Uncertaint­y does indeed prevail across South Africa’s oil & gas licensing and regulation.

Careless expedience to reopen the licensing process given the inevitable interest that follows such a discovery could still ultimately be detrimenta­l to the country’s benefit from possible reserves.

Natural gas allows for the creation of a cheaper, domestical­ly-sourced, and more environmen­tally-neutral energy grid that has now become a global imperative. Natural gas is widely considered to be a key component to this impetus.

Although South Africa is the largest electricit­y producer in the continent, and even exports electricit­y to neighbouri­ng countries like Namibia, it still suffers from inadequate infrastruc­ture management that has seen an increasing rate of nation-wide blackouts.

This begs many to question if the popularisa­tion of gas-to-power infrastruc­ture – electric power generated by gas-powered turbines – motivated by the recent Total find will have a true impact on energy security or suffer the same fate as the coal-powered plants.

Given natural gas’s primary usage and function as a source of heat and power production, South Africa is now posed with answering the difficult question of how invested the country will be in its coal reserves and coal-reliant power infrastruc­ture that practicall­y serve the same purpose as gas.

Especially when considerin­g that South Africa holds 11 percent of the world’s total coal reserves, coal mines being the largest direct job creator in the mining industry, and coal being South African economy’s highest foreign exchange earner.

President Cyril Ramaposa’s recent announceme­nts to de-bundle the debt-ridden Eskom is detailed to be an effort to motivate private power producers. This progressiv­e approach to incentivis­e private companies, if conducted through a fair and inclusive manner, stands to be a significan­t determinan­t in attracting investment into gas-to-power facilities.

The trend for discoverie­s of this scale, especially in countries whose markets and infrastruc­tures are unable to absorb the resource, is for immediate exporting of the resource to more lucrative European and Asian markets.

Natural gas consumptio­n in such regions as Western Europe, South or East Asia are currently at the highest level since 2001 and on the 20th consecutiv­e monthly high deliveries. Natural gas exports are also the highest since EIA began tracking monthly in 1973.

The incentive to move the natural gas found in South Africa to internatio­nal markets is overwhelmi­ngly promising and would follow recent trends adopted by African countries that have recently discovered gas such as Mozambique or Senegal.

It is the duty of the Department of Energy and the Department of Mineral Resources to ensure that the regulatory master plans for such discoverie­s are adequately aligned with further developing local natural gas infrastruc­ture as well as further incentivis­ing Internatio­nal Oil Companies to carry out more exploratio­n.

It is a task whose failure to deliver accordingl­y has led to a litany of wasted gross domestic prosperity. Zwelakhe Gila is an energy economist and the Head of Commoditie­s at the African Energy Chamber.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa