State of Renewable Energy in South Africa - S PDF
State of Renewable Energy in South Africa - S PDF
State of Renewable Energy in South Africa - S PDF
Renewable Energy
in South Africa
2015
Imprint
Published by the
Department of Energy
Matimba House
192 Visagie Str
Corner Paul Kruger and Visagie Str
Pretoria
0001
ISBN No.
978-1-920435-08-0
Copyright
Copyright of this document vests with the Department of Energy. For permissions to copy or distribute this
document, please contact the publisher.
Disclaimer
This document is meant for informational purposes only. Though the accuracy and validity of information
and recommendations given has been checked thoroughly, DoE, GIZ and other authors cannot be held
liable for the content of this document.
2015
Acknowledgements
GIZ for generously sponsoring the entire project and for this, special
gratitude goes to Dr Sascha Thielmann, Renewable Energy Advisor, who
made it all possible.
All the professionals who provided invaluable inputs at the workshop held
on 24 July 2014 at DoE to conrm the scope of this report. Andre Otto,
Dominic Milazi, Jason Schfer, Karen Surridge-Talbot, Machwene Molomo,
Moeketsi Thobela, Nicole Algio, Wim Jonker Klunne, Sofja Giljova, Robert
Kwinda, Ramaano Nembaha, and Yaw Afrane-Okese.
The Project Team who passionately worked around the clock to produce
this report within a condensed timeframe: Nomawethu Qase (DoE), Project
Leader; Marlett Balmer (GIZ), Project Manager; Phindile Masangane (CEF),
Editorial Support; Mari-Louise Van der Walt (Alakriti), Commissioned Lead
Author.
Last but not least, the experts who shared their experiences and insights on
South Africas amazing renewable energy journey.
Foreword
by Ms Tina Joemat-Pettersson - Minister of Energy
South Africa embarked on a new journey since the publication of the White Paper on Energy Policy
of 1998. Critical among the priorities of Government at the time, which was characterised as a period
of reconstruction and development, was the mass rollout of electrication to lend a new sense of
belonging to people who were previously excluded from accessing this modern energy service. Since
the national electricity utility, Eskom, had excess capacity, the renewable energy (RE) technology
options were marginalised, often being left to a few demonstration or pilot projects largely driven by
the international donor community. Yet, these projects contributed immensely to the demonstration of
the potential of RE technologies and to some degree lled the gap in respect of provision of non-grid
services to targeted rural communities between 2001 and 2010. The tipping point for RE technologies
came with the REFIT process that was publicised and managed by NERSA; it galvanised the market.
Catapulted to prominence by the electricity blackouts of 2008, RE technologies as options with short
lead times became an attractive alternative for our country and have since delivered according
to expectations. Consequently, the IRP 2010 set a target of 17,800MW (equivalent to 42%) of new
electricity generation capacity to be derived from renewables, largely Solar (PV & CSP) and Wind.
South Africa has taken off on a new trajectory of sustainable growth and development; there is no
turning back. Since 2011 the country has introduced a world class competitive bidding process, which
to date has delivered 92 Independent Power Producers who will contribute in excess of 6,327 MW. This
world-renowned programme is set to inform the design of other related programmes on the continent
and across the globe. The REIPPPP programme has successfully created an enabling framework for
attracting substantial private sector expertise and investment for utility scale RE. It has delivered cost
effective, clean energy infrastructure to the country and contributed to security of electricity supply
that is expected to bring about a virtuous circle of investment and economic growth. In a period of just
less than ve years, we are proud to have secured a position among the top-10 countries in the world
with signicant investments in RE technologies. Pioneering work by ofcials within Government, state-
owned entities, the private sector and the international donor community, contributed immensely
towards the achievement of this milestone and for this, South Africa will always be grateful.
This report presents a consolidated and authoritative account of progress made thus far in advancing
RE technologies to the economy and citizens at large. We trust that Civil Society, Parliament and the
international community can use this resource as a quick reference point to hold the Department of
Energy (DoE) to account and also to provide additional advice on areas that need more attention
or intervention. The South African government sees renewables as having a critical role in advancing
transformation of the energy sector and social equity. It will contribute towards creating green
economy jobs; diversication of our energy mix and universal access to modern energy services, which
is an aspiration built on the express commitment to expand the current 85% household electrication
rate to 97% by 2025. Renewables are expected to contribute both to grid and off-grid electrication,
transport fuels and electricity demand-side management through fuel switching, e.g. from electric
geysers to solar water heaters. The report highlights the key policy and legislative framework that
underpins Government activities in this eld, as well as other key role players and responsible institutions
across all tiers of Government. It will be produced periodically and published widely for easy access
and dissemination of information.
Tina Joemat-Pettersson, MP
Minister of Energy
Content
Foreword
List of Photos V
List of Acronyms VI
Executive Summary 1
CHAPTER 1
History of Renewable Energy Policy in South Africa 10
CHAPTER 2
Comprehensive and Conducive Regulatory Environment at National and Provincial level 30
CHAPTER 3
Abundant and widespread renewable energy resources 46
CHAPTER 4
Market overview and current levels of renewable energy (RE) deployment 60
CHAPTER 5
Investment Flows, Economic Development and Localisation under the REIPPPP 92
CHAPTER 6
Renewable Energy (RE) contribution towards sustainable energy for all 106
CHAPTER 7
Managing the development of the grid infrastructure to support renewable energy
deployment 118
CHAPTER 8
Renewable Energy Research and Training in South Africa 126
CHAPTER 9
The foundation for a promising future 144
Bibliography 147
| II
List of Figures
Figure 1: Solar resource maps for South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (annual sum
of direct normal irradiation and global horizontal irradiation, kWh/m),
GeoModel Solar 1
Figure 2: REIPP growth in energy produced during 2014 (Eskom, CSIR Energy Centre
analysis)
Source: Eskom, CSIR Energy Centre analysis 4
Figure 3: Geographic distribution of IPPs in the REIPPPP 5
Figure 4: Key enabling policy for renewable energy 10
Figure 5: Global electricity generated by Solar and Wind (1965-2013)
Source: 2014 BP Statistical Review of World Energy 11
Figure 6: Relative contribution by RE to global primary energy consumption
Source: BP Statistical Review of Energy 2014 12
Figure 7: Eskom maximum demand and net maximum capacity
Source: Steyn (2006) 13
Figure 8: South Africa Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission reductions and limits
Source: DEA 22
Figure 9: Number of direct and indirect jobs (thousands) 23
Figure 10: REFIT tariffs as published 25
Figure 11: The impact of major policy drivers on renewable energy deployment
in South Africa, 2010 28
Figure 12: Energy Triangle (World Economic Forum Global Energy Architecture
Performance Index Report, 2013) 30
Figure 13: Policy platform for planning 31
Figure 14: IRP 2010, targeted energy mix for 2030; OCGT = Open Cycle Gas Turbine;
CCGT = Closed Cycle Gas Turbine 32
Figure 15: Indicative regulatory requirements for REIPPPP participation 38
Figure 16: The rst veried wind atlas over South Africa showing generalised wind
speeds at 100 meters height (in ms-1). The location of measurement mast are
show as yellow circles and the inset table indicates how closely the wind
atlas results match the observational wind atlas developed at each mast 47
Figure 17: High-resolution wind resource map showing Mean wind speed (ms-1) at 100m.
The inserted graph show the accuracy of the NWA (vertical axis) against
the observational wind atlas(horizontal axis) at each measurement mast 47
Figure 18: Extreme wind atlas showing the 1-in-50 year 10 minute wind speed 48
Figure 19: Solar resource maps for South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (annual
sum of direct normal irradiation and global horizontal irradiation,
kWh/m), GeoModel Solar 50
Figure 20: South African Renewable Resource Data - Micro Hydro Power Potential
(DME, Eskom, CSIR, 2001) 53
Figure 21: Provincial distribution of RE resources 54
Figure 22: Main RE industry role players in South Africa 55
Figure 23: BP Statistical Review of World Energy: South Africa, Primary Energy
Consumption, 2011 65
Figure 24: Operational, non-hydro renewable energy capacity of South Africa 66
Figure 25: Procurement milestones and bid window status for the RE portfolio
as at 30 June 2015 69
Figure 26: Bid window capacity contribution to cumulative capacity procured 72
Figure 27: RE generation capacity that has commenced commercial operation 72
Figure 28: Progress against planning targets 73
Figure 29: Actual monthly power supply in South Africa, showing an average day
for each month, Jan June 2015 (CSIR Energy Centre analysis) 74
Figure 30: Economic contribution, Jan June 2015 (CSIR Energy Centre analysis) 75
| IV
List of Photos
Page 2 Hopeeld Wind Farm by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 6/7 Solar panels at De Aar Solar Power by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 9 Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 17 PV technician at Droogfontein Solar Power, Kimberley by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 21 Turbine at Hopeeld Wind Farm by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 24/25 Metrowind van Stadens Wind Farm, Port Elizabeth by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 27 Sunset at Hopeeld Wind Farm by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 29 Machinery at Neusberg Small-Hydro near Kakamas by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 32 Parabolic troughs at Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 34 Turbine blades awaiting assembly by Stephanie De Beer Jeffreys Bay Wind Farm
Page 45 Generator at Neusberg Small-Hydro near Kakamas by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 48 Dusk at De Aar Solar Power by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 52 New parts at Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 59 Storage tank at Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 61 Bisasar Road Landll gas-to-electricity plant. www.envitech.co.za
Page 62 PetroSA - www.industr.co.za - www.industrysa.co.za/petrosa-cans-mossel-bay-gas-terminal-plans/
Page 63 Darling Wind Farm - www.darlingwindfarm.com
Page 64 Bethlehem Hydro - www.aurecongroup.com
Page 66/67 Solar array at Droogfontein Solar Power, Kimberley by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 70 Metrowind van Stadens Wind Farm, Port Elizabeth by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 73 Inverters at De Aar Solar Power by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 77 Working hard at Droogfontein Solar Power, Kimberley by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 84 Parabolic trough at Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 86 Bio2Watt Bronkhorstspruit Biogas Plant
Page 87 Bio2Watt Bronkhorstspruit Biogas Plant
Page 88/89 Fishwater Flats WWTW at Nelson Mandela Bay by Sofja Giljova GIZ
Page 91 Inverters at De Aar Solar Power by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 92 Wind turbines at Hopeeld Wind Farm by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 101 Turbine assembly by Stephanie De Beer Jeffreys Bay Wind Farm
Page 102 S ARTsolar Production facility - www.artsolar.net
Page 102 T PiAsolar installation - www.piasolar.com
Page 103 A Gestamp manufacturing facility - www.gestampwind.com
Page 105 Solar Panel at De Aar by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 108/109 Typical rural villages targeted for Solar Home Systems installations in the Eastern Cape
Page 112 Rooftop PV at Lourensford Wine Estate, Somerset West by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 113 SouthSouthNorth installation team
Page 114 Cosmo City SWH installation - C40 Cities, Case Study, www.c40.org
Page 117 Metrowind van Stadens Wind Farm, Port Elizabeth by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 118 Wind turbines at Hopeeld Wind Farm by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 120 Turbine assembly by Stephanie De Beer Jeffreys Bay Wind Farm
Page 122/123 Blade in transit by Stephanie De Beer Jeffreys Bay Wind Farm
Page 125 Parabolic trough underbelly at Bokpoort, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 129 Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 133 Ready for turbine assembly by Stephanie De Beer Jeffreys Bay Wind Farm
Page 140 S The SARETEC located at CPUT
Page 140 T Donated Nacelle and hub being delivered to SARETEC
Page 143 Pipes at Bokpoort CSP, Groblershoop by Glenn McCreath GIZ
Page 146 Metrowind van Stadens Wind Farm, Port Elizabeth by Glenn McCreath GIZ
A
ADA Austrian Development Agency
AIJ Activities Initiated Jointly
AQP Assessment Quality Partner
B
BAPEPSA Biomass Action Plan for Electricity Production
BAU Business As Usual
BIS Biofuels Industrial Strategy
BTT Biofuels Task Team
BUSA Business Unity South Africa
C
CaBREERE Capacity Building in Energy Efciency and Renewable Energy
CDM Clean Development Mechanism
CED Clean Energy Division
CEF Central Energy Fund
CEO Chief Executive Ofcer
CER Certied emission reduction
CoGTA Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs
COP17 17th session of the Conference of the Parties
COUE Cost of Unserved Energy
CPUT Cape Peninsula University of Technology
CPV Concentrator Photovoltaics
CRSES Centre for Renewable and Sustainable Energy Studies
CSAG, UCT Climate System Analysis Group, University of Cape Town
CSP Concentrated Solar Power
CSIR Council for Scientic and Industrial Research
D
DAFF Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (
DANIDA Danish Development Agency
DBSA Development Bank of Southern Africa
DEA Department of Environmental Affairs
D:EA&DP Department of Environmental Affairs and Development Planning
(Western Cape Provincial Government)
DEDEAT Department of Economic Development, Environmental Affairs and
Tourism (Eastern Cape Provincial Government)
DoE Department of Energy
DPE Department of Public Enterprises
DQP Development Quality Partner
DST Department of Science and Technology
DTI/ the dti Department of Trade and Industry
E
EDC Energy Development Corporation
EEDSM Energy Efciency and Demand Side Management Programme
EEP Energy & Environment Partnership
EIA Environmental Impact Assessment
EL Electroluminescence
ELIDZ East London Industrial Development Zone
EPC Engineering, procurement and construction
EPRET Energy Policy Research and Training Project
ERA Electricity Regulation Act
ERC Energy Research Centre
| VI
Eskom South African National Electricity Utility
EU European Union
F
FBE Free Basic Energy
FDI Foreign Direct Investment
FTE full time equivalence
G
GCCA Generation Connection Capacity Assessment
GEF Global Environment Facility
GHG Green House Gas
GIZ Deutsche Gesellschaft fr Internationale Zusammenarbeit
GRI Gestamp Renewable Industries
GSET Group for Solar Energy Thermodynamics
GTZ German Technical Co-operation Organization
GW/GWh Gigawatt and Gigawatt hour
H
HEIs Higher Education Institutions
I
IDC Industrial Development Corporation
IDZ Industrial Development Zone
IEA SHC International Energy Agency, Solar Heating and Cooling
IEC International Electrotechnical Commission
IEP Integrated Energy Plan
ILO International Labour Ofce
IPAP Industrial Policy Action Plan
IPPs Independent Power Producers
IRENA International Renewable Energy Agency
IRP Integrated Resource Plan
ISES International Solar Energy Society
ISMO Independent System and Market Operator
K
KfW Kreditanstalt fr Wiederaufbau (German Development Bank)
KSEF KZN Sustainable Energy Forum
L
LTMS Long-Term Mitigation Scenario
M
MD Managing Director
MERSETA Manufacturing, Engineering and Related Services Sector Education and
Training Authority
MFMA Municipal Finance Management Act
MIF Multilateral Investment Fund
MoA Memorandum of Agreement
MTSF Medium-Term Strategic Framework
MW/MWh Megawatt and Megawatt hour
N
NDP National Development Plan
NEC National Energy Council
NEDLAC National Economic and Labour Council
NEEAP National Energy Efciency Action Plan
NEES National Energy Efciency Strategy
NEMA National Environmental Management Act
NERSA National Energy Regulator of South Africa
NGO Non-governmental organization
O
OEMs Original Equipment Manufacturers
OFO Organising Framework for Occupations
P
PPA Power Purchase Agreement
PV Photovoltaic
Q
QCTO Quality Council for Trades and Occupations
R
RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme
RE Renewable Energy
RECE Renewable Energy Centre of Excellence
RECORD Renewable Energy Centre of Research and Development
RECs Renewable energy certicates
REDZ Renewable Energy Development Zones
REEEP Renewable Energy & Energy Efciency Partnership
REFIT Renewable energy feed-in-tariffs
REFSO Renewable Energy Finance and Subsidy Ofce
REIPPPP Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme
RED Hub Renewable Energy Development Hub
REMT Renewable Energy Market Transformation
R&D Research and Development
RFI Request for information
RFP Request for Proposals
S
SABIA South African Biogas Industry Association
SABS South African Bureau of Standards
SADC Southern Africa Development Community
SAEON South African Environmental Observation Network
SAGEN South African-German Energy Programme
SAIPPA South African Independent Power Producers Association
SANEA SA National Energy Association
SANEDI South African National Energy Development Institute
SANERI South African National Energy Research Institute
SAPVIA South African Photovoltaic Industry Association
SAQA South African Qualications Authority
SAREC South African Renewable Energy Council
SARETEC South African Renewable Energy Technology Centre
SASTELA Southern Africa Solar Thermal Electricity Association
SASTTP South African Solar Thermal Technology Platform
SA-STTRM South African Solar Thermal Technology Roadmap
SAURAN Southern African Universities Radiometric Network
SAWEA South African Wind Energy Association
SAWEP South African Wind Energy Programme
SAWS South African Weather Service
SEA Sustainable Energy Africa
SESSA Sustainable Energy Society of South Africa
SETA Sector Education and Training Authority
SETRM Solar Energy Technology Roadmap
SEZ Special economic zone
| VIII
SE4All Sustainable Energy for All Initiative
SHS Solar home system
SIPs Strategic Infrastructure Projects
SOEs State-owned enterprises
Solar PV Solar Photovoltaic
SOLTRAIN training for solar water heating
SSEG Small Scale Embedded Generation
SWH Solar water heaters
S4GJ Skills for Green Jobs
T
TAF Technical Assistance Facility
TIA Technology Innovation Agency
TIH The Innovation Hub
TISA Trade and Investment South Africa
U
UFH University of Fort Hare
UNDP-GEF United Nations Development Programme Global Environment Facility
UNEP United Nations Environment Programme
UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
UNIDO United Nations Industrial Development Organisation
V
VNAMA Vertically Integrated NAMA
W
WASA Wind and Solar Atlas
South Africa is fortunate in that, over and above its rich coal resources, it is also well endowed with non-
depletable RE sources, notably solar and wind. The country has an average of more than 2,500 hours
of sunshine per year and average direct solar radiation levels range between 4.5 and 6.5kWh/m2 per
day, placing it in the top-3 in the world.
Figure 1: Solar resource maps for South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (annual sum of direct normal irradiation and
global horizontal irradiation, kWh/m), GeoModel Solar1
1 Developed in partnership between Centre for Renewable and Sustainable Energy Studies (CRSES), University of Stellenbosch and
Group for Solar Energy Thermodynamics (GSET) at UKZN (2014), www.sauran.net
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A number of tertiary institutions from the Southern African Development Community (SADC) member
states are collaborating on a new Solar Data and Resource Mapping study. The primary aim of this
work is to promote the use of solar energy in SADC Member States and to improve the quality of
satellite-derived solar data available for the area. Collaborating institutions will compile high-resolution,
ground-based solar radiometric data, collected from stations located across the southern African
region. The Solar Data and Resource Mapping study is conducted by the Southern African Universities
Radiometric Network (SAURAN) and up-to-date progress can be found on the website, www.sauran.
net. The outputs from this work will result in mutual benets for South Africa and the SADC, whereby,
in addition to improved national energy security, there will be a broader market for manufactured
products and job opportunities. The SAURAN initiative is supported by GIZ and USAID.
The Department of Energy (DoE), with support from the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) through the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), as well as the Danish government, represented by
DANIDA, has developed the rst numerically veried Wind Atlas for South Africa (WASA I). The WASA
has conrmed results from the previous Wind Atlases developed in 1995 and 2001, which showed
greater potential for wind energy in the coastal areas. In addition, the WASA has also demonstrated
signicant wind energy potential inland. Ten wind measurement masts, each 60 metres high, were
erected throughout the Western Cape, parts of the Eastern Cape and Northern Cape provinces to
provide observational data that was correlated with the modelled data to provide the numerical wind
atlas.
The WASA I project also conducted analysis on extreme winds, with 50-year statistical projections. The
Wind Atlas is ideally structured to inform general siting, strategic environmental assessment and wind
farm planning and development, but does not substitute local, on-site measurements necessary for the
detailed design and assessment of a new plant. The Extreme Wind Atlas is particularly useful for wind
turbine selection. Since WASA I depicts the local wind climate that a wind turbine would encounter at
very high resolution, it is a critical tool for protecting the most important asset in a wind farm the wind
turbine! The greatest recognition of the WASA outputs has been its adoption by other Agencies such
as the World Bank and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA). The WASA dataset has
been used for verication of the IRENA Global Wind Atlas. The WASA I information is publicly available
and can be used by both Government and the private sector for independent verication of other
wind data. It is a critical tool for quick identication of wind hot spots prior to conducting costly on-site
measurements. The second phase of WASA, involving the same partners, starts in 2015 and will expand
to other provinces, i.e. KwaZulu-Natal and the Free State.
With respect to other technologies, there are no studies that have been conducted recently.
However, it is estimated that the potential for new small-scale Hydro development in the region of
247MW exists in the rural areas of the Eastern Cape, Free State, KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga
provinces; these are embedded in water transfer and gravity-fed systems throughout the country.
The power generation potential of this resource has not been fully exploited to date. Similarly, the
Biomass resource potential was previously estimated to be signicant. With technical support from
the Netherlands government, work has begun to develop a Biomass Action Plan for South Africa. The
results from this 18-month project, which includes biomass resource assessment, are expected by June
2016.
To enable the optimum utilisation of the countrys abundant RE resources, the South African government
has established excellent policy foundations. This report illustrates that the successful introduction of
RE technologies can be rmly traced back into the 1996 Constitution, which has been translated
effectively in at least three policy documents, the 1998 White Paper on Energy Policy (WPEP), the 2003
White Paper on Renewable Energy (WPRE) and the 2011 National Climate Change Response White
Paper Policy. Also in 2011, the National Planning Commission located in the Ofce of the President
completed the National Development Plan (NDP), which sets the overarching long- term vision for
South Africas growth and development.
The signicance of the WPEP with respect to RE was its ability to recognise, as early as 1998, that the
rapid development of renewable energy technologies (RETs) was imminent, and that these RETs would
become cost competitive and cost effective in time. In addition, that the exploitation of these vast
resources would create enormous opportunities in the future. These assertions could only be made due
to rm policy-oriented research conducted by researchers, such as those who were at the Energy and
Development Research Centre (EDRC) at the time. They formed part of the team that developed the
WPEP. It is notable that close collaboration between policy makers and research institutions played a
very signicant role here.
The 2003 WPRE, which set the rst target for RETs, clearly identied nancial instruments; legal instruments;
technology development; governance; and awareness raising, capacity building and education as
the ve key facilitative areas that needed to be addressed in order to enable the deployment of
renewables on a large scale. It is through concerted effort and intervention in each of these priority
areas that South Africa is able to speak of ambitious targets and record achievements in RETs progress
today. Signicantly, in each of these areas international partners have played a central role through
providing nancial and technical support to both industry and Government. Climate Change
commitments driven by the Presidents undertaking at Copenhagen in 2009 that South Africa would
reduce its emissions by 34% by 2020, progressing to 42% by 2025 (compared to the business as usual
emissions baseline) and subject to international nancial support gave the implementation of RETs
additional credence.
The 2011 National Climate Change Response White Paper (NCCRWP) has thus become an instrument
to motivate and monitor implementation of climate change mitigation programmes across the
key priority sectors, such as transport and energy. The NDP has become a rallying point for many
Government initiatives. First highlighted by the blackouts of 2008, the NDP has brought the centrality of
energy to peoples livelihoods and the economy to the fore.
Chapter two elaborates on the evolution of the policies and regulation of RE in the country, which
culminated in the Integrated Resource Plan 2010-2030.
Published by the DoE in May 2011, the Integrated Resource Plan 2010-2030 is the key document that
provides a long-term plan for electricity generation. It calls for doubling of electricity capacity using a
diverse mixture of energy sources, mainly Coal, Gas, Nuclear and Renewables, including large-scale
Hydro, which is to be imported from the southern African region. Implementation of the IRP 2010-2030
is carried out through Ministerial Determinations, which are regulated by Electricity Regulations on New
Generation Capacity. These are released periodically. Once released, the Ministerial Determinations
signify the start of a procurement process and, most importantly, provide a greater level of certainty to
investors.
The Electricity Regulations Act (ERA, 2006), as amended, and the New Generation Capacity
Regulations have been the key legal instruments used by Government to unlock the Renewable
Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP). The ERA and its regulations
enable the Minister of Energy (in consultation with NERSA) to determine what new capacity is required.
So far, three Ministerial Determinations for the procurement of 3,725MW by 2016, 3,200MW by 2020
and 6,300MW by 2025, have been issued. The allocated quantities are derived from the IRP 2010-2030
target of 17,800MW new generation capacity set aside for renewables. Over and above this, the IRP
2010-2030 conrmed 2,600MW of large-scale Hydro to be imported from the southern African region
as well as Eskoms 100MW each for solar and wind plants.
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In 2008, South Africa initiated a process to introduce renewable energy feed-in-tariffs (REFIT) in order
to facilitate the introduction of RE into the power system. This approach was informed by international
experience, where feed-in-tariffs were successfully used in countries such as Germany to encourage
RETs uptake. REFIT design work was accelerated in the wake of severe electricity shortages experienced
during 2008. In 2009 NERSA published REFITs with proposed tariffs designed to cover generation costs
plus a real after tax return on equity of 17 percent, fully indexed for ination. In many ways, this REFIT tariff
policy demonstrated South Africas commitment to introducing RETs and, as such, it stimulated market
interest. In the end, the REFIT announcement became what Malcolm Gladwell calls the tipping point
for RETs. The rapid changes following from this announcement catapulted South Africa into the world
spotlight, drawing investor interest from across the globe. RE implementation became a topical issue
nationwide. Ultimately, actual implementation was done through a competitive tendering system (the
REIPPPP) with REFIT rates used as caps. The competitive bidding process, as it has become apparent in
South Africa, has a great potential to lower prices while still providing adequate incentives for market
entry by RE investors.
While RE implementation took more than a decade to realise the policy aspirations articulated in
the founding policy documents, the rapid achievements within a period of three years since
the procurement process started in 2011 shine brighter. Many reviews of South Africas progress in
implementing the REIPPPP have been positive, earning the country accolades from abroad. The
overall design of the REIPPPP has been acknowledged by industry as being private sector-friendly.
The UNEP 2014 Report has placed South Africa among the top-10 countries in respect of RE investments.
The procurement process started in August 2011 and, by November 2011, the DoE announced the
appointment of the rst 28 preferred bidders, collectively offering approximately 1,416MW. The total
investment from these projects was close to US$6 billion. Some projects came on stream towards the
end of 2013 while an additional 36 RE IPPs were selected as preferred bidders by October 2013.
Wind and solar photovoltaic (Solar PV) power plants have been the rst power plants from the RE
portfolio to start operations, steadily contributing additional capacity to the power system with each
new successfully commissioned plant, as shown in the gure below.
350 343
317 316
300
130
208 212
GWh / month
200
170 104
113
150 123
113 104
213
100
87 84 169 168
60
58 43 37 131
48 98
50
31 85
26 66
47 53
44
23 26
0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Figure 2: REIPP growth in energy produced during 2014 (Eskom, CSIR Energy Centre analysis)
Source: Eskom, CSIR Energy Centre analysis
5 5 1 1
Capacity procured (MW) Capacity procured (MW)
275 275 18 18
Capacity online Capacity online
7 7
Mpumalanga BM
Number of projects
1 1
Capacity procured (MW)
25 25
Capacity online
KwaZulu Natal BM
Number of projects
Western Cape OW PV
1 1
Number of projects
Capacity procured (MW)
11 6 5
17 17
Capacity procured (MW)
Capacity online
592 458 1 34
Capacity online
237 183 54
Free State SH PV
Number of projects
Eastern Cape OW PV 5 2 3
Number of projects Capacity procured (MW)
17 16 1 208 9 199
Capacity procured (MW) Capacity online
1 509 1 440 70 121 121
Capacity online
603 533 70
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The introduction of IPPs at the scale shown in this report has
contributed immensely to the transformation of the electricity
generation sector, from one dominated by a single public
utility to multiple generators. By design, the private sector is
playing a dominant role in REIPPPP. RETs are also proving to be
key instruments for advancing social equity. For instance, both
Northern and Eastern Cape provinces, which have received a
greater share of REIPPPP projects, have higher levels of poverty
and unemployment. REIPPPP contracts require IPPs to contribute
to socio-economic development within their immediate locality,
set within a 50km radius of plant location.
Biogas, small-scale Hydro and Landll Gas are still lagging behind, and Government is looking at
mechanisms to bolster the development of these technologies under a tailor-made, small-scale IPP
procurement programme. Analysis conducted by Anton Eberhard and others for the World Bank
attributes slow progress with respect to small-scale IPP procurement (i.e. projects of 5MW and below),
to a market shortcoming wherein the South African banking sector, that has been largely responsible
for the bulk of funding to the IPPs, lacks the necessary incentives to participate in this particular
programme. The Solar PV rooftop market, on the other hand, has been steadily growing without much
Government incentives. A voluntary database of small-scale rooftop Solar PV installations established
around 2011 suggests that by May 2015 these installations had already reached a total of about
43,8MW. A majority of these Solar PV installations were in the commercial, agriculture, industrial and
mining sectors. This is an area that still requires policy renement at national level.
For the liquid fuels/transport sector, large-scale procurement has not yet started. However, following
the 2007 Biofuels Industrial Strategy, mandatory blending regulations were promulgated in 2012 and
will come into effect in October 2015. Government is still considering mechanisms that will reduce the
risk of the impact of a large-scale Biofuels programme on food security as well as mechanisms that will
reduce the impact of the biofuels nancial support/subsidy on the scus.
Executive
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Other off-grid solutions include the commitment to the rollout of solar water heaters (SWH) to both
low-income and mid-to-high income households. The NDP has a long-term vision of 5 million SWH
installations by 2030. From the initial target of 1 million SWH installations to be achieved by March
2015, the government has been able to install 407,463 SWH by February 2015. The programme is being
re-designed to address some shortcomings observed during implementation, such as poor quality of
installations and to also ensure that it is geared up to meet other Government priorities for job creation
and local content requirements. There is a concerted effort lead by NERSA to look at small scale
embedded generation which covers solar PV rooftops, biogas etc in the short term.
Renewable energy R&D, skills development and training mainly inform and support the implementation
of RE projects in South Africa. Local institutions have stepped up to the challenge to supply not only
innovative technologies, but also a trained and skilled workforce to support this edgling RE industry. A
number of South African government ofcials and professionals have received RETs training and real-
time exposure to RE plants abroad, through government to government facilitated initiatives. Chapter
seven outlines national RETs skills development programmes that are aimed at ensuring the country
realises the objective of reducing unemployment through large-scale deployment of RETs.
In conclusion, this report outlines how South Africa has moved from zero to hero in increasing the share
of RE in the countrys energy mix. An enabling environment for achieving the national objective of 30%
clean energy by 2025 has been created, and South Africa is well on its path towards this audacious
goal.
South Africas Constitution, which took effect in 1997, is unambiguous in its mandate for a sustainable
energy future. Since the adoption of the Constitution in 1996, three government policy papers have
created the foundation for South Africas Renewable Energy (RE) programme, which has recently
come into the global spotlight and is now receiving worldwide acclaim. The United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP)2 ranked the country among the top-10 renewable energy investing countries in
2014 and, by breaching the 500MW of utility scale solar power in the same year, South Africa became
the 10th biggest solar market in the world for installations sized 5MW and above3.
The successful introduction of renewable energy into the countrys electricity generation mix is founded
in the Constitution and given effect in three key policy development steps:
The rst policy document was the 1998 White Paper4 on Energy Policy. The Paper was groundbreaking
from a South African perspective because it signalled a new direction. The Paper considered all South
Africans, recognising inequalities in the energy sector, both in energy usage and access, and escalated
the need for increased access to affordable energy services for all the countrys citizens. In addition,
it gave a Government commitment to support and promote the development of renewable energy
2 Prepared by Frankfurt School-UNEP Collaborating Centre for Climate & Sustainable Energy Finance and Bloomberg New Energy Finance, March 2015
3 Wiki-solar.org, June 2015
4 Having adopted the United Kingdoms Westminster system in 1910, South Africa still observes many of the processes, with a white paper being a
document produced by Government; it sets out policy on a particular subject and is used as the basis for more detailed plans and regulations to be
put before Parliament for adoption.
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Globally in 1998, large scale renewable energy was still in its infancy with many sceptics unconvinced
of the technical and nancial viability, reliability and the price at which the technology would be able
to deliver energy. Global electricity generated by Wind and Solar at that time was less than 0.5% of
total global primary energy. Figure 5 illustrates the exponential growth in contribution from wind and
solar since 1998, yet it still contributed less than 2.5% to total primary energy consumption by 20146
(Figure 6).
800
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500
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1965 1968 1941 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013
Solar Wind
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12 000
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8 000
6 000
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2 000
0
1965 1968 1941 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013
This was most certainly the case in South Africa where, at the time, the country had an entrenched
mind-set of employing the vast coal reserves to generate electricity at scale in order to achieve the
lowest possible cost. In fact, Eskom (the national utility) was required to operate at neither a prot nor
a loss7,8 until the mid-1980s. In addition, in 1998, the country had an oversupply of electricity and was
mothballing and decommissioning operational power plants as the reserve margin was as high as 40%
in 1992-1994 and close to 25% in 1998. A positive spin-off of this situation, and very importantly, was
that Eskom and the newly elected democratic government were able to fast track their electrication
programme to households to provide them with electricity for the rst time. In the mid-1980s,
electrication penetration levels for households were as low as 35%; this increased to 61% by 2001 and
83% by 20119. During this time Eskom was also able to allow the price of electricity to reduce in real
terms10. From an environmental perspective, however, these developments effectively tightened the
grip of coal generation and ensured that coal would remain the countrys primary energy resource
for the foreseeable future. South Africas electricity generation over-supply during the 1980s and 1990s
can be seen in Figure 7.
The signicance of the Energy Policy White Paper, specically with respect to renewable energy (and
given the prevailing context), was its ability to recognise that the rapid development of renewable
energy technologies was imminent, and that they would become cost competitive and cost effective,
meaning the countrys vast renewable energy base would create numerous opportunities in the future.
3 000 30%
2 000 20%
MW
1 000 10%
0 0%
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
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-1 000 -10%
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Demand increase Net capacity increase Reserve margin %
The strong policy position given early on to renewable energy in South African
policy, such as the 1998 Energy Policy White Paper, was largely informed by the
pioneering work of the EDRC.
The EDRC was founded at the University of Cape Town in 1989 and was
active for a decade until 1999, coinciding with the critical timeframe of South
Africas political transition to democracy. The centre was structured as a
transdisciplinary research institution committed to producing knowledge that
will result in improved policy-making and practical implementation in the energy
sector in Africa. Its work focused on three main areas: Energy, Poverty and
Development, Energy, Efciency and Environment, and Energy, Markets and
Governance. As a result of this work at the time of transition, the EDRC played
an important role in raising issues to the policy agenda, while at the same time
providing support to various agencies trying to address these issues.
The initial funding for the EDRC came from a government grant, but quickly
shifted to being funded by international donors and national, regional and
international contract research. The centre established a wide range of
partnerships and networks, and was the beneciary of extensive support and
contributions from the international community wanting to support the new
government in this context.
11 http://www.gsb.uct.ac.za/les/Eskom-InvestmentUncertainty.pdf
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Among others, the centre was responsible for a comprehensive energy policy
review under the Energy Policy Research and Training Project (EPRET). EPRETs
primary objective was to design policies that widen access to adequate and
affordable energy services for poor urban and rural households. Stemming from
this, the EDRC was contracted by Government for the process leading to the
formulation of the 1998 Energy Policy White Paper.
The EDRC has since been incorporated into the Energy Research Centre (ERC)
at UCT and continues to operate and contribute to national energy research
and policy formulation, with specic focus on climate change and energy
modelling.
The greatest contribution the EDRC has arguably provided in the renewable
energy eld (and across wider energy issues) has been through education,
training and research. Postgraduate students, researchers and interns have
moved into vital sectors of industry, government and energy/environmental
consultancy, both here and abroad. Mr Bill Cowan, previously senior
researcher at the EDRC.
To achieve the national policy objectives, two renewable energy paths, which were to be pursued
simultaneously, were described in the White Paper.
The second path considered in the Paper was the nature of the existing
electricity generation in the country, 96% of which was generated by Eskom
and almost exclusively from coal.
The White Paper identied Governments need to improve its ability to address long-term issues, noting
that the country was responsible for 1.6% of global greenhouse gas emissions, with the energy sector
being by far the largest contributor. The development of renewable energy resources were needed
to achieve a more sustainable energy mix, and in many instances was likely to provide the least-cost
energy service when social and environmental costs are included in the equation.
There were two stages: consultation and writing, followed by production and
approval. The rst stage involved a number of stakeholder forums, leading to a
discussion document as a basis for comment. After a period for inviting public
comment, a National Energy Summit was held to arrive at a consensus on
energy sector goals. The next stage, which was the production and approval
part of the process, involved several consultation meetings. These meetings led
to a draft paper in June 1996.
The use of certain renewable energy sources may additionally be seen to protect further constitutional
rights, such as access to clean sufcient water.
With the publication of the Energy Policy White Paper, South Africa, already
a signatory of Agenda 2112 and the Kyoto Protocol13, demonstrated her
commitment to both sustainable development and climate change. This
Paper was welcomed by the international community, creating the context
for international support for energy efciency and renewable energy in the
country.
After the democratic elections in 1994, energy diversity and clean energy were
only two of the numerous immediate and pressing issues (such as housing,
sanitation, education, water and electricity access) confronting the newly
elected government.
During this time, renewable energy development in the country beneted from
signicant support and funding from the international community, promoting
renewable energy and energy efciency. The support and funding received to
undertake research and demonstration projects were inuential, as it started to
create the foundation to shift general perception, introduce new concepts and
ideas and, most importantly, dispel myths and pre-conceived notions through
local scientic research.
12 Agenda 21 is a non-binding, voluntarily implemented action plan of the United Nations with regard to sustainable development and a product of the
Earth Summit (UN Conference on Environment and Development) held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992
13 An international treaty regarding climate change, adopted and signed in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997
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5
the energy sector) in the period leading up to the 2003 RE White Paper:
The Global Environmental Facility through the World Bank also provided a USD
6 million grant for pre-investment services under the Renewable Energy Market
Transformation programme. DBSA implemented the programme on behalf of the
DoE which contributed USD 975,693. Some of the outputs of this programme were
instrumental in informing decisions around the IRP 2010-2030 and the National
Solar Water Heating programme, which were the key priority areas for REMT. For
example, prior work done on modeling of Renewable Energy Technologies (RETs)
learning curves facilitated their incorporation into the IRP process. This resulted
in a cost-optimized IRP model that allocated greater capacity for RETs, thereby
providing a sound analytical basis for planning the implementation of the DoEs
policy of substantially increasing the share of RE in the projected energy mix; a
number of IPPs which became successful bidders under the REIPPPP obtained
REMT grants; REMT procured the services of a specialist energy project nance
law rm for review of the draft standardized PPA published by NERSA in July
2009. The specialist review laid the foundation for the standardized PPA that
was used later as the basis for bankable IPP transactions; REMT supported a CSP
workshop in September 2009 and one of the outcomes was the formation of
the Southern Africa Solar Thermal and Electricity Association (SASTELA). On Solar
Water Heating, REMT supported South Africas SWH industry through targeted
studies, reports, grants, and capacity building.
Lastly, over time a number of government ofcials and professionals from industry
and academia have received training and/or practical exposure to renewable
energy technologies abroad through sponsored seminars and study tours, e.g.
China, Japan, Germany, Norway etc.
SEA has received strong support from international donor agencies, especially during
the 1990s when sustainable energy was still a edgling industry and was not formally
supported by national policies and regulations. Donor funding was used very effectively
during this time, especially funding from DANIDA, which supported impact evaluation
studies that demonstrated the value of promoting sustainable energy in urban South
Africa. Mr Borchers strongly believes that the approach developed by SEA whereby
donor funds were used in a skilful, programmatic way, which maximised local capacity
development and impact were a key success factor that allowed it to continuously
attract donor funding. Bringing in foreign experts is a bad way of using donor funding,
he notes. SEA is now using the same approach in other African countries.
14 www.sustainable.org.za
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The second noteworthy policy was the Renewable Energy White Paper of 2003. The Renewable Energy
White Paper states clearly that it derives its mandate from the Constitution; notes that the Energy Policy
White Paper only touched on renewable energy, but committed Government to setting a renewable
energy target: Government will work towards the establishment and acceptance of broad targets for
the reduction of energy-related emissions that are harmful to the environment and to human health;
and, as part of South Africas reintegration into the global economy, recognised that a denitive policy
on renewable energy had to be fully developed and articulated.
The Renewable Energy White Paper clearly demonstrated that the South African government
comprehended the framework and details needed to enable a sustainable, renewable energy industry.
The document elaborated on these as nancial and legal instruments, technology development,
awareness raising, capacity building and education as well as governance15. The Renewable Energy
White Paper had a number of objectives, including ensuring that an equitable level of national
resources was invested in renewable technologies; directing public resources for implementation
of renewable energy technologies; introducing suitable scal incentives for renewable energy and;
creating an investment climate for the development of the renewable energy sector.
The key objectives of the White Paper were considered in the ve major facilitative areas below:16
Financial instruments
Legal instruments
15 Sebitosi, A.B. and Pillay, P (2008): Renewable Energy and the environment in South Africa: A way forward. Energy Research Centre UCT
16 Mwakasonda, S.A.J. (2004): Policies and Measures for Renewable Energy and Energy Efciency in South Africa. Energy Research Centre UCT
Governance
The 1998 Energy Policy White Paper had also introduced a shift in the responsibility for energy planning.
For electricity, the national planning function had until then resided with the national, vertically
integrated utility, Eskom, which had been established in 1923. This policy change was given effect
in the Renewable Energy White Paper with the important new requirement for the adoption of an
Integrated Resource Planning (IRP) approach led by Government. This integrated planning approach
was to ensure that the different energy resources being considered would be treated equitably from
a nancial analysis perspective to adequately evaluate their performance and potential.
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The Renewable Energy White Paper outlined a long-term vision of a sustainable, completely non-
subsidised alternative to fossil fuels. To get started, it set its aim at 10,000GWh of renewable energy
contribution to be achieved over 10 years. This was to be produced mainly from Biomass, Wind, Solar
and Small-scale Hydro and is equivalent to providing electricity to 300,000 households17 per annum.
No long-term target was quantied.
The concluding section of the White Paper was The Way Forward, which stated: $ 6WUDWHJ\ RQ
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however, not immediately undertaken. As a result there was a good deal of confusion regarding what
this target actually meant: was it a cumulative or an annual target? Did it include renewable energy
services other than electricity? In response, the DoE claried (in 2004) that the target was cumulative
and would be met by a combination of Bagasse (59%), Landll Gas (6%), Hydro (10%), Solar Water
Heaters (13 %), other Biomass (1%), and only 1 % Wind.
Intriguingly, no Solar Photovoltaics (Solar PV) or Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) were expected
to contribute to this energy target. But, in the face of the prevalent energy paradigm, even these
relatively modest targets could not be met in the given timeframe18.
Dr Crompton revealed that the newly elected democratic government of 1994 quickly
came to the realisation that Coal, in the quantity and quality that would allow for low
cost electricity generation, would not be available indenitely. This necessitated greater
consideration to be given to a more diversied, long-term energy strategy for the
country. Consequently, the White Paper on Energy Policy required security of supply
through diversity of supply. Renewable energy carriers are one of the alternatives to Coal
and Oil. At the time the DME had limited knowledge and expertise on alternative, and
specically renewable, energy. Therefore its primary objective was to strike a balance
between protecting the country from excessively costly alternatives while promoting
diversication and private sector investment.
The renewable energy knowledge black box was bridged with assistance from DANIDA
(Danish Development Agency), which funded a study on the cost of technologies that
would inform the development of the RE White Paper. The development of the White
Paper gained impetus in the lead-up to the World Summit on Sustainability Development,
hosted by South Africa in 2002. During the course of the summit, the draft paper was
shared with a select number of attending industry leaders for comment, and was then
released in 2003.
Dr Crompton noted the impact the California electricity crisis of the early 2000s had
on Government thinking. Having just released a policy paper advocating private
sector investment, cabinet viewed with disquiet the US electricity supply crisis caused
17 Based on 3,319kWh per household, i.e. average household electricity use derived from Eskom residential consumption data and Amps data for number
of electried homes (2013)
18 Eberhard, A., Kolker, J. and Leigland, J. (2014) South Africas Renewable Energy IPP Procurement Programme: Success Factors and Lessons. PPIAF and
World Bank
19 Subsequent 2008, Department of Energy
The countrys subsequent energy journey has been shaped by a changing energy
and economic landscape and inuenced by various political imperatives. Looking
back, the implementation of renewable energy has deviated somewhat from the initial
expectations of the RE White Paper. For instance, the integrated resource planning
approach incorporated technologies that did not meet the efciency criteria
envisaged in the White Paper. Also, progress with respect to the development of Biomass
and Biofuels has been limited, both of which were anticipated by the White Paper to
contribute signicantly to energy production.
Irrespective of this, the RE White Paper continues to provide the basis for Government
investment and implementation in the renewable energy sector, supporting the
development of a sustainable market share for clean energy, as anticipated by the DME
at the time.
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The Department of Environmental Affairs (DEA) National Climate Change Response Policy White Paper
of 2011 is the third inuential policy paper that supported the countrys renewable energy aspirations.
South Africas renewable energy trajectory received an unexpected ally in the prominence and
visibility of global climate change and mitigation efforts as well as the countrys national commitments
to emission reductions. The rst related United Nations Conference was held in 1972, but it was
only in 1992, at the same time that South Africa was negotiating its transition to democracy, that
representatives from 178 nations met in Rio de Janeiro to discuss global environmental issues that
would become central to policy implementation. At the conference more than 130 nations, including
South Africa, signed a Convention on Climate Change and a Convention on Biodiversity20. This
international commitment, although possibly not recognised at the time, signalled an important step
in South Africas journey to a cleaner energy future.
The Climate Change White Paper was largely informed by a process known as the Long-Term Mitigation
Scenario (LTMS) formulation. The LTMS, led by the DEA, was a Cabinet-mandated process that took
place in South Africa between 2005 and 2008. The LTMS21 arose out of the realisation that South Africa
would need to contribute its share to mitigation, but recognising that the economy had been built
around energy intensive industry, which is heavily reliant on coal. The country also needed to address
poverty and inequality, so any move to a low carbon development path would require a major shift
in thinking and action. However, a potential advantage was that such Third World issues could be
strategically addressed in the process of creating renewable energy solutions, as the provision thereof
is manufactured from scratch, using the most appropriate and affordable technologies.
Research culminated in the development of scenarios that presented four proposed strategic options
that could be pursued. This work was submitted to Cabinet, which in mid-2008 adopted a peak,
plateau and decline trajectory. A strategic direction was set where the countrys emissions would grow
for a while, but peak between 2020 and 2025 at 550Mt CO2-eq, remain at for a decade, and decline
in absolute terms from 2030-35 onwards. This was a major step by a developing country in the climate
negotiations. In Copenhagen in December 2009, President Zuma internationalised this pledge. He
committed South Africa to take mitigating action that would reduce South Africas emissions by 34%
below the Business As Usual (BAU) trajectory by 2020, provided the international community supported
South Africa with nancial aid and the transfer of appropriate technology. The peak, plateau, and
decline scenarios (Figure 8) for carbon emissions were taken into account for the development of the
Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) 2010-2030.
1 800
Actual Extimated Modelled
Growth without
1 600 constraints
Current Develop-
ment path
1 400
1 200
Start now
Mt CO2-eq
1 000
0
1990 2000 2010 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2050 2060
Figure 8: South Africa Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission reductions and limits
Source: DEA
The Paper was the catalyst for public and private sector stakeholder representatives agreeing at
COP17 to 12 commitments aimed at achieving the governments goal of creating 300,000 new jobs
in the green economy of South Africa by 202024. These targets are not deemed to be unrealistic or
unreasonable given the experiences of other countries25, illustrated in Figure 6.
22 Dened by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Chance (UNFCCC) as actions taken to help communities and ecosystems cope with
changing climate condition
23 Dened by UNEP as efforts to reduce or prevent emission of greenhouse gases
24 Eberhard, A., Kolker, J. and Leigland, J. (2014) South Africas Renewable Energy IPP Procurement Programme: Success Factors and Lessons. PPIAF and
World Bank, pg 7
25 Walwyn, D.R. and Brent. A. (2015) Renewable Energy gathers steam in South Africa. Elsevier
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Putting policy into action
In 2010, the Integrated Resource Plan for electricity (IRP, 2010) was published as a notice under the
Electricity Regulation Act with the intention for it to be seen as a document that gives effect to national
policy and provides a planning framework for the management of electricity demand in South Africa
for the period 2010 to 2030. Additionally, it formalises and extends Governments aims as set in the
Renewable Energy White Paper of 2003.
In 2008 the country initiated a process to introduce renewable energy feed-in-tariffs (REFIT), to facilitate
the large-scale introduction of renewable energy into the power system. This approach was informed
by international experience, where feed-in-tariff structures have been widely and successfully used to
encourage and/or accommodate renewable energy. In 2009, the National Energy Regulator (NERSA)
published a tariff policy, proposing tariffs designed to cover generation costs plus a real after tax return
on equity of 17%, fully indexed for ination. This policy signalled an important position regarding the
commitment to renewable energy in South Africa.
The IRP 2010 estimated that electricity demand by 2030 would require an increase in additional
generation capacity of 52GW, 17.8GW of which will be from renewable sources Wind, Solar, Biomass,
Small-scale Hydro and Biogas - and 2.6GW from Large-scale Hydro. In 2010, at the time the IRP
was being developed, the electricity mix included less than 0.5% capacity from renewables when
excluding the existing Large-scale Hydro capacity (2.1GW). This aspiring target for renewable energy
was a deliberate policy adjustment to the IRP 2010, informed by the policy direction of the Energy
Policy White Paper, the Renewable Energy White Paper and the peak, plateau and decline scenarios
for carbon emissions26.
Published REFIT rates included R1.25/kWh for wind, R3.14/kWh for concentrated solar and R3.94/kWh
for Solar PV. In March 2011, NERSA announced a revision of the REFIT programme citing changes in
26 Eberhard, A., Kolker, J. and Leigland, J. (2014) South Africas Renewable Energy IPP Procurement Programme: Success Factors and Lessons. PPIAF and
World Bank pg 7
Published
REFIT tariffs27
2009
tariff28 1.25 3.94 2.1 0.94
2011
tariff29 0.94 2.31 1.84 0.67
The programme ran into several problems, which included the legality of a REFIT under the countrys
procurement framework and Eskoms willingness to support the programme by entering into power
purchase agreements. A legal opinion sought by National Treasury and the Department of Energy
concluded that the REFIT approach contravened public nance and procurement regulations. In
the latter part of 2011, NERSA terminated the REFIT programme and announced that a competitive
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bidding process for renewable energy would be launched, the Renewable Energy Independent
Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP). This approach has proven extremely successful.
By June 2014, South Africa had established 1.9GW new renewable energy capacity for electricity
production, including both utility-scale and small-scale installations, delivering in excess of 5TWh of
clean energy per annum into the energy mix. From a starting point of less than 0.5GW in 2010 (excluding
Hydro), this achievement represents a signicant shift in the energy landscape of South Africa, placing
it among the global leaders in renewable energy in only ve short years.
Although not often recognised, South Africas current renewable energy bidding
programme has its roots in the 2003 RE White Paper. The White Paper gave direction
to NERSA to investigate appropriate scal and nancial support mechanisms within the
relevant legal and regulatory framework that would promote the implementation of
renewable energy in the country. Mr Bukula recalls that some of the options employed
in the world at that time and identied for consideration included renewable energy
subsidies as well as renewable energy certicates (RECs) with trading and feed-in tariffs.
According to Mr Bukula, the starting point for South Africa circa 2006 was to dene what
would constitute renewable energy; this occurred amid an ongoing global debate
about how to dene and distinguish renewable from non-renewable energy. A suitable
denition has signicance because of the potential impact on policy and regulatory
efforts aiming to promote clean energy resources.
The second focus was to identify a suitable mechanism and way forward to enable the
implementation of renewable energy, attract domestic and international investment
and facilitate the effective integration of IPPs into the existing electricity system while
ensuring that national policy objectives were achieved. Mr Bukula highlighted the value
of international experience including that of Germany, Spain and Denmark and
industry consultation to inform the identication of the most suitable instruments and
framework for South Africa. The tremendous support from international donors, particularly
funding from the Danish and Norwegian governments and technical assistance from
Germany, is acknowledged with great appreciation. Based on this work and what was
generally considered global best practice, a renewable energy feed-in tariff (REFIT) was
introduced via Regulations issued by the Department of Energy (DoE). The Regulations
gave instruction to NERSA to design and implement the REFIT and formulate criteria for
procurement.
Design work was accelerated in 2009 in the wake of severe energy shortages experienced
during the preceding year, resulting in the rst set of REFIT tariffs published for Wind, Solar
PV, CSP and Small-scale Hydro in April that year. An inclusion for REFIT was incorporated
into Eskoms revenue determination to provide for funding, and the nalisation of the
Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) in 2010 provided a longer-term view to investors on
electricity planning and renewable energy objectives, creating an opportunity to move
forward.
Even so, Eskoms deteriorating balance sheet and the successive downgrading of its
credit rating raised concerns among potential investors, debt providers and developers
Mr Bukula notes that the scope and depth of industry consultation during the initial
development period created a foundation for the REIPPPP success. The extensive
industry engagement had built trust in the integrity of the process and the shared
interest of Government to carve out a mutually agreeable and sustainable solution
for the realisation of renewable energy in the country. As a result, investor interest and
condence weathered the lull during the transition from the REFIT to REIPPPP.
The many iterations and renements that were done during the development of the REFIT
and later incorporated in the REIPPPP, helped shaped the programme and provided
valuable pricing inputs to inform price oors and ceilings. Today South Africa boasts a
world-renowned renewable energy programme that is currently informing the design of
other programmes on the continent as well as the globe.
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The impact of policy shifts on RE deployment
It is often assumed that creating a conducive clean energy policy environment will deliver the desired
energy developments and environmental and economic benets. In South Africa, a clear policy
direction, including a target for renewable energy, was in place for almost a decade, during which
limited development in renewable energy took place. An assessment of policy effectiveness done
in 2010 by the University of Cape Town Energy Research Centre illustrated the actual and foreseen
impact of the major policy drivers on RE deployment in the country (Figure 11).
3 500
3 000
Renewable Energy Output (TWh)
(SWH) Testing
2 000 Cheap electricity
IRP 2010
1 500 T
T
Cheap electricity
T
REFIT Regulations
1 000 T
500
T T T
0
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
T T TT
TT
Energy Policy
White Paper
Renewable Energy
Policy White Paper
LTMS
Blackouts
2c levy
REFIT
Figure 11: The impact of major policy drivers on renewable energy deployment in South Africa, 201030, 31
As predicted by this assessment, it required renewable energy to be included in the national integrated
electricity plan and the initiation of the government-led procurement programme, REIPPPP, to create
market conditions that invited large scale renewable energy development. In this, South Africas
experience echoes that of international energy and climate change initiatives: that a combination
of policy tools are most effective in fact, essential to unlock market potential and achieve national
clean energy objectives.
30 Edkins, M. Marquard, A. Winkler, H. June 2010. Assessing the effectiveness of national solar and wind energy policies in South Africa. ERC
31 The 2c levy refers to a 2c/kWh environmental levy that was introduced in 2009 and imposed on all electricity generated from non-renewable sources.
Refer chapter 5 for detail of the SWH programme in South Africa
A sustainable energy system, comprising economic growth, environmental sustainability and energy
security performance, requires a sound, comprehensive energy strategy to balance these three
elements. Such a balanced energy system has been depicted as a triangle with the three sides
denoting, respectively: promoting economic development, providing energy security and access while
achieving environmental sustainability. An appropriate approach to development of a sustainable
energy portfolio has to take cognisance of how new development and capacity delivers against the
imperatives of the energy triangle.
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Figure 12: Energy Triangle (World Economic Forum Global Energy Architecture Performance Index Report, 2013)
South Africas enabling policy environment aims to achieve a balance between these three aspects,
focusing on achieving a secure and diversied energy mix, including more renewables, while supporting
the countrys developmental needs. As the policy landscape continued to take shape on the basis
of the Constitution and the two pivotal energy policy papers discussed in the preceding chapter, a
The previous chapter outlined the three primary, policy white papers that had shaped the RE landscape.
These serve as the basis for strategy development and detailed planning in the sector.
The Integrated Energy Plan (IEP) and Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) are the most important documents
shaping the countrys energy sector, and can be regarded as the second level of implementation, with
the policy papers being the rst. Often confused with each other, the IEP is Governments strategic,
coordinated master plan for the entire energy system that enables alignment and optimisation across
the respective energy carriers and provides a coherent and holistic energy plan for the country.
The IEP reects the three developmental elements of the energy triangle with the imperative of a
sustainable energy system apparent in its objectives: energy security, cost of energy, access to energy,
diversication of supply sources, minimisation of emissions, promotion of localisation and technology
transfer, water consumption and promotion of energy efciency32.
Subordinate to the IEP, the IRP (under the Electricity Regulation Act of 2006) comprises the national
electricity sector plan articulating electricity policy and providing a planning framework for the
management of electricity demand in South Africa. The IRP develops the preferred electricity mix and
delivery timeline with which to meet the countrys electricity needs over a 20-year planning horizon. The
IRP 2010, the most recent plan33 covering the period 2010 to 2030, estimates that electricity demand by
2030 will require an increase in generation capacity of over 46GW, of which 23.6GW is from renewables
(including Hydro). This represents 26% from renewable energy sources, including Hydro, towards the
total system capacity of 89,532MW planned for 2030.
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3% CCGT Other 1%
3% Pumped storage
5% Hydro
8% OCGT
Coal 46%
13% Nuclear
Renewables 21%
Figure 14: IRP 2010, targeted energy mix for 2030; OCGT = Open Cycle Gas Turbine; CCGT = Closed Cycle Gas
Turbine
The IEP and the IRP are energy sector planning frameworks that create the context for supply side
capacity development, and the issuance of a power generation licence for any new power plant is
subject either to demonstrable alignment with these frameworks or an extraordinary approval from the
Minister.
The National Energy Efciency Strategy (NEES), along with the National Energy Efciency Action Plan
(NEEAP) and the Biofuels Industrial Strategy (BIS), are two further sector plans with relevance to the
development of renewable energy resources in the country.
The NEES, with its supportive action plan (including the development and promotion of solar water
heating in the country), targets one million solar water heaters (SWH) to be installed by 2015.
The BIS adopted a short-term focus with the aim to promote the development of a robust national
biofuels industry, encourage investment in the biofuels sector and reduce the countrys reliance on
imported fuel. It provides for a 2% (or 460 million litres per annum) penetration level of biofuels in the
national liquid fuels supply.
National Energy Efciency Strategy (2005) set a voluntary target of reducing nal
energy demand by 12% by 2015;
The IRP 2010, which is the countrys electricity master plan, set a target of 17,8GW of
the countrys new build34 generation from renewable sources (not including large-
scale Hydro) by 2030;
In 2009/10 the President of South Africa and Minister of Energy committed to installing
1 million SWH by 2015.
In May 2011, the Department of Energy (DoE) gazetted the Electricity Regulations on New Generation
Capacity (New Generation Regulations) under the Electricity Regulation Act (ERA). The ERA and its
regulations enable the Minister of Energy (in consultation with NERSA) to determine what new capacity
will be procured in line with the IRP.
The New Generation Capacity Regulations establish rules and guidelines that are applicable to the
undertaking of an IPP bid programme and the procurement of an IPP for new generation capacity.
These guidelines include:
Ministerial determinations, as per the ERA and New Generation Regulations, give effect to components
of the planning framework of the IRP and the NDP, as they become relevant. In three separate
determinations35 by the Minister, 6,925MW have been determined for capacity from RE sources and
2,609MW for imported Hydro. A further determination for 6,300MW from RE sources was announced
by the Minster in April 2015 and gazetted on 18 August. These determinations provide a line of sight
and greater level of certainty to the burgeoning industry, interested project developers and investor
community.
Additional policy and regulatory developments that will facilitate the development of RE include
amendments to the Electricity Regulation Act, National Energy Regulatory Act, introduction of a
Carbon Tax and revisions to the Grid Code and the IRP.
34 Planned generation capacity that had not been previously committed for development. A further 1.1GW from RE sources had already been
committed for the planning period
35 Three determinations published: 1 August 2011 (RE) and 19 December 2012 (RE and hydropower)
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3
These, and a selection of the most pertinent regulations, supportive policy papers and plans from other
Government departments and agencies that delineate the energy development and investment
environment in South Africa, are provided below. Together these provide the current and proposed
or upcoming rules of engagement for investors and developers, on which to base their investment
decisions.
Relevant focus/
contribution
The National Planning Commission was appointed in 2010 by the President to develop a long-term
national development plan. Understandably a key focus of the NDP is the countrys ability to return
to a state of continued and uninterrupted electricity supply. This is to be achieved by increasing
the electricity generation reserve margin from 1% (2014) to 19% in 2019, which will require the
development of 10GW of additional electricity capacity by 2019 against the 2010 baseline of
44GW. Five of the 10GW are to be sourced from RE, with an additional 2GW to be operational by
2020.
Relevant focus/
Custodian of policy and planning
contribution
for the energy sector focusing on
energy security through diversifying
the countrys energy mix to include
Renewable Energy sources.
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The Act gives power to the Minister of Energy to determine new generation capacity and to
approve the generation and procurement thereof. A licence for generation capacity is subject to
Ministerial approval. This establishes an enabling environment for IPPs to enter the market, the bid
programme rules and guidelines as well as procurement of new generation capacity.
Amendment to the Electricity Regulations on new generation capacity (18 August 2015)
The amendment provides an extended denition of new generation facilities to include existing
generation facilities not previously supplying electricity to the national grid and/or an extension or
renewal of existing supply agreements from existing generation facilities for an additional period.
The Strategy approved the nancial support (subsidies) for a national biofuels programme with a
short-term strategy of 2% penetration level of biofuels in the national liquid fuel supply by 2013. The
regulations to enable this programme are not yet in place hence there has been no progress in its
implementation.
Pertinent for the implementation of the Biofuels Industrial Strategy of 2007 was the promulgation of
the Mandatory Blending Regulations for the blending of biofuels with petrol and diesel.
The Regulations come into effect on 1 October 2015. The Regulations provide for all licensed
petroleum manufacturers to purchase locally produced biofuels from licensed biofuels
manufacturers.
The Act prohibits the manufacturing of petroleum products, including biofuels, without a
manufacturing licence.
The Act authorises the Minister of Minerals and Energy to require licenced liquid fuel wholesalers and
producers to supply and sell petroleum products made from vegetable matter, i.e. blending of
conventional liquid fuel with biofuel. This is an important legislative vehicle for the development of
biofuels in the country.
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Regulation of the energy sector in
Lead authority
Relevant focus/
contribution
the context of national policy and
planning; licensing of new energy
infrastructure; regulation of electric-
ity and hydrocarbons infrastructure
tariffs.
Lead authority
Relevant focus/
Ensuring sustainable development
contribution
and environmental integrity; envi-
ronmental authorisations in terms
of the National Environmental Man-
agement Act (NEMA).
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) 2010, under the National Environmental Management Act
(NEMA) (Act 107 of 1998) and amendment Act (Act 62 of 2008)
The EIA process forms the framework for environmental authorisations. An EIA is required for RE
generation projects which are36: > 10MW; the facility is > 1 hectare; transmission power > 33kV;
and the construction of masts. Ordinarily applications are made to the provincial authority, but
as projects under the IPP are treated as Strategically Important Development (SID) applications,
these can be sent directly to the Department of Environmental Affairs.
Depending on the nature of the RE project the following additional licences or authorisations may
be required incuding:
Z Waste management and atmospheric emissions licence is required for high impact projects;
Z Biodiversity authorisation where endangered fauna and ora are impacted;
Z Water licence when taking, storing, diverting, reducing stream ow and altering banks;
Z Civil Aviation Authority authorisation when impeding an existing ight path;
Z If storing a hazardous material, such as oil;
Z Land use planning and sub-division requires the legal authority to do so;
Z Considering the impact on buildings or sites with heritage status.
Lead authority
Relevant focus/
contribution
Relevant focus/
Responsible for economic policy,
contribution
economic planning and econom-
ic development; focus on employ-
ment creation and the green econ-
omy.
The NGP is Governments framework for economic policy and the driver of the countrys jobs
strategy. Job creation is prioritised by outlining strategies to enable South Africa to develop in an
equitable and inclusive manner. The NGP targets 5 million new jobs by 2020. It also aim for 300,000
additional direct jobs by 2020 to green the economy, with 80,000 in manufacturing and the rest in
construction, operations and maintenance of new environmentally-friendly infrastructure37.
Supporting the NGP, the Accord was signed in November 2011 and is a comprehensive social
partnership designed to grow and develop the green economy to meet the NGP objectives.
Signatories to the accord include multiple Government departments, organised labour and
business. An objective realised was the development of the South African Renewable Energy
Council38.
Lead authority
Relevant focus/
contribution
Industrial Policy Action Plan (IPAP) 6, Department of Trade and Industry (2014)
The dti plays a critical role in supporting the local manufacturing base, which includes renewable
technology development and deployment. The IPAP is an annually updated, three-year rolling
plan for industrial policy implementation; since 2011 it has specically identied the energy sector
(Solar and Wind energy; solar water heating and energy efciency) as a priority for the countrys
industrial policy39.
37 Covary, T. and van der Walt, ML. (2013) Renewable Energy Policy Mapping Study of RSA. Unlimited Energy
38 Covary, T. and van der Walt, ML. (2013) Renewable Energy Policy Mapping Study of RSA. Unlimited Energy
39 Montmasson Clair, G., Moilwa, K. and Ryan, G. (2014) Review of Regulation in Renewable Energy. TIPS pg29
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How policy is integrated for RE delivery
The above policy environment integrates to deliver the permitting framework for the REIPPPP as
illustrated in the diagram below (Figure 12) indicating the relevant regulatory authorities involved.
Lead Lead
authorities authorities
REIPP
Procurement Environmental Authorisation
Programme
Waste Management License
(Biomass, LFG, CSP)
Land Use Planning (Rezoning, Consent Use or other) DAFF, Deeds Ofce
Bid
DoE, NT Preferred
and DBSA Bidder Civil Aviation Commision Authorisation Civil Aviation Authority
Grid Connection
(Indicative Cost and Timeline)
Eskom, NERSA
Grid Connection (Traversal Rights)
Gene-
Water Use License DWS
ration Imple-
License mentation
Agreement
& PPA Grid Connection (Budget Quote) Eskom
Financial Close
Commercial Operations
Closure
The set of approvals illustrated are not necessarily comprehensive, but covers the majority of required
consents in most cases. A comprehensive guideline for navigating this process, with full detail of each
regulatory requirement, has been developed by the GIZ and is available on the websites of GIZ and
their partners.
Provincial Government
Since the formation of the Union of South Africa (1910), the Republic of South Africa (1961) and the
rst democratic elections in 1994, the country has had a three-tier unitary Government model: central,
provincial and local. Under this model central Government formulates the countrys overall policy
direction from which the two lower, and subordinate, tiers of Government take their cue, though
each has sufcient autonomy to take action and implement programmes best suited to its priorities,
resources and circumstances. This level of independence was strengthened even further when the
countrys new Constitution (1996) moved away from an inter-governmental system by guaranteeing
certain functions. There were several reasons that prompted this change, but a key motive was that
provincial and local Government are closer to the public and thus best placed to respond to its needs.
Provincial frameworks that promote and support sustainable economic development are structured
differently in the respective provinces. Provincial frameworks and structures are also informed by the
availability of natural resources (Figure 8). Accordingly, each Province has taken a unique approach
to renewable energy developments. The table below lists actions and programmes to enable and
support national RE policy, undertaken by each of the nine provinces.
.
Limpopo Province
Z The plan recognises the importance of energy in the economy and the
potential for growing a green economy in the province. It identies Solar
and Biomass as the main renewable energy resources for the province.
Z Limpopo has silicon reserves and the second biggest silicone smelter in the
world is located in Polokwane. The plan identies potential for beneciation
of the silicon resource, production of components for solar panels and
production of solar chargers for cell phones and small-scale electrical
devices as industrialisation opportunities.
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Gauteng Province
The province has a small geographic footprint, but high population density
and concentration of economic activity. Solar and bioenergy from waste and
wastewater offer the most signicant resource potential.
Z In 2011 the nal Green Strategic Programme for Gauteng was published in
partnership with the Gauteng Department of Economic Development and
the Gauteng City Region Observatory (GCRO), with input from Gauteng
Provincial Government departments and Gauteng municipalities.
Z The strategic programme prioritises the shift towards green growth and
creation of green jobs and envisages the province as a renewable energy
hub.
The Eastern Cape has signicant resource potential in terms of RE generation, with
exceptional wind conditions by international standards, good solar conditions, as
well as substantial potential for energy from the biomass and biofuels sectors. The
province actively supports the development of RE projects and related industries.
Z In 2012, the Province adopted the Eastern Cape Sustainable Energy Strategy,
which focuses on improved provincial energy security and self-sufciency,
improved access to energy for all and the need to stimulate a green and
low-carbon economy that creates employment.
40 http://greenenergy-ec.co.za
Z The DEDEAT, with support from GIZ, developed and published a REIPPPP
Permitting and Authorisation Process Map and booklet for REIPP projects in
the Eastern Cape to support investment.
Z The DEDEAT issued a Bio Energy Support Plan and is currently, with GIZ
support, compiling a comprehensive Bio Energy Tool Kit for municipalities.
There are several biogas projects at schools and the research centre at the
University of Fort Hare (UFH) in Alice is working on ones with dairies, bakeries
and for general residential areas. All three universities in the Eastern Cape,
UFH, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU) and Walter Sisulu
University have divisions for research in RE.
41 www.greencape.co.za
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Z Atlantis is being positioned as a green manufacturing hub. A development
facilitation team has been established to assist potential investors;
streamlined application and approval processes are offered to promote
Atlantis as a green technology manufacturing cluster (see the case study
on page 103). Qualifying manufacturing facilities have beneted from
active support by Trade and Investment South Africa (TISA), a division of the
dti, and GreenCape.
Exceptionally high radiation levels make the province particularly suited for
power generation from solar energy. Besides solar, the province also has
potential for Wind, Hydro and Biomass power generation.
Z The strategy identies the following opportunities for renewable energy: solar
water heating; clean cook stoves; energy-efciency and energy-service
companies; municipal solid waste; Solar PV technologies; cogeneration
and waste-heat recovery; and hydrogen and fuel cell technologies.
42 www.ewseta.org.za
43 www.ndwc.co.za
Wind, solar, biomass (most notably sugarcane bre) and waste-to-energy offer
the most signicant potential for RE generation in the province. It is actively
exploring and supporting development of both utility-scale and rural RE projects.
Z In 2013, The Renewable Energy Development Hub (RED Hub) was launched.
It is partnership between the provincial government, eThekwini Municipality,
Ilembe District Municipality and a consortium of local and foreign rms who
plan to build and operate a RE technology innovation hub. The project is
expected to attract more than R2bn in private investment.
Mpumalanga Province
Biomass from agricultural and forestry waste is considered the largest RE resource
for the province. Opportunities for biodiesel production are also being investigated.
In implementing the above strategies, some of the provinces have set up industrial development
zones. The East London Industrial Development Zone ELIDZ was created in 2002 in response to the
need for a robust catalyst for economic development and industrial diversication in the country. It is a
state-owned enterprise set up by Government through the South African Industrial Development Zones
Programme (now the South African Special Economic Zones Programme).
ELIDZ aims to develop, operate and maintain modern infrastructure and attract strategic investments
for the region. Since inception, ELIDZ has prioritised green, environmentally sustainable industrial
development. As such, the ELIDZ targets clean industries only, including RE-related industries. Since
September 2014, ELIDZ hosts South Africas rst Solar PV panel manufacturing plant. The wafers aside
(crystalline silicon will still be procured in Asia), everything is locally sourced. These locally manufactured
panels meet all international standards and specications and can, therefore, supply to the local and
global market.
ELIDZ also hosts the Master Artisan Academy for becoming a solarteur (to date the rst and only
academy of its kind in South Africa), as well as a Renewable Energy Science Hub for research, in
association with NMMU.
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The 11,000ha Coega Industrial Development Zone, near Port Elizabeth, is South Africas largest Industrial
Development Zone (IDZ). Both national and international interest in Coega is growing and to date
investments total more than R40 billion; more than 15,000 jobs have been created.
The Coega IDZ is aiming to become a leading RE hub in South Africa by hosting solutions for RE and
opportunities in wind energy, photovoltaic and biomass-to-energy development. It offers available
land, connection to the Eskom grid via approximately 30 substations within the IDZ, proximity to logistics
solutions (such as the port), a lay down area within the IDZ designated for wind turbine components,
custom built warehouses to manufacture green technologies components, green technology
incentives and other IDZ-specic incentives provided by the dti.
The Eastern Cape province consumes approximately 9,538 (GWh)45 per annum,
i.e. 4.4% of the national total. With the introduction of the capacity procured
under the REIPPPP, approximately a third of the provinces power needs will be
produced locally from RE sources46.
A particular focus is the provision and support to, and training of, potential skilled
labour for the ever-increasing amount of RE sector projects in the province. Skills
for Green Jobs (S4GJ), a GIZ initiative, aimed to strengthen the relationship
between the RE sector and the training sector via the creation of the Green
Skills Forum in 2013.
South Africa has a robust policy environment that provides the enabling environment for the three
tiers of government to effectively implement. This provides the platform for a better functioning energy
sector that is vital for ensuring the citizens of South Africa can full their aspirations.
45 StatsSA. 2013. Eskom energy sales to the Eastern Cape calendar year 2013
46 Equivalent volumes; in practice all energy is fed into the national grid and available nationally
47 Adopted by the Eastern Cape provincial government in 2012
South Africas location, geography and size all play a role in providing it with multiple RE resources.
A coastline of approximately 3,000km that goes around the tip of Africa, starting from the desert on
the west coast and ending in Mozambiques warm tropical climate, provides favourable conditions
for wind power throughout the country. Most of the country is classied as semi-arid, meaning there
are large expanses of at terrain with high irradiation, making it ideal for solar power. The east coast
is tropical with large wood and sugar plantations creating biomass opportunities. Although a water
scarce country, opportunities for small-scale hydropower do exist and have been exploited over the
years.
Support from international agencies as well as Government have provided the technical studies and
empirical evidence of the quantity and quality of available resources required by policy makers,
developers and nanciers. The collaboration during the preceding decade between Government,
industry and international partners, has given rise to RE roadmaps or resource maps, providing collated
datasets and clear guidance for resource and technology development in the country.
South Africa is among the countries participating in the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA)
Global Atlas for Renewable Energy, which is used in the verication of the EUDP. The WASA project is an
initiative of the South African government, the DoE, and is funded by the Global Environment Facility
(GEF) via the South African Wind Energy Programme (SAWEP) with United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) support and co-funded by DANIDA (Danish International Development Agency).
The development of the Wind Atlas was achieved as a collaboration between several institutions,
each contributing specialised skills and knowledge to the project team:
Z SANEDI (South African National Energy Development Institute), which is responsible for
management, coordination, contracting;
Z UCT CSAG (Climate System Analysis Group, University of Cape Town) in mesoscale modeling;
Z CSIR (Council for Scientic and Industrial Research) for measurements, microscale modeling and
application;
Z SAWS (South African Weather Service) for extreme wind assessment; and
Z DTU Wind Energy (Dept of Wind Energy, Technical University of Denmark), partner in all activities.
The rst phase of the project was initiated in June 2009 and concluded in April 2014 with the production
of the rst ever Veried Numerical Wind Atlas (VNWA) in the world (see Figure 16). Additionally, the
project has produced a database of wind time-series data, a high-resolution wind resource map (see
Figure 17), an Extreme Wind Atlas (see Figure 18) and continues to deliver high quality wind data
from 10 wind measurement stations across South Africa. Data from the 10 measurements masts have
also been used to develop an observational wind atlas for each mast, and these were used to verify
the numerical wind atlas (see insets on Figure 16 and Figure 17). Guidelines and tools have been
developed to assist in using these products for planning and development of wind farms and off-
grid electrication and are publicly available, free of charge48. The level of accuracy and spatial
resolution of the data has proven invaluable for the planning and development of wind farms and off-
grid electricication and has conrmed for the rst time that South Africa not only has a good coastal,
but also a good inland wind energy potential.
48 WASA project information and presentations: http://www.wasaproject.info; Online graphs of measurement stations http://www.wasa.csir.co.za/; and
nal reports, maps, guides and data downloads: http://wasadata.csir.co.za/wasa1/WASAData (register for free and log in)
Figure 16: The rst veried wind atlas over South Africa showing generalised wind speeds at 100 meters height
(in ms-1). The location of measurement mast are show as yellow circles and the inset table indicates
how closely the wind atlas results match the observational wind atlas developed at each mast
Figure 17: High-resolution wind resource map showing Mean wind speed (ms-1) at 100m. The inserted graph show
the accuracy of the NWA (vertical axis) against the observational wind atlas(horizontal axis) at each
measurement mast
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WASA Phase 1: 1:50 yr 10 min wind speed (m/s)
20
25
30
35
40
Figure 18: Extreme wind atlas showing the 1-in-50 year 10 minute wind speed
The VNWA and database can be used for estimating the annual energy production of a wind farm
and the wind time series data for power system modelling. The high-resolution wind resource map,
which was developed from the VNWA with local terrain data, is particularly useful for the identication
of wind hotspot areas. The VNWA is thus ideally suited to inform the general siting of wind farms,
for strategic environmental assessment and wind farm planning and development. However, it does
not substitute local, on-site measurements that are required by nanciers of wind farms. The extreme
Wind Atlas is useful for selecting wind turbines that can withstand extreme winds, and equally useful
for informing national building standards, since wind loading is generally considered a key factor in
structural design. The WASA dataset has been used for verication of the IRENA Global Wind Atlas.
In March 2013, the Danish government approved further support (DKK12 million) to expand the WASA
project to cover the remaining areas of the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu- Natal and Free State provinces.
Through WASA 2, an additional ve wind measurements masts are being installed and will start operating
from October 2015. Further to the Danish support, in May 2015 the GEF also approved funding for the
SAWEP Phase 2. This support includes the expansion of WASA 2 to cover the remaining areas of the
Northern Cape province, with implementation expected to start early in 2016.
The overall aim of the SAWEP Full Size Project Technical Assistance was to
assist the South African Government and stakeholders in creating an enabling
environment for the commercial replication of grid connected wind farms and
the establishment of a vibrant and sustainable wind industry in South Africa. The
objective of the project was to install and/or prepare the development of 50.2
MW (i.e. 5.2MW from Darling Wind Farm and 45 MW from IPPs) of wind power.
At inception the project anticipated total emissions reductions of 4.6 million
tons of CO2 equivalent (over 20 years). The project was intended to contribute
to national development objectives such as; to diversify power generation in
South Africas energy mix; to set up a wind energy industry that could generate
employment and to promote sustainable development by making use of the
nations renewable, natural resources (such as wind). Key outputs include the
Darling Wind Farm, a Green Power Guarantee Scheme was established at the
DBSA to facilitate the signing of the Power Purchase Agreement with the City
of Cape Town; Wind Atlas Project for South Africa (WASA); the revival of the
South African Wind Energy Association (SAWEA) (through assistance with the
development of the Business Plans and initial Wind Energy Seminars) which
contributed immensely towards the IRP 2010-2030 target of 8,400MW for Wind.
Solar data and resource mapping (refer Figure 19) are being developed to promote the use of solar
energy in the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC)49 countries and to improve the quality
of satellite-derived solar data available for the area. Six universities from South Africa, and one each
from le de la Runion and Botswana, are cooperating in the Southern African Universities Radiometric
Network (SAURAN) to compile high-resolution, ground-based solar radiometric data, collected from
15 stations50 located across the southern African region. The initiative has benetted from extensive
49 Initial focus was on South Africa. Extension into SADC recently initiated
50 Thirteen of these measurement stations are currently located within South African borders. A map of locations is available at http://www.sauran.net
Chapter
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nancial support by GIZ, making it possible for measurement data to be publically available, free of
charge, in support of industry development.
Figure 19: Solar resource maps for South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (annual sum of direct normal irradiation and
global horizontal irradiation, kWh/m), GeoModel Solar51
51 Developed in partnership between Centre for Renewable and Sustainable Energy Studies (CRSES), University of Stellenbosch and Group for Solar
Energy Thermodynamics (GSET) at UKZN (2014), www.sauran.net
The Solar Energy Technology Roadmap (SETRM) is a joint initiative of the Department of Energy (DoE)
and the Department of Science and Technology (DST) supported by CSIR, SANEDI, the International
Energy Agency (IEA) and the Deutsche Gesellschaft fr Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), through
the South Africa-German Energy Programme (SAGEN).
The purpose of the SETRM is to prepare a guide for the local development of solar energy technologies
and their deployment, taking into consideration the relevant policy context and national initiatives. It
is a component of a broader Solar and Wind Sector development strategy intended to support the
development of green industries in the country. As such, the roadmap develops detailed information
of the countrys solar resources, and extends to the development of the Solar Sector, including
opportunities to stimulate a local industry, build manufacturing capabilities and create employment
opportunities. In recognition of the various national departments and industry players that have specic
interests in respect of the development of solar energy technology in South Africa, a wide range of
industry stakeholders (mainly represented through the two associations SAPVIA and SASTELA), relevant
national departments and a number of academic institutions, were involved in the drafting process.
The development process, which started in 2010, was based on the IEA methodology52 and concluded
in mid-2015.
The complete solar energy roadmap consists of three sector components: Concentrated Solar Power
(CSP), Solar PV and Solar Thermal Technologies, while drawing attention to research and development
into hybrid technologies and solar fuels. The draft roadmap currently estimates that 40GW of Solar PV
and 30GW of CSP can be developed by 2050 in South Africa.
Unlocking the envisaged contribution from solar thermal technology would require an annual
compounded growth rate in installed collector surface area of 25% over the next 15 years, a very
ambitious target. This would require signicant uptake in solar heating and cooling systems in the
residential, commercial and industrial sectors in the country.
The SA-STTRM maps out the development, support and promotion of solar thermal technologies in
South Africa and estimates that 4GW of solar water heating can be installed in the country by 2050.
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Bioenergy
Being a semi-arid country, the availability of bioenergy feedstock in South Africa is constrained,
accounting for comparatively low54 levels of development, with utilisation conned mostly to the use of
fuel wood by rural households. To better inform this view, the Department of Science and Technology
(DST) commissioned the development of a Bioenergy Atlas for South Africa. The atlas, expected to
be publicly available before the end of 2015, will signicantly strengthen the availability of quality
information on the topic, providing important input to policy and decision support.
Development of the atlas was led by the South African Environmental Observation Network (SAEON)
and National Research Fund (NRF), with the assistance of a number of collaborators in academia,
research institutions, and Government. This atlas was compiled over a period of two-and-a-half years
with comprehensive data and thorough analysis of availability, potential (captured in a bioenergy
resource map) and feasibility of the countrys bioenergy resource. In developing the atlas, the
potential, availability and application of biomass from household waste, wastewater and agriculture
were considered. Various process technologies were also evaluated with consideration of appropriate
and optimal sizes, location and type. In this, the atlas will provide invaluable guidance for project
development.
The objective of the atlas is to establish a platform for continued collaboration and data sharing
towards the increasing maturity of this national data resource.
Building on the work of the Bioenergy Atlas, the development of a Biomass Action Plan for Electricity
Production (BAPEPSA) was initiated in November 2014. The project participants include Government
departments the DoE and Department of Public Enterprise (DPE) as well as state owned companies
(Eskom and SAFCOL), research institutions (SANEDI and University of Stellenbosch) and non-governmental
organisations, i.e. WWF. It is co-funded by the Dutch government, through the Netherlands Enterprise
Agency, and Eskom. The focus of the initiative is on the use of woody biomass and agricultural waste,
for electricity generation (both on- and off-grid applications) in the South African context. BAPEPSAs
primary objective is to identify and address the requirements for creating an environment that would
enable and promote the utilisation of biomass resources in South Africa. It will also look at formulating
54 Ms. Mokgadi Modise, Chief Director: Clean Energy. 2013. Renewable Energy Resource Assessment in South Africa. Africa CEC session 3_RSA Department
of Energy_Modise_220613
The outcome will be prioritised actions with timelines and responsibilities for addressing market barriers
and developing market opportunities in South Africa.
Small-scale Hydro
Small-scale Hydropower is a proven, mature technology with a long track record. Although not well
documented, small-scale55 Hydro technology has played an important role in the provision of energy
to urban and rural areas in South Africa. The gold mines at Pilgrims Rest, for example, were powered
by two 6kW hydro turbines as early as 1892. Two years later, a 45kW turbine augmented those turbines
to power the rst electrical railway in 189456.
In South Africa 247MW potential for new small-scale Hydro development is believed to exist in the rural
areas of the Eastern Cape, Free State, KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga57 and embedded in water
transfer and gravity-fed systems throughout the country. Of the countrys hydro potential, South Africa
only has an installed capacity of 38 MW.
KIMBERLEY
BLOEMFONTEIN
DURBAN
BISHO
CAPE TOWN
Figure 20: South African Renewable Resource Data - Micro Hydro Power Potential (DME, Eskom, CSIR, 2001)
55 An upper limit of 10MW installed capacity is used when referring to small-scale hydropower (new denition of up to 40MW introduced in June 2014,
smallhydroworld.org)
56 Klunne, W. J. 2013. Small hydropower in Southern Africa an overview of ve countries in the region. CSIR
57 Barta, B. 2002. Capacity building in energy efciency and renewable energy. Baseline study on Hydropower in South Africa and Barta, B. 2011.
Renewable energy: hydropower
58 DWA (now DWS). 2011. Appraisal of Feasibility of Retrotting Mini Hydropower Plants on DWA Dams.
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Currently Eskom is operating four large hydropower stations and two small hydro power stations,
while local municipalities own at least two operational systems. Integrated in the water infrastructure
eight systems are currently operational with a substantial number currently at different stages of
development. Next to a very substantial number of privately owned systems, six IPPs are currently
feeding power into the national grid (three of which are part of the REIPPPP) and it is estimated that
between 50 and 60 systems have been installed underground in mines in the country. No recent study
has been conducted on the full potential of hydropower in South Africa.
To support the development of small-scale Hydro resources, the South African government, through the
Departments of Energy, Water and Sanitation and National Treasury, conducted a feasibility study58 in
2011 for small-scale hydropower at twenty-six dams; part of the National Water Resource Infrastructure
under the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS). The study identied 22 sites with high potential
feasibility for development. Based on the study ndings, policy to regulate the development of these
resources is being augmented by the DWS.
With consideration of the resource mapping, it is evident that the type and extent of RE opportunities
vary among provinces; the most prevalent RE opportunities per province are indicated in Figure 21.
RE resources not shown are not absent, but relatively small compared to the highlighted resource
opportunities. For instance, landll and cogeneration opportunities exist in all large cities and are not
specically shown here.
Limpopo
North West
Solar
Solar Biomass Mpumalanga
Biomass
Northern Cape
Solar (incl. CSP) Gauteng
Wind Solar
Hydro
KwaZulu Natal
Solar
Wind Free State
Eastern Cape Solar
Solar (limited) Hydro
Wind
Hydro
Biomass
South Africas sizable footprint of plentiful RE resources have been well documented and has been
well-accepted by investors and developers. Efforts to expand and rene resource maps with high
quality, credible data are continuing.
58 DWA (now DWS). 2011. Appraisal of Feasibility of Retrotting Mini Hydropower Plants on DWA Dams.
The number of industry stakeholders reects the wealth of resources South Africa offers. Entities with
interest in the development of RE and the green economy span a wide range of stakeholders, including
various national departments and industry players, academia, local/international institutions and the
private sector, as illustrated in Figure 22.
SO CIETY l p
VILations Ge
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al
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KfW ere
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SECO irec
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Greenpeace t
GEF
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REEEP t
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SEA ec
GEEREF Dir
us DST
WWF ISES foc
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pr i
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SAWEA Network
RE
Commercial RE GreenCape EDD
SAPVIA
Banks in DoE DEA
SESSA
SASTELA
SA
NERSA
The dti
SAIPPA
CoGTA
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REIPPs
t
GOV
it
Parliment and
TOR
SAIBA SANEDI
i
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e
parlimentary
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SAREC committees
IDC
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E
CSIR CEF
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R
DBSA
Eskom N
E
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AT
EN
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pl
search centres
T
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I
PR en
tat
ion
ent
ities
Interest in sustainable energy practices has a long history in South Africa and was active even prior to
the release of the Energy White Paper in 1998. Of course, during those early days it represented a very
small, but vocal, percentage of the overall population. The Sustainable Energy Association of South
Africa (SESSA) was founded in 1974 by academics and other enthusiasts. SESSA is a national section of
the highly regarded International Solar Energy Society (ISES), which was formed in 1954 and became
a United Nations accredited body in 1963. Lobbying for RE prior to the release of the Renewable
Energy White Paper in 2004 was difcult funding was unavailable, the technology was expensive and
unproven to many but, most importantly, commercial opportunities were virtually non-existent. During
this time the work of a few committed individuals and funding provided by international agencies
made all the difference. An example is the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which
funded the Market Survey of Solar Water Heating in South Africa. At the time little attention was given
to Solar Water Heaters59 (SWH) as there was an over-supply of electricity, tariffs were cheap and there
were many vested interests to maintain the status quo of electric water heaters. The study, published
59 Market Survey of Solar Water Heating in South Africa for the Energy Development Corporation (EDC) of the Central Energy Fund (CEF) by Dieter Holm
for SolaSure
60 http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/jun/01/how-renewable-energy-in-south-africa-is-quietly-stealing-a-march-on-coal
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5
in 2005 but started a few years earlier, was seminal in the launch of a SWH incentive programme
launched and funded by national Government in 2008. This is not an isolated example. Additional
instances of early support are listed below and serve to illustrate rather than provide a denitive list:
Z Concentrating Solar Power for Africa Study (1999), World Bank $0.75m;
Z RE Market Transformation (2007), GEF World Bank $6m;
Z Darling Wind Project (2001), Danish Development Assistance Programme DKK15.1m;
Z South Africa Wind Atlas (2008), Danish Development Assistance Programme DKK10m and the
GEF UNDP; and
Z The GTZ (currently GIZ) supported research into the viability of solar cookers for South Africa (1996-
2000), 3 million.
For all the good work done by industry associations, which had grown in numbers by 2005, in response
to the pronouncements made in the Energy (1998) and Renewable Energy White Papers (2004) to
represent the various RE resources (such as Wind, Solar PV, CSP and others), they remained under-
funded, lacked inuence and remained unstructured. This changed with the announcement of the
REFIT programme in 2009 and the subsequent change to REIPPPP shortly after. The CEO of the South
African Renewable Energy Council (SAREC), aptly described the resulting shift as follows: In the last
16 years the best way to describe it [the transition to RE sources] is that its a rocket launch after a very
slow countdown.60
The sector has attracted foreign interest and investment, with many of the worlds leading RE companies
setting up ofces in the country. Local companies also recognised the opportunities and expanded
their services; for example, all investment banks are now funding projects, many of the large legal rms
have introduced legal services to support the industry and consulting companies are providing RE
services. All of these were largely non-existent prior to 2008. In addition to private sector companies,
each technology has started its own industry association. The main industry associations are:
Z South African Wind Energy Association (SAWEA): Representing the wind industry, membership
is made up of national and international entities in the entire wind energy supply chain. The
association is afliated to the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC). SAWEA has been instrumental
in securing a large share of the total planned capacity for Wind energy in the IRP 2010. SAWEA,
in partnership with the GWEC, has successfully established the annual WINDABA industry
conference.
Z South Africa PV Industry Association (SAPVIA): A not-for-prot association representing members
largely made up of developers, manufacturers and service providers operating within the
Photovoltaic (PV) industry. The association is devoted to promoting the growth of South Africas
Solar PV electricity market and representing the industry to provincial and national Government.
Z Southern African Solar Thermal and Electricity Association (SASTELA): Promoting the deployment
of Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) stations as well as the localisation and industrialisation of CSP
components in the SADC region.
Z Sustainable Energy Society of South Africa (SESSA): The longest standing sustainable energy
association in South Africa was founded in 1974. It is a member of the International Solar Energy
Society (ISES). SESSA supports energy efciency and RE with the focus on Solar Water Heating and
small scale (residential) PV installations.
Z South African Independent Power Producers Association (SAIPPA): The association promotes the
interest of IPPs, and considers all energy generation.
Z Southern Africa Biogas Industry Association (SABIA): Established to represent the diverse biogas
industry in South Africa. SABIA aims to promote the needs of industry stakeholders and facilitate
the development of a prosperous biogas industry in Southern Africa.
60 http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/jun/01/how-renewable-energy-in-south-africa-is-quietly-stealing-a-march-on-coal
SAREC is now fully constituted, has an ofce in Johannesburg and fulltime staff. This was largely achieved
with the nancial support of the GIZ SAGEN programme. The main objective of SAREC is to promote
the RE sector in South Africa by acting as an umbrella body to the industry associations representing
specic RE technologies (such as Wind, Solar and Biogas) and to act as a collective custodian and
voice for the RE industry in South Africa.
Mr
M Moeketsi Thobela, CEO of the South African Photovoltaic Industry Association
((SAPVIA)
Mr Thobela was appointed as the CEO of SAPVIA in October 2014. An electrical engineer
born in Benoni, east of Johannesburg, he has worked at Eskoms nuclear power station
and more relevantly was part of the team that developed wholesale tariff at Eskom.
For Mr Thobela, three projects stand out that supported the development of the RE
industry; (i) the DANIDA62-funded establishment of the Renewable Energy Finance and
Subsidy Ofce (REFSO), at the then Department of Minerals and Energy, to provide
capital grants to qualifying RE projects. National Treasury (NT), which was a bit sceptical
at the time about prospects for the edgling RE industry, had nevertheless set aside R14
million, over three years, for this purpose. REFSOs launch towards end-2005 was, however,
a bittersweet victory as the funding at its disposal was inadequate to support projects
meaningfully. Consequently, the uptake of grants was initially slow, which ironically risked
conrming NTs view that there was no market to support. But the REFSO team nally
got it right and six projects, with a total installed capacity of 23.9MW, were subsidised
under the capital grant programme. A further notable achievement was that, during
the preparation of the REFSO project, the idea to introduce a levy on the electricity tariff
to fund a REFIT, was developed. This was presented to NERSA and, in Mr Thobelas view,
planted the seed for the creation of the 2006 Request for Proposals (RFP) that called for
a study to develop a REFIT for South Africa. REFIT eventually paved the way for REIPPPP.
(ii) The second project was with the Norwegian government, and incorporated support
for small-scale Hydropower projects. This included support for feasibility studies, as well
as setting up guidelines for assessing applications for water use licences, as in such cases
use was understood as non-consumptive.
(iii) The third milestone project was the GEF- and World Bank-supported Renewable
Energy Market Transformation (REMT) programme, a matching grant facility that was
co-funded by the DoE and administered by the Development Bank of Southern Africa
(DBSA). REMT provided grant funding for power generation projects and solar water
heating initiatives in South Africa.
61 National Economic and Labour Council, a vehicle for cooperation between Government, Labour, Business and community organizations. It focuses
on problem-solving and negotiation on economic, labour and development issues, and related challenges facing the country
62 Danish Development Agency
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A
Advocate Johan van den Berg, CEO of the South African Wind Energy Association
((SAWEA)
Mr Van den Berg is the CEO of the South African Wind Energy Association (SAWEA), the
Chair of both the South African Renewable Energy Council (SAREC) and the African Private
Sector Focal Point for the Africa-EU Energy Partnership. A barrister, he has spent 18 years in
dispute resolution; environmental mediation; climate change avoidance/emissions trading
and RE in southern Africa. He is a member of the Ministerial Advisory Committee on Energy.
For Mr Van den Berg, the birth of the RE industry was the Darling wind farm demonstration
project in the Western Cape. The site was rst identied and secured in 1997, but it took
11 years before it started producing electricity in 2008. As a director of the company from
2005 until 2008, he learned the trade on this project. Mr Van den Berg reects that, during
that time, Darling was the beacon of hope for the RE industry and became the centre
piece of successive conferences in 2002 (World Wind Energy Conference in Cape Town
and the World Summit of Sustainable Development in Johannesburg). The then minister of
Minerals and Energy, Ms Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, also provided strong support.
It was to be expected that the rst RE project in the context of South Africas coal-
dominated electricity generation was not going to be straightforward, and the project
was not short of controversy, nancial constraints, contractual disputes and other issues
that resulted in delays, nancial losses and a reduction of output from 13 to 8GWh. It also
did not result in the RE oodgates opening, as was hoped at the time. However, many
positives were derived. It created human capacity with several individuals involved
with the process still working in Government and the private sector; resulted in training
programmes being developed; identied the regulatory issues which needed to be
addressed; and ultimately demonstrated to everybody what a wind farm looks like.
Mr Van den Berg believes that many deserve credit, though without the perseverance of
Herman Oelsner and the nancial support of DANIDA, the project would probably have
faltered. The Darling wind farm project gave SAWEA impetus and focus and resulted in
it being operational before the REFIT and REIPPPP programmes came into being. This
was a unique situation as the international norm is for industry associations to form after
commercial certainty has been secured. The converse allowed the association to be
ahead of the curve and help shape the industry.
Post-2005, the RE programme beneted greatly from GIZ support. For Mr Van den Berg they
played a crucial role early on with their focus on capacity development and by organising
study tours for industry and Government ofcials. The obvious benet of these study tours was
the demonstration effect of visiting international RE projects. The second, and in his opinion
the more crucial benet, was that these trips facilitated discussions between the stakeholders
in a conducive environment, creating new relationships between industry and Government.
Mr Van den Berg believes that it was on one these trips that NERSA realised the urgency
of introducing an RE programme if the country was to have any chance of reaching its
10,000GWh RE target by 2013. This contributed to the accelerated publication of the
REFIT tariffs, which in turn resulted in an investment of over R500 million by international
companies in feasibility studies, establishing local ofces and preparation.
GIZ went on to support the establishment of SAREC by providing funding of R1 million over
an eighteen month period. This paid for constituting the association, securing ofces and
developing a promotional video. The ability of SAREC to organise itself in such a short
period of time enabled it to be part of the Green Economy Accord with a direct line to
national Government.
As the CEO of SAREC and SAWEA, Mr Van den Berg continues to contribute to the RE industry.
He is positive about the future of RE in South Africa, which he ascribes largely to the existence
of a world class REIPPPP and the IPP Ofce, which he considers to be a beacon of excellence.
Historically, in terms of renewables, solid biomass and waste represented the largest renewable energy
(RE) contributor in South Africa, estimated at 10%63 of total, primary energy consumption in 2010. The
largest share of biomass energy has been consumed in the residential sector among rural and low-
income, urban households for cooking and space heating. Although a RE source, Biomass in this
application is not always utilised in a sustainable way. A smaller share of biomass energy, mostly in the
form of agricultural waste or by-products, has been used in industrial processes or for on-site electricity
generation. Other small-scale RE applications include decentralised energy services (such as solar and
wind pumps) in remote, non-electried areas. Measures implemented to displace electricity usage
include passive solar design and solar water heating. None of these, however, made a marked impact
on total energy consumption in the country.
Prior to 2012, the contribution of RE to modern energy applications was limited to a small number of
initiatives. Only Hydropower made a small, but recognisable contribution to mainstream electricity
production.
In the wake of the 2003 Renewable Energy White Paper, a handful of pioneering organisations,
companies and individuals led the way in developing RE generation projects. Despite the national
policy direction, the regulatory and legislative environment for RE across all spheres of Government
remained unchartered. Successful delivery of a RE project during this time relied in equal measure on
technical and nancial rigour as it did on perseverance and commitment to develop and navigate the
regulatory requirements for generation licences, water use licences, environmental impact approvals
and local bylaws, among others. It also required power purchase agreements to be established with
local authorities under the stringent guidelines of the Municipal Finance Management Act (MFMA).
These projects often had to draw on international donor funding support or supplemental, green
funding mechanisms including Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) to offer a cost-competitive
alternative to low cost national electricity supply. The unwavering commitment to RE solutions and
perseverance demonstrated in an environment that was either not conducive to, or new to (and
therefore mostly ignorant of) RE, make acknowledging and celebrating the achievements of the early
trailblazers and their projects all the more important.
A few of the pioneering initiatives that demonstrated successful RE applications in the South African
context in the decade to 2012 include Bethlehem Hydro, eThekwini Landll Gas, Darling Wind Farm
and PetroSA Biogas Power projects.
63 IIED Brieng, REEEEP. Aug 2013. South Africa biomass energy: little heeded but much needed; and Holm, D. Banks, D., Schfer, J. Worthington, R.,
and Afrane-Okese, Y. March 2008. Potential of RE to contribute to national electricity emergency response and sustainable development. Renewable
Energy Brieng Paper for the Trade and Industry Policy Studies (TIPS)
Developer: Various
Date project commissioned: 2006 and 2008 (initial investigation in 1994, rst contact with
Carbon Fund 2001)
Commercial arrangement: The capital and operating expenditures of the project are
supported by two revenue streams: the sale of carbon credits and the sale of electricity.
The electricity sale was facilitated through a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) between
the eThekwini Cleansing and Solid Waste Department (as the project developers) and the
municipalitys Electricity Distribution Utility at a rate equivalent to the Eskom standard.
Challenges: As the project was the rst of its kind in South Africa, several barriers had to
be overcome throughout the process. Low electricity prices, at the time, impacted on the
nancial viability of the project. There were lengthy Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
processes. Community and stakeholder education and engagement, relating to the new
concept, had to be carried out. Municipal procurement processes had to be negotiated.
There were extensive and costly monitoring and verication requirements to qualify for
carbon credits and, to add to the degree of difculty, the carbon price collapsed. Lastly,
the project required an attitude of learning by doing from all participants.
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Highlights: A rst of its kind in landll gas-to-electricity and the rst registered and veried
CDM project in South Africa.
Z It has created permanent jobs within the City and own generation contributes to
reducing municipal electricity costs.
Z The City also visibly demonstrates its strong commitment to carbon mitigation and
carbon abatement, as well as to improving air quality for the surrounding communities.
International support or supplemental funding: World Bank-PCF, the dti, DoE (under the
REFSO scheme), French Development Bank, eThekwini Municipality and reliance on the
sale of Carbon Emission Reductions (CERs) under the UNFCCC64 Cleaner Development
Mechanism to made the project viable.
PetroSA Biogas-to-Energy65
Developer: MethCap, a WSP Group Company, the Central Energy Fund (CEF), NRG and a
group of empowerment investors.
Commercial arrangement: Plant owned, operated, and maintained by MethCap SPV1 (Pty)
Ltd. Established as an on-site IPP, nanced from two essential revenue sources: Electricity
sales to PetroSA and the sale of Certied Emissions Reductions through the CDM.
Description: Waste biogas from the treatment of waste process water (using anaerobic
digesters) is captured, piped to three GE Jenbacher reciprocating gas engines to generate
electricity that is used on-site by PetroSA.
Developer: DARLIPP in partnership with the Central Energy Fund and the City of Cape
Town.
Date project commissioned: 2008 (site identied by project partners in 1997, sod turning
ceremony 2007).
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Commercial arrangement: Long-term power purchase agreement (PPA) with the City of
Cape Town.
Challenges: Being the rst large RE project in the country, the project tested many of the
existing but, up to that point, unused regulations:
Highlights: The rst of its kind in the country to generate electricity from wind power on a
commercial basis.
International support: A signicant portion of this project funding was provided by the Danish
International Development Assistance programme of the Danish government, GEF/UNDP.
Bethlehem Hydro
Commercial arrangement: Long-term power purchase agreement (PPA) with the Dihlabeng
Local Municipality, supplemented by the sale of carbon emission reductions (CERs).
Description: Comprised of two separate generation sites, i.e. Merino, a 4MW run-of-river site
located on the As River, and Sol Plaatje, a 3MW site located at the wall of the Sol Plaatje
Dam.
In spite of the innovation of such initiatives, the total RE power generation capacity (including
conventional Hydro, but excluding pumped storage) in the country was estimated to be less than
1,000MW69 in 201170 and the contribution to primary energy consumption reported as less than 0.5%
to the countrys total as illustrated by the contribution from various energy sources in Figure 23.
22% Oil
Coal 73%
Figure 23: BP Statistical Review of World Energy: South Africa, Primary Energy Consumption, 2011
68 AIJ was a precursor to the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism, to look at ways in which rst world countries could nance clean, green
energy in developing countries to obtain the benet of emissions reductions
69 Holm, D., Banks, D., Schfer, J., Worthington, R., Afrane-Okese, Y. 2008. Potential of Renewable Energy to contribute to National Electricity Emergency
Response and Sustainable Development. Renewable Energy Brieng Paper for the Trade and Industy Policy Studies (TIPS)
70 2008 data reported by TIPS brieng paper, Energy Information Administration Country Report, 2014
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To global recognition
Since 2011, with the release of the rst request for proposals, South Africas Renewable Energy
Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP) propelled RE into the mainstream
and, within the short space of four years, South Africa was catapulted into a world leadership position
with respect to RE investment and development. The 2014 ClimateScope71 study placed South
Africa third among 35 surveyed nations for its ability and potential to attract capital to low carbon
energy sources as well as the realisation of this potential. Among the 19 African countries included
in the ClimateScope 2014 investigation, South Africa held 43% of the total, operational, non-Hydro
RE capacity. This is 75% of the capacity of the other 18 African countries combined. As previously
indicated, South Africa is now also recognised among the top-10 countries with the largest installed,
utility-scale, Solar PV capacity and among the top-10 RE investing countries in 201472.
South
Africa
43%
75%
of the capacity
of the other 18
African countries
combined
71 The annual ClimateScope (published October 2014) was conceived and produced in partnership with the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) of the
Inter-American Development Bank Group. ClimateScope surveyed and analysed 55 countries. South Africa achieved third place overall and second
place in the category of Clean Energy Investment & Climate Financing due to the surge of investments attracted in 2013. The report motivates this
score with: developing countries to obtain the benet of an energy investment in 2012 and 2013
72 UNEP's 9th Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investments, 2015, Prepared by Frankfurt School-UNEP Collaborating Centre for Climate & Sustainable
Energy Finance and Bloomberg New Energy Finance, March 2015
As identied in the 1998 Energy Policy White Paper, non-utility generation or Independent Power
Producers (IPPs) were expected to play a key role in developing and producing new electricity
capacity in the country. The introduction of private sector generation offers multiple benets: it
contributes greatly to the diversication of both the supply and nature of energy production; assists in
the introduction of new skills and in new investment in the industry; and enables the benchmarking of
performance and pricing.
On careful consideration of the various challenges that had hindered private investment in the energy
sector, the establishment of a dedicated procurer of independently produced power in the country
was identied to enable market participation and deliver urgent electricity generation capacity. The
Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (IPPPP) was introduced as the primary vehicle
for securing private sector investment for the development of new electricity generation capacity,
thereby giving effect to the policy decision captured in the 1998 White Paper on Energy Policy73.
In November 2010, the DoE and National Treasury (NT) entered into a Memorandum of Agreement
(MoA) with the Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) to facilitate the implementation of the
IPPPP and to establish an IPP Ofce as supplementary capacity to the DoE in its role as designated
procurer of IPPs. While accountability for the procurement function resides with the DoE, the need to
establish a function and capacity to execute on the procurement mandate was recognised.
Initially, it was envisaged that the IPP Ofce functions and capacity will serve as the nucleus of an
Independent System and Market Operator (ISMO) that would manage trading of electricity at
wholesale level. However, the establishment of the latter remains uncertain with the end-state of the
policy, regulatory and institutional framework not yet dened. Pending resolution of this framework, the
IPP Ofce is expected to continue to deliver the procurement function in the foreseeable future.
Arguably the most important arrangement under the REIPPPP was the directive for Eskom to enter into
Power Purchase Agreements (PPA) with the IPPs selected as preferred bidders, securing an off-take
agreement for RE for the next 20 years. The PPA provides for rm revenue projections, which, in turn,
comprise the single most important criterion to render a power generation project bankable and
appealing to investors. The guaranteed power off-take from preferred bidders, as secured through the
PPAs, has provided the foundation for the REIPPPP success.
In addition, the programme has attempted to nd an effective balance between the seemingly
competing national goals of accelerated procurement of cost-effective energy at the required scale,
while enabling and leveraging maximised developmental benets for the country. The design of the
REIPPPP as a rolling, competitive bid window procurement programme, has attracted vibrant investor
interest locally and from abroad, with the potential to maintain and grow a pipeline of new power
generation projects.
73 The purpose of this policy is to: improve energy and capital efciencies in the national interest; encourage the development of renewable and
environmentally sound electricity generation technologies; and encourage more players to enter the generation industry in order to develop a
competitive power market
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The REIPPPP competitive bidding procurement process
STAGE 1
A bid round or bid window is opened with a request for proposals (RFP)
Request for issued to the market.
Proposals
(RFP)
T
STAGE 2
Interested bidders prepare and submit bid submissions in response to
BID the RFP within specied timelines. As minimum qualication criteria,
Submission
every project has to show a very advanced stage of development, as
demonstrated by:
Having secured land rights to the project site via ownership, leases or
T options;
Z Having certain permits in place, most notably an authorisation
under the countrys environmental legislation;
Z Having the whole project structure nalised, complete with
technology suppliers, EPC contractors and nanciers (both equity
and debt);
Z Fullling a range of technical requirements such as a yield
assessment based on at least 12 months of measurements or data;
Z Meeting minimum economic development requirements such as
job creation and localisation;
Z Offering an electricity tariff that is equal to or less than the
technology tariff cap R/kWh (if applicable); and
Z Providing a bid guarantee to Government.
STAGE 3
Qualifying bid submissions are adjudicated during an extensive
Preferred evaluation process using independent advisors before preferred
Bidders
bidders are announced by the DoE.
Announced
STAGE 6
Commercial operation date marks the successful completion and grid
Commercial integration.
Operation
Date
(COD)
Bid rounds have been implemented on an annual cycle. The progress of the
current RE portfolio through these key milestones in the procurement process,
are reected with milestone dates below.
5 Nov 2012
6 Dec 2011
BW 1 4 Nov 2011
3 Aug 2011
1 425 95%
9 May 2013
21 May 2012
BW 2 5 Mar 2012
3 Aug 2011 1 040 48%
~ Sep 201574
BW 3 29 Oct 2013
19 Aug 2013
3 May 2013 1 457
~ Sep 2015
Figure 25: Procurement milestones and bid window status for the RE portfolio as at
30 June 2015
Bids totalling 17.5GW, from 305 bid submissions, have been received in the
REIPPPP bidding process across all bid windows. From these, 6.3GW have been
selected for procurement. The number of qualifying and competitive bids in
windows 2 onwards75 well exceeded the available allocation or cap that could
74 Fifteen of the 17 IPP projects concluded nancial closure on 11 December 2014. Two IPPs still need to sign to nalise closure for the completed bid
windows
75 Bid window 1 submissions exceeded the available capacity cap, but a large number of bids failed to comply with all bid requirements. Non-
compliance was ascribed to the unfamiliar process and short submission preparation time (three months)
Chapter
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be procured. The ratio with which bids have exceeded bid allocations conrms
the signicant potential for RE in the country, but also the signicant market
interest in participating in the REIPPPP for developing RE supply capacity.
Continued and growing investor interest is testimony to the well executed bidding
process as implemented by the IPP Ofce. The credibility of the programme is
ascribed to the transparency, fairness and efcacy of the bidding process; it has
earned acclaim as a agship public-private partnership model for South Africa,
and indeed the rest of Africa during an assessment by the WWF76 in 2014.
Through the selected procurement approach and bid obligations, the REIPPPP has contributed to
industrialisation, skills development and broad-based black economic empowerment objectives. IPPs
have also been committed to enterprise, economic and socio-economic development goals over the
contracted 20-year operations period.
Annual bid windows allow for the incorporation of lessons learned, continued renement of the
procurement process and requirements as well as increased competitive pressure among bidders in
each subsequent bid window; this continually improves the cost effectiveness of the energy procured.
Learnings from the rst bid windows have informed, and will continue to inform and rene, the optimal
balance for realising national objectives in subsequent procurement windows. Some renements,
such as revised local content requirements, are already reected, while further renements will be
incorporated in the revised tender documentation for bid window 5.
76 WWF. August 2014. Enabling Renewable Energy in South Africa: Assessing the REIPPPP
Mr Mark Tantons interest in RE spans a long time. He has spent a signicant part of his
career in leadership positions within the Central Energy Fund (CEF) Sustainability and
the Energy Development Corporation, a division of CEF. A state-owned company,
CEF pursues the development of pioneering energy solutions for meeting the country
and regions growing energy needs. In this capacity, Mr Tanton had the opportunity
to develop RE solutions and manage a portfolio of RE projects long before RE went
mainstream in the country. This unique, local experience has proven of great value in
the private sector where he heads up Red Cap Investments, a company focused on
developing a portfolio of large-scale wind energy projects in South Africa.
Participation in the rst bid round of the REIPPPP was painful. Mr Tanton recalls this as
a period fraught with angst. Processes were well dened, yet unfamiliar, and there
were varying interpretations of what exactly was required. Many of the rst bid window
participants had already invested signicant effort and money in anticipation of the
REFIT, so for them much was at stake. Even so, not only project developers, investors and
lenders were affected by the high stakes. The REIPPPP had attracted global attention
and close scrutiny of both the evaluation process and advisors. The resulting caution with
which the process was approached made it excessively complicated and difcult to
navigate. Even for those bidders who passed the meticulous evaluation to be selected
preferred bidders, uncertainty remained as to the way forward and the likelihood of
project realisation.
Red Cap has since had a second successful bid in bid window 3. In Mr Tantons
experience, the process has been rened and simplied; greater familiarity and higher
condence levels of all role players facilitated a much easier experience. These same
factors have, however, given rise to greater market interest and competition.
Mr Tanton ascribes the success of the REIPPPP to four factors: sourcing the appropriate
expertise to design a robust process; dedicated procurement capacity; maintaining
alignment between the two key government role players (DoE and NT); and consistency
in approach. This has enabled market condence and attracted continued investor
interest.
From an industry perspective, Mr Tanton identied the most burning issues to be grid
capacity that is hampering cost-effective expansion of the programme and a clearer
line of sight on the procurement plans ve to seven years in advance. Industrialisation
relating to the RE sector would require certainty on longer-term commitments.
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RE capacity development taking big strides
Since August 2011, ve procurement bid windows have been completed under the REIPPPP. Preferred
bidders for bid window 4, the most recent bid round, were announced in April 2015 with a further
selection of preferred bidders from the same bid round announced in June 2015. Following the
announcement, it will take an estimated 12 months for IPPs to conclude nancial close.
Bid window 4 initially enabled the addition of 1,121MWs from 13 preferred bidders. Due to the number
of competitive and compliant bids received in bid window 4, the initial bid allocation was increased
with the announcement of an additional 13 preferred bidders offering a further 1,084MW.
Bid window 4 thereby brought the total number of participating IPPs to 92, and the combined
generation capacity77 that have been procured since the announcement of the rst preferred bidders
in late 2011, to 6,327MW (refer Figure 26).
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4 BW 5
28 19 17 2 26
selected selected selected selected selected
projects projects projects projects projects
Of the RE capacity procured, 3,922MW (from bid windows 1, 2 and 3) are at various stages of
construction or have commenced with commercial operation. By end June 2015, 37 IPPs had already
started commercial operation, adding 1,860MW capacity to the power system (i.e. 4% of the total
installed capacity78 in the country) within 2.5 years79. Construction lead times for completed projects
have averaged between 15 months and two years, delivering operational capacity to the system
within relatively short timeframes. The majority of REIPP projects have been delivered on time (or within
a reasonable window) and within budget (Figure 27).
Since November 2013, the growing number of operational REIPPs supplied 4.3TWh electricity to the
grid, 15% of which contributed to the system peak80 periods.
2 500
2 147
2 000 1 742 1 852
1 319 1 860
1 500 1 709
1 522
MW
988
1 000
1 045
500 321
26 639
191
7
0
June June June June June June June
2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015
77 The maximum rated output of a generator or other electric power production equipment under specic conditions designated by the manufacturer
78 Total estimated at 46.88GW consisting of 44.26GW (2013), CIA The World Factbook; 0.8GW, Unit 6 Medupi; 1,8GW REIPPPP
79 From bid window 1 nancial close in November 2012
80 System peak as dened by the Eskom Megaex tariff
81 Showing the RE from new build, not including 1.1GW of RE planned under committed build
Chapter
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RE making a tangible contribution to the power system
The value of the energy, demand and nancial contribution from RE procured
by the REIPPPP has been validated by two independent analyses. By June 2015,
1,850MW82 Wind and Solar PV capacity had been commissioned and were
producing and supplying energy into the national electricity network. Although
less than a third of the procured RE portfolio and still a comparatively small share
of South Africas total installed capacity, it already makes a visible contribution
to the power system during an average day (see Figure 29).
30
PV
28
26
Wind
24
22
20 OCGTs
(Diesel)
18
16
Hydro, pumped
14 storage
12
10 Coal
6 Imports, other
4
2
Nuclear
0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
Figure 29: Actual monthly power supply in South Africa, showing an average day for
each month, Jan June 2015 (CSIR Energy Centre analysis)
Billion Rands
Jan-Jun 2015 4.6 8.3 4.3
1.5 1.2 Wind
PV
3.1 3.1
4.0
4.0 3.6 < COUE @ 90 R/kWh
1.4
0.1 203 h X
2.0 52 GWh
0.1 0.1
Coal Diesel Total Value Total Total Renew-
saved saved fuel of nanical tariff ables net
savings avoided benet of payments benet
unserved renew- to renew- from Jan-
energy ables ables IPPs Jun 2015
A B C
Figure 30: Economic contribution, Jan June 2015 (CSIR Energy Centre analysis)
During this six-month period, direct cash savings from reduced fuel purchases
amounted to R3.6 billion (see Figure 30). The most signicant contributions from
Solar PV were seen during winter mornings and throughout the day in summer,
displacing the volume of diesel required for supplemental power during these
times (Figure 31). Wind power contributed around half of all RE produced during
the period. On average, peak production from Wind generation coincided
with the evening consumption peaks (Figure 31), reducing the need for costlier
alternatives to provide for peak demand.
1 000 35 000
900
30 000
800
700 25 000
600
20 000
500
15 000
400
300 10 000
200
5 000
100
0 0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24
Figure 31: Average 24 hour Solar PV and Wind production proles and average system
load for Jan Jun 2015
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5
These ndings were substantiated by research undertaken at Stellenbosch
Universitys Centre for Renewable and Sustainable Energy Studies (CRSES). The
CRSES analysis for quarter two of 2015 showed that the daily contribution of RE
was often greater than the supply shortfall, meaning that the frequency and
duration of load shedding is being averted or reduced. The study also showed
that the RE contribution is providing relief to the countrys pumped storage
facilities, allowing them to be used during peak consumption hours, when they
are needed most85.
Bid prices have fallen markedly from round to round. The average per kWh tariff for the portfolio,
in April 2014 terms, has declined by 68% when compared with the rst bid window (Figure 32). The
tariffs bid into the programme demonstrated the effectiveness with which the competitive bidding
process leveraged technology advancements and international price trends as well as the increasing
competitiveness of RE as a generation supply option.
3.00
2.77
2.37
2.00
R/MW
1.57
1.00 1.26
Not
34% 19.2% relevant 39% 0.77
BW 1 BW 1 BW 1 BW 1 BW 1
Figure 32: Energy weighted average price (R/kWh)86 per bid window (April 2015 terms)
The rapid rate of capacity ramp-up is a remarkable achievement corresponding with market
penetration rates achieved by global leaders in RE. In addition, South Africa is achieving this growth
rate cost effectively relative to international experience.
For the period from 2000 to 2014, the energy contribution from RE sources to
total electricity production grew by 26% in Spain87 and 20% in Germany88, i.e. an
average, annual growth rate of 1.7% and 1.3%, respectively. The introduction
of new RE capacity in South Africa has achieved a similar growth rate of ~1%
during 2014, which is expected to continue as commissioned REIPPs ramp up to
full annual production and more IPPs become operational during 2015.
85 Karin Kritzinger, senior researcher at the Centre for Renewable and Sustainable Energy Studies, Stellenbosch University. 8 June, 2015
86 Weighted average per bid window considering average, technology RFP submission price (published) for each bid window and the projected annual
energy contribution/share per technology type. Contracted price (at which power is sold to Eskom) per IPP was weighted with consideration of the
technologies and their relative, projected annual energy contribution (P50) (in April 2013 terms). BW 3 estimated rate incorporates the peak tariff (270%
of base rate) applicable to CSP. BW 3.5 is not included as it is technology specic
87 CSIR Analysis. 2014. RED Electrica de Espana
88 CSIR Analysis. 2014. German Federal Ministry for Economics and Energy; CSIR analysis
60
-72%
50
Feed-in Tariff in EUR-ct/kWh
40
From beginning
7.4 7.5 7.6
of FIT law in 2001,
yearly reduction
30 of FIT for new
instillations
2.0 2.0
10 Since April 2012,
1.3 monthly reduc-
1.0 0.8 tion of FIT for new
0.7 instillations May 2015
0.2 0.1 0.1 9 EUR-ct/kWH
0
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
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77
Wind and Solar dominating the current RE market
Bid windows 1 to 3 and bid window 4 sought to procure RE across the full range of RE sources in the
apportioned capacities and technologies corresponding to the IRP (Figure 34), while bid window 3.5
focussed exclusively on procuring additional capacity from Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) facilities.
S
10 000
15 834
9 000 6 327
9 20091 1 860
6 360
8 000 8 400 3 356
4 725 790
2 292
7 000 960
6 000
MW
5 000
4 709
4 000 2 609
0
3 000 - 940 Not
1 200
1 200 specied
2 000 600 25 210 110 195 400
100 18 42 0 19 0
- - - 10 -
1 000
0
Large- Solar Onshore Solar Landll Biomass Biogas Small- Small Total
scale PV Wind CSP gas scale projects33
Hydro Hydro (<5MW)
Figure 34: RE capacity planned, determined, procured and operational as at 30 June 2015
The composition of the procured RE mix has varied very little between bid windows and, in line with the
IRP 2010, Solar PV and Wind contribute the largest share of new capacity (Figure 35).
10 000 8 400
8 400
1 200
9 000 940
8 000 6 360
47%
4 725 53%
7 000 1 200
740
6 000
MW
5 000 3 357
2 700 2 292
4 000 2 800 600
500 79
3 000 43% -
36%
2 000
1 000 6% 9.5%
3%
0 1%
Figure 35: Renewable energy mix of planned and procured RE capacity , excluding large-scale hydro
Wind power was anticipated by both the IRP and independent researchers95 as the technology most
likely to contribute signicantly to the South African energy mix because of technology maturity and
established global capacity. Across the ve bid windows, 3,357MW was procured, presenting a third of
the capacity planned by the IRP 2010 and 53% of the procured portfolio.
91 Including 800MW committed build and 8,400MW new build for wind
92 Including both committed build and new build
93 Procured capacity reect contracted capacity at nancial close for projects that have reached this milestone. For projects in the later bid windows
that have not achieved nancial close the capacity bid is reected
94 400MW have been determined for small projects (<5MW) to be procured from an unspecied mix of Solar PV, Wind, Biomass, Biogas, Landll Gas and
Small Hydro technologies
95 Energy Research Centre at the University of Cape Town, Markal model, 2011
3 357
3.00
1 994
MW 2.00
1 207
1.00
649
0
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4
4 000
3 357
3 000
1 994
MW
2 000
1 207
1 000
649
649 639 559 787 1 363
0 151
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4
8 Projects 7 Projects 7 Projects 12 Projects
Figure 37: Wind capacity per bid window (as at June 2015; IPP Ofce analysis)
By June 2015, 790MW capacity from wind IPPs were already operational and delivering electricity onto
the power grid. The prices associated with wind projects in the last bid window had averaged 71c/
kWh, having fallen by 50% when compared with the rst bid window.
