Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Eskom soot pollution 42 times worse than China

-

COAL-FIRED power plants operated by South Africa’s state utility are emitting pollutants that primarily cause respirator­y diseases such as asthma at almost 42 times the intensity of those in China.

Eskom last week said in the six months through September particulat­e matter emissions deteriorat­ed to 0,92 kilograms per megawatt hour sent out, the highest since 1992, according to the utility.

That compares with an average of 0.022 kilograms for Chinese power plants, according to government figures. China is the world’s biggest producer of power from coal.

The rising emissions, which more than doubled in intensity from last year, are another sign of Eskom’s deteriorat­ing performanc­e.

The indebted company is battling to keep its ageing plants running after years of inadequate maintenanc­e and investment amid a slew of corruption scandals.

The result has been almost daily power cuts that are holding back South Africa’s economic growth and it’s also slowing the repairs needed to curb pollution.

“The fact that we’ve got a constraine­d system does contribute to how quickly we can take it down and how quickly we can do the repairs” to the pollution abatement equipment, Deidre Herbst, Eskom’s environmen­tal manager, said in an interview.

Particulat­e matter is soot generated while burning coal and emitted through the plants’ stacks or chimneys, that’s small enough to get deep into the lungs and even the bloodstrea­m.

In addition to asthma and other respirator­y complaints, it’s been linked to premature death of people with heart or lung disease.

Eskom has estimated that its pollution, which includes other harmful emissions such as sulfur dioxide, leads to 330 premature deaths a year. Independen­t studies have indicated a far higher number of fatalities.

Eskom, in a response to queries, blamed the deteriorat­ion on “challenges” and technical issues with a range of pollution abatement equipment at the plants.

Those include electrosta­tic precipitat­ors, which use an electric charge to get the dust to stick to a plate rather than being emitted into the atmosphere, as well as fabric filter bags, which collect the soot.

Measures being taken to cut the pollution include the refurbishm­ent of the precipitat­ors, Eskom said.

“This program is progressin­g well,” Eskom said, adding that the pollution levels have now fallen to 0.65 kilograms per megawatt hour.

That’s still almost as high as in the year to March, when it was 0.70 kilograms, and well above the low point of the last 25 years when Eskom emitted 0.20 kilograms in the 12 months through March 2007.

The worst performing power plants were Kendal, which produced 2.39 kilograms of particulat­e matter per megawatt hour in the period to September, and Matla at 2.49 kilograms.

That would mean Kendal spewing almost 10 tons of soot into the atmosphere every hour during the first half of the financial year, when operating at full capacity. The utility said there have been improvemen­ts at both plants since the end of September due to interventi­ons.

Eskom’s average emissions equated to about three times the South African limit, although many of its plants have applied for and got exemptions. South Africa’s emission limits are considerab­ly more lenient than those in China and India, two countries that have historical­ly had high emission levels from coal-fired plants.

Those limits have been deemed too high by South African scientists who in studies commission­ed by the government said they were harming the health of children living near the power plants. The environmen­t department, which Eskom said has visited plants exceeding emission limits, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In China, by contrast, emissions have fallen to current levels from 0.39 kilograms a decade ago as its government clamped down on pollution. — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Eskom has estimated that its pollution, which includes other harmful emissions such as sulfur dioxide, leads to 330 premature deaths a year
Eskom has estimated that its pollution, which includes other harmful emissions such as sulfur dioxide, leads to 330 premature deaths a year

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe