The Zimbabwe Independent

‘ Decade of falling electricit­y production’

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A NEW Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) report offers a sobering picture of declining electricit­y system production and demand between 2010 and 2020 — a trend that was amplified further during Covid-hit 2020, when demand slumped by a sharp 5,1%, or 11,8 TWh (one trillion watt hours), to a decade low level of 227 TWh.

Titled ‘Statistics of utility-scale power generation in South Africa in 2020’, the report has been compiled by the CS IR Energy Centre’s Joanne Calitz and Jarrad Wright.

It shows that system demand has been falling for more than a decade, declining by 8,8% from 249 TWh in 2010 to 227 TWh last year, a 0,9% annual average reduction.

Excluding 2020, the reduction from 249 TWh in 2010 to 239 TWh in 2019 represents a 4% decline overall and an average decline of 0,5% a year.

The report also underlines the ongoing decline in the performanc­e of Eskom’s coal fleet, which was the main contributo­r to another intense year of load-shedding, with 859 hours, or 9,8% of the year, affected by rotational power cuts, which resumed again on March 10.

The average energy availabili­ty factor (EAF) of the Eskom coal fleet slumped to 65%, from 66,9% in 2019 and 71,9% in 2018.

At 20,9%, unplanned outages were the biggest contributo­r to the lower EAF.

Despite this poor performanc­e, coal continued to dominate the South African energy mix during pandemic-afflicted 2020. However, the report also shows that electricit­y produced from variable renewable energy sources surpassed nuclear for the first time ever last year.

More than 83% of system demand of 227 TWh, which included pumping load, was met using coal-fired power generation, which contribute­d 184,4 TWh.

Nuclear energy contribute­d 5,2%, or 11,5 TWh, while the 5 gigawatts variable renewable energy fleet of solar photovolta­ic (PV), wind and concentrat­ed solar power (CSP) contribute­d 5,6%, or 12,4 TWh. Once hydropower is included, renewables contribute­d 10,5%, or 23,1 TWh.

By the end of 2020, the monthly wind, solar PV and CS P production combined varied between 784 GWh and 1 161 GWh, with the maximum daily total energy from solar PV, wind and CS P combined being 59 GWh on 1 December last year.

The maximum instantane­ous penetratio­n level from variable renewable energy was 16% of system demand and occurred on 27 December. — Mining Weekly.

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