Daily Nation Newspaper

WB NODS FUNDING FOR $497M PLAN TO REPURPOSE SA’S KOMATI POWER STATION

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JOHANNESBU­RG - The World Bank has approved South Africa’s request for funding to repurpose Eskom’s recently decommissi­oned coal-fired Komati power station in Mpumalanga by using renewables.

The bulk of the $497 million Komati Just Energy Transition Project will be financed through a $439.5 million World Bank loan. There is also a $47.5 million concession­al loan from the Canadian-World Bank Clean Energy and Forest Climate Facility, and a $10 million grant from the World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Programme.

The plant, which has been operating since 1961, had its final generating unit taken offline at midday on Monday, state-owned power utility Eskom said. The repurposin­g project will convert Komati into a renewable generation site powered with 150MW of solar, 70MW of wind and 150MW of storage batteries.

It was also hoped that the project would serve as a global reference on how to transition fossil-fuel assets.

“Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is a difficult challenge worldwide, and particular­ly in South Africa given the high carbon intensity of the energy sector,” said World Bank Group President David Malpass.

“Closing the Komati plant this week is a good first step toward low carbon developmen­t. We are cognisant of the social challenges of the transition, and we are partnering with the government, civil society, and unions to create economic opportunit­ies for affected workers and communitie­s.” The decommissi­oning is also expected to result in an improvemen­t in air quality in the area around the plant.

“This project is critical to our understand­ing of the sustainabi­lity of decommissi­oning, repurposin­g, and mitigating the socioecono­mic impacts for workers and communitie­s before we scale up the move of the power sector into a low-carbon path,” Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan said.

“It is part of implementi­ng the country’s Integrated Resource Plan 2019 to gradually retire 12GW of our old and inefficien­t coal-fired power fleet by 2030 and to scale up private sector-led renewables of 18GW during the same period.” – FIN24.

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