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Gwede spurns shift to renewables

Published: 2024-03-27 06:39 +02:00 by Agency Staff tag: Energy

JSE:ARH

Energy minister Gwede Mantashe said expecting a rapid transition to clean energy would be “very wrong”.
Old King Coal … energy minister Gwede Mantashe. Image: GCIS

Energy minister Gwede Mantashe said expecting a rapid transition from its dependence on coal-fired power generation to clean energy would be “very wrong”, and South Africa will need to use the fossil fuel for longer to address an electricity shortage.

Mantashe’s reiteration of his view that coal will continue to play a vital role in the country’s energy mix comes as wealthy nations look for ways to invest in technologies that help decarbonise the country.

Mantashe said clean-energy technologies that rely on intermittent factors like sunshine or wind are less reliable than coal plants that are able to run 24 hours a day.

This belief that you can leave coal and move to renewables: there’s a technical mistake, very wrong

“This belief that you can leave coal and move to renewables: there’s a technical mistake, very wrong, it will never work,” he said in an interview.

State-owned Eskom is struggling to meet demand for power mainly because its coal-fired plants are unreliable and keep breaking down, resulting in load shedding of up to 12 hours a day. Government’s focus on improving the energy availability factor at coal-fired plants has helped reduce power cuts and is expected eventually to eliminate them, Mantashe said.

“Coal is going to be around for a long time; for a longer time than many people expect it will be,” he said.

Mistakes

Mantashe, who is also the chairman of the ANC, conceded that the party has made key mistakes in the energy sector during its 30 years in power — specifically on delays in building new power plants and the flawed design that was used when they were built.

Read: 76% of Africa’s energy needs could come from renewables by 2040

“That is one of those mistakes and we are learning out of it,” he said. Eskom’s Medupi and Kusile stations are still being fixed after construction lagged years behind schedule at a bloated cost from original estimates. — Jennifer Zabasajja and Paul Burkhardt, with S’thembile Cele, (c) 2024 Bloomberg LP

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