Brighter future for African power | Infrastructure news

News 1 Powering Africa SummitThe expansion of generation and transmission capacity, and the rapid adoption of renewables such as solar, promise economic benefits and improved quality of life across Africa.

At a stakeholders’ briefing held in Sandton this week ahead of the annual POWER-GEN & DistribuTECH Africa conference and business expo, Eskom said that great strides have been made in reducing loadshedding and stepping up power infrastructure maintenance in South Africa.

Industry experts also noted that renewable energy is going mainstream, offering significant potential to provide affordable power to under-served rural areas across the continent.

In addition, high-level conferences such as POWER-GEN & DistribuTECH Africa were increasingly giving African power sector players an opportunity to learn from international mistakes and leapfrog into next generation power generation and distribution, they said.

 

Goodbye to loadshedding

Willy Majola, Senior General Manager Engineering at Eskom, speaking on behalf of Matshela Koko, Group Executive Generation at Eskom, said: “Since August last year, we have not done any load shedding. To achieve this remarkable performance, we have stepped up maintenance and we are bringing more generation capacity online.

“On the transmission side, Eskom is rolling out 765kV lines for more efficient bulk distribution, and has installed over 6,000km of transmission lines in the past seven years. On the distribution side, we have electrified over 4.6 million households since 1991.”

Majola said a key factor in improving power generation and distribution was collaboration: “We are well aware of the big responsibility on our shoulders and the impact electricity has on our economy.

Somebody once said ‘electricity is the oxygen of our country’. It supports more than economic development, but quality of life.

 

Going solar

Noting that other African countries learn from South Africa’s example, POWER-GEN & DistribuTECH Africa conference chair Dr Willie de Beer said: “South Africa is reforming the industry by default. By introducing IPPs, enabling self-built transmission grids and supporting the solar revolution, our industry is adapting to change and moving away from the hW/H utility model.”

Renewables, in particular solar, present significant hope for affordable power that can be rolled out quickly in under-served areas, stakeholders said. “Solar is reforming the industry, so utilities have to adapt to accommodate this,” de Beer noted.

Earlier, SindiswaMzamo, Chief Operating Officer of the Edison Power Group and POWER-GEN& DistribuTECH Africa participant noted that Africa had reached a tipping point for the adoption of solar power. “Across Africa, solar is the solution for powering rural communities, because it is cost effective and does not need to be connected to a grid to power an isolated geographic area. The wave of solar adoptions might be one of the most important initiatives in African power right now,” she said.

 

POWER-GEN & DistribuTECH Africa 2016

The 2016 edition of POWER-GEN & DistribuTECH Africa will highlight a number of other key themes, including the maintenance and management of ageing assets, the nuclear power question, the gamut of renewable energies, and advanced technologies and smart grids.

Under the theme ‘Creating power for sustainable growth’ POWER-GEN & DistribuTECH Africa 2016 will be staged from 19 – 21 July at the Sandton Convention Centre, with a strong focus on renewable energy, sustainable power generation and distribution, pan-African power provision and smarter management and grids.

 

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