A new report recently published by the University of Cape Town’s Energy Research Centre shows that government’s planned independent power producer coal plants – Thabametsi and Khanyisa – are set cost South Africa an additional R19.68 billion in comparison to a least-cost energy system.
Thabametsi and Khanyisa are the preferred bidders under the first bid window of the coal-baseload independent power producer (IPP) programme. According to the report the two coal IPPs are not needed to meet South Africa’s medium-term electricity demand. It states that where future capacity is needed, this could easily be met more cheaply by other electricity sources such as wind, solar, and flexible gas generation. Gregory Ireland of the university’s Energy Research Centre (ERC) says the new coal IPPs are excessively expensive and polluting, and crowd out other cheaper, cleaner, and more flexible alternatives. “They would increase costs in the electricity sector unnecessarily, in circumstances where we already have a large surplus of generation capacity”, Ireland notes.New report shows two coal IPPs would cost SA an extra R20 billion
May 30, 2018 | Air Pollution News