2.00
1.42
R/MW
1.00
1.12
0.82 0.71
0
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4
Figure 38: Average prices from Wind per bid window (April 2015 terms; IPP Ofce analysis)
Solar power, both from Solar PV and CSP, also offer mature technology solutions well suited to the
excellent solar radiation resources in South Africa. On the back of focused research and development
investments by both China and the USA97, Solar PV has seen the most dramatic technology and
cost advancements98 in the preceding decade. Consequently, rapid improvement in conversion
efciency coincided with signicant cost improvements. The timing and selected procurement
approach positioned the REIPPPP perfectly to capitalise on these developments. Solar PV bid tariffs
had decreased by around 75% from the rst bid window to 82c/kWh in bid window 4, making it a cost-
competitive contributor to the RE portfolio.
96 Rounding of individual values may cause an apparent discrepancy with the cumulative total
97 US Department of Energy SunShot Initiative
98 New or emerging technologies are typically subject to an experience curve. The experience curve suggests that product price will drop as production
volumes increase. Typically, the ratio is about 20 30% for each doubling of volumes. For new technologies the combined effect of learning (more
experience in manufacturing), technology advances and the economies of scale of increasing volumes, may accelerate the experience rate
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4.00
3.00 3.44
R/MW 2.00
2.05
1.00
1.10
0.85
0
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4
Figure 39: Average prices from Solar PV per bid window (April 2015 terms; IPP Ofce analysis)
A total of 2,292MW Solar PV capacity has been procured in the ve bid windows, contributing more
than a third of the total procured RE capacity. Solar PV projects were delivering 960MW into the grid
by June 2015.
3 000
2 292
2 000
1 479
MW
1 044
1 000
627
627 621 435 813
0 417 339
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4
18 Projects 9 Projects 6 Projects 12 Projects
Figure 40: Solar PV capacity per bid window (as at June 2015; IPP Ofce analysis)
Wind and Solar PV power plants have been the rst power plants from the RE portfolio to start
operations, steadily contributing additional capacity to the power system with each new successfully
commissioned plant (Figure 41).
350 343
317 316
300
130
208 212
GWh / month
200
170 104
113
150 123
113 104
213
100
87 84 169 168
60
58 43 37 131
48 98
50
31 85
26 66
47 53
44
23 26
0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Figure 41: REIPP growth in energy produced during 2014 (Eskom, CSIR Energy Centre analysis)
5.00
4.91
4.58
4.00
3.00 3.35
R/kWh
2.00
3.13
1.82 1.70
1.00
0
BW 1 BW 2 BW 3 BW 4
Figure 42: Average prices from Solar CSP per bid window (April 2015 terms; IPP Ofce analysis)
Half of the allocation of 1,200MW for CSP, as determined by the Minister, had been procured with the
completion of bid window 3.5. The exibility created by thermal storage and the benets it offer the
power system have informed a slight acceleration in the procurement of CSP compared to the IRP 2010
(Figure 41). More wind capacity has also been procured than what was foreseen to be operational by
2020, while procured capacity for Solar PV is still 500MW short of the 2020 target.
Capacity from small-scale Hydro, Biomass and Landll Gas have been comparatively small, but
commensurate with the anticipated contribution in the IRP. Generation from landll gas and biomass
power plants are less constrained by energy availability and typically offers higher capacity factors.
With higher capacity factors, these facilities make an important contribution to a more diversied,
cleaner energy composition.
1 500
1 000
MW
500
0
BW 1 BW 1 BW 1 BW 1 150 BW 1 627 BW 1 649
BW 2 14 BW 2 BW 2 BW 2 50 BW 2 417 BW 2 559
BW 3 BW 3 17 BW 3 18 BW 3 200 BW 3 534 BW 3 787
BW 3.5 BW 3.5 BW 3.5 BW 3.5 200 BW 3.5 BW 3.5
BW 4 5 BW 4 25 BW 4 BW 4 BW 4 813 BW 4 1 363
Prices contracted under the REIPPPP for all technologies are well below the published REFIT rates (refer
to Figure 10 on page 25). The REIPPPP has, therefore, effectively translated policy and planning to
deliver clean energy at very competitive prices.
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1
South Africas growing RE footprint
The geographic distribution of REIPPs corresponds broadly to the distribution of resource potential in
the country. Accordingly, the share of projects in the respective provinces reects each provinces
natural endowment of RE resources. Most IPPs are located in the rural areas of the Northern, Eastern
and Western Cape (Figure 44).
OW SH BM
LG CS PV
The Northern Cape, offering the most favourable solar radiation levels, has attracted the majority of
the Solar PV projects and all of the CSP projects. The province, host to 48 of the 92 IPP projects in the
country, is expected to contribute 3,566MW to the total procured RE capacity once construction is
complete.
The Eastern Cape has attracted 17 of the 92 IPPs totalling 1,509MW; the second largest share of the
total procured capacity. Corresponding to the provinces excellent conditions for the generation of
on-shore wind power, 16 of these are wind projects representing 43% of the procured wind power.
Eleven IPP projects are located in the Western Cape, contributing 592MW to total procured capacity.
The number of projects is shared roughly equally between six wind (458MW) and ve Solar PV (134MW)
IPPs.
The remaining 16 IPP projects are distributed among the other provinces, with Free State and North
West Province sharing ve each; Limpopo boasts three; and there is one IPP project per province in
Mpumalanga, Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal.
Bid window 3 included the rst Landll Gas and the rst Biomass IPPs as well as the rst projects in both
Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal.
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With the continuing, sharp decline in technology costs, Solar PV offers an attractive option for private
building owners and is, increasingly, expected to make a marked contribution to RE capacity in the
country. A Solar PV baseline study99 completed in 2013 as part of the South African Solar PV technology
roadmap, considered current trends and different penetration rates; it predicted the combined
commercial, industrial and residential installations of rooftop PV in the country is likely to be between
3.5GW and 11.6GW by 2035. A voluntary database of small-scale, typically rooftop, Solar PV installations
in the country had, by May 2015, recorded 43.8MW100 capacity established since 2011. Since the rst
publication of the database in January 2015 with 19MW installed, the registered capacity has more
than doubled. Among those listings that were specied, the majority of installations were recorded in
the commercial, agriculture, industrial and mining sectors.
Residential 4%
12% Agricultural
Industrial /
Manufacturing /
13% Mining
Commercial 57%
99 Maphelele, T., Standord, R., Kooverji, B. May 2013. Solar PV baseline report
100 Unveried industry project database: http://pqrs.co.za/s-a-solar-pv-list-2/as published 21 June 2015
Limpopo
North West
2 888
2 261 Installed capacity (kW) Mpumalanga
Installed capacity (kW) 6.59% 1 144
5.16% Percentage share Installed capacity (kW)
Percentage share
2.61%
Percentage share
Northern Cape
Gauteng
1 157
Installed capacity (kW)
13 267
2.64% Installed capacity (kW)
Percentage share
30.28%
Percentage share
KwaZulu Natal
Western Cape 3 263
Installed capacity (kW)
11 736
Installed capacity (kW) 7.45%
Percentage share
26.78%
Percentage share Eastern Cape Free State
605 1 331
Installed capacity (kW) Installed capacity (kW)
1.83% 3.04%
Percentage share Percentage share
Indicated as national
or unspecied
1 331 Total
Installed capacity (kW)
43 821 Installed capacity (kW)
3.04%
Percentage share 100.00% Percentage share
The trend is likely to accelerate with streamlined regulatory processes and greater clarity regarding
tariff structures (resolution of uncertainty in this environment has already been prioritised, refer to Figure
15 on page 38).
The Finance Minister, in his February 2015 Budget Speech, announced a nancial incentive in the
form of an accelerated depreciation for Solar PV RE installations. The announcement reinforced
Governments commitment to this initiative and the promotion of energy efciency and lower
greenhouse gas emissions.
Compared with the market gains of RE technologies in general, development of Bioenergy101 solutions
has been slow, despite the important initial contribution to RE in the country, as well as the signicant
market potential and contribution expected by the RE White Paper, 2003. Opportunities to unlock the
countrys bioenergy potential are therefore under development.
101 Bioenergy dened as energy generated by combusting solid, liquid or gas fuels made from biomass feedstocks, UK Bioenergy Strategy
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Biogas
Commercial scale biogas digesters that processes organic waste streams to produce methane as
an energy source, is increasingly common worldwide, but only a handful of installations have been
developed in South Africa to date. SABIA, the Southern African Biogas Industry Association, estimates
that biogas can contribute 2.5GW generation capacity in the country, employing waste streams from
wastewater treatment plants, food waste, manure, agricultural residues and commercial processes
including abattoirs, breweries and cheese factories. Biogas is the only RE technology included under
the ministerial determinations for which no IPP bids have been received to date. The DoE, SABIA and
GIZ are working to address this and the IPP ofce has revised the tariff on request.
Smaller scale biogas production facilities have been more prevalent in rural areas where there is
no electricity supply from the national grid. In terms of national legislation102, the owners of biogas
operations not connected to the national gas pipeline grid do not have to be licensed, but they are
required to register with NERSA. Less than 200 biogas operations have been registered in South Africa
since 2011, a small number compared with the vast numbers in both India (12 million) and China
(17 million).
In recognition of the barriers to biogas capacity development, the DoE has facilitated the establishment
of a National Biogas Platform in 2013 and have collaborated with the industry association (SABIA)
to host two biogas conferences in 2013 and 2015, respectively. The National Biogas Platform was
established with the aim to support and stimulate the development of South Africas edgling biogas
industry.
A national biogas strategy will be developed by the DoE in collaboration with GIZ and a draft is
expected to be released by March 2016.
Owner: Bronkhorstspruit Biogas Project (Pty) Ltd (BBP), currently majority owned by Bio2Watt.
Developer: Bio2Watt.
Capacity and annual energy production: 4.4 MW; 36GWh per annum (actual).
Commercial arrangement: Established as an IPP with a signed PPA with BMW SA. Power is
connected to Eskom network and wheeled through the municipal grid to the industrial off-
taker.
Description: Co-digestion biogas plant situated on a large feedlot east of Pretoria and
making use of mixed waste, including primarily manure, paper sludge, fruit & vegetables
plus abattoir waste streams. The Anaerobic Digestion technology is thermophilic and comes
from Denmark.
Challenges: To bring the rst commercial biogas plant to closure, Bio2Watt had to break new
ground and convert a number of sceptical stakeholders. The complexity of the transaction
and absence of a clear framework for small Independent Power Producers added to the
challenges and legal costs. There were lengthy processes for licensing, permits and EIAs
and alignment between governmental procedures. These were largely responsible for the
project taking sever years to be developed compared with the short turnaround times
which have become synonymous with the REIPPPP.
Highlights: Developing the wheeling agreement with the Tshwane Metropolitan, which, in
its current form, had never been done before (nalised in 2013).
Z Executing the rst private deal (PPA signed with BMW in 2012), where a large industrial
manufacturer demonstrates its commitment to sustainability by purchasing 30% of its
power from BBP rather than from the utility or a municipality.
Z The rst commercial/industrial scale biogas plant in South Africa.
Z Successfully introducing the idea of waste used as a resource, where a culture of
dumping at landlls has always been seen as the easiest way to dispose of waste.
International support: Development support was largely from the Dutch government (RVO)
as well as the Norwegian Development Fund (Norfund). The REMT and Energy & Environment
Partnership (EEP) funded by the Finish government also supported this initiative.
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Biomass
In May 2015, the IPP ofce released a request for proposals for
cogeneration projects and the announcement of preferred
bidders is expected by the end of 2015.
Biofuels
Within the family of bioenergies, liquid biofuels have been most topical on South Africas developmental
agenda due to the inherent attributes, such as high labour intensity, potential balance of payments
savings103 and potential diversication of the countrys transport fuel mix. In 2007 the South African
government committed to a short-term goal in the production of biofuels amounting to 2% of the total
road transport pool.
Worldwide, biofuels are primarily employed as an instrument for reducing carbon emissions. In South
Africa, however, the main attraction of biofuels is centred on their potential to create jobs, support the
agricultural industry and rural development.
Globally, the adoption of biofuels has soared in the last decade, but still makes a negligible contribution
to the fossil fuel-dominated global market. Biofuels is most commonly used as transport fuel, but is more
expensive to produce than conventional mineral fossil fuels. Its inclusion into the fuel mix cannot be left
to market forces; it requires Government policies, such as subsidies and mandatory use of biofuels, to
stimulate the market. This will also be the case in South Africa.
While subsidies seek to level the playing eld with conventional fossil fuels, the cost-effectiveness
of achieving national goals under a subsidy scheme requires careful consideration. South Africa
intends to address the market imbalance with the establishment of a fair and favourable regulatory
environment, which includes:
1. Regulations regarding the mandatory blending of biofuels104, expected to come into operation
from 1 October 2015. These regulations make it mandatory for licensed manufacturers of petroleum
products (petrol/diesel) to blend locally produced biofuels into their petrol or diesel.
2. Revised fuel specications for the country, adjusted to allow for the changing fuel characteristics
associated with blending.
103 With no domestically produced crude oils, South Africa is heavily reliant on oil imports at a scale that contributes negatively to the balance of
payments
104 Gazetted August 2012. Refer Chapter 2 for further details
The Biofuels Regulatory Framework is being developed by an inter-Departmental Biofuels Task Team
(BTT), led by the DoE and comprising the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (DAFF),
National Treasury, Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS), Department of Trade and Industry (the
dti), NERSA and the Department of Science and Technology (DST), EDD, Small Business Development,
Presidency, Rural Development and Land Reform.
The BTT needs to address two important challenges in nalising the regulatory framework and the
subsidy mechanism in particular:
Z The biofuels subsidy will effectively be consumer funded, necessitating due scrutiny to ensure a
fair and transparent process for selecting projects, maximising job creation and achieving the
optimal socio-economic objectives.
Z At the same time, it requires the impact on the consumer to be kept as low as possible.
Z Ensuring value for money for subsidy paid to manufacturers of biofuels and the net benet of the
country with respect to its social development goals.
To meet these objectives, the current focus is on nalising details of the Biofuels Implementation
Framework, which involves:
Z Process for the selection of projects to be subsidised as part of the biofuels programme.
Z Ensuring the intended support and benets to agriculture is realised.
Z Minimised impact on food security.
Based on the success of the REIPPPP, it is expected that project selection will follow a similar bidding
process. Competitive bidding effectively supports the national objectives, allowing cost impacts to
be minimised, while incorporating the requirements for rural community involvement, job creation,
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equitable shareholding and the inclusion of previously disadvantaged people in the mainstream
economy as bid conditions.
In addressing concerns relating to food security, a Biofuels Feedstock Protocol has been developed
to safeguard the switching from production of food to Biofuels feedstock in the country. The protocol
favours the use of fallow land that can produce commercial and small-scale crops under rain-fed
conditions. Where irrigation is required, water use will be subject to a water use license from the DWS.
In addition, the Protocol prohibits the use of staple food products like maize and potato for biofuel
production and favours dual purpose crops. It also provides guidance with respect to preferred
production areas in different regions with adequate rainfall.
In order to limit the liability to the scus it has been proposed that the targeted 460 million litres be
initiated with 230 million litres and to follow an open competitive bidding process.
The proposed regulatory framework with associated funding support mechanisms and potential
benets of promoting biofuels is under Cabinet consideration, with a Cabinet determination on biofuels
expected before the end of 2015.
The REIPPPP has been the dominant force of the RE market growth since 2011. The success of utility
scale power projects has cemented RE as an indispensable component of the countrys electricity
mix. Market trends suggest that rooftop Solar PV is set to make a signicant contribution in the market,
even though the exact scale and speed of market penetration will depend on how the policy
environment is resolved. Alongside developments in the liquid fuels sector and the historic contribution
from woody biomass, RE sources are emerging as a cornerstone of South Africas energy sector. As
such, it is contributing to the national aspirations of secure, affordable energy, lower carbon intensity
and a transformed green economy.
This scope and scale of RE development in South Africa, across the diverse range of energy sources,
demonstrates what is possible when Government and private players share a strong commitment to
implementing a RE programme. South Africans are collaborating to realise one of the worlds most
progressive alternative energy plans, effectively tapping into the immense RE potential offered by the
countrys natural resources while doing it cost effectively.
Sustainable, clean, reliable and affordable energy supply is a critical component in economic and
socio-economic growth and development. In 2008, in the face of severe electricity supply constraints,
South Africa was confronted by the reality of prolonged underinvestment in the electricity sector,
presenting signicant risk to the stability of the economy and the developmental goals of the country.
This prompted, among others, the prioritised introduction of the REIPPPP that unlocked rapid, large-
scale development of energy generation infrastructure while serving as an attractive platform for
investors to participate in energy infrastructure opportunities.
The design of the REIPPPP as a rolling, competitive procurement programme enabled continued
renement of the process and increased competitive pressure among bidders in each subsequent bid
window, continually improving the cost effectiveness of the energy procured.
In delivering clean energy to the strained electricity network at competitive prices, the REIPPPP has
contributed to improved security of electricity supply, economic stability, development and job
creation.
The REIPPPP is the fastest growing renewable energy programme in the world105 and one of the largest
programmes in the current infrastructure development portfolio of the country. With the announcement
of the latest bid round, committed private sector investment in renewable energy generation reached
R193bn; effectively realising investment at this scale within four years from the juncture when rst
request for proposals went to market (Figure 48). The investment achieved in utility scale RE projects
during 2014 placed South Africa among the top 10 investing countries in the world106 for the year.
250.0
192.6
200.0
145.5
Rand billion
150.0 127.2
100.0 82.8
49.3
50.0
0.0
Bid window Bid window Bid window Bid window Bid window
1 2 3 3.5 4
While the focus of the procurement design has been largely on securing shareholding for South Africans
in the REIPPPP, the programme has also attracted signicant foreign investment into the country (see
Figure 49), bucking the general foreign investor sentiment trend.107,108
28% 72%
Foreign Domestic
105 UCT Graduate School of Business. 9 July 2015. Managing Power Sector Reform and Regulation course media release: Power crisis offers investment
opportunity in sub-Saharan Africa
106 UNEP. 2015. Global Trends In Renewable Energy Investment report
107 UNCTAD. 2015. 2014, Global foreign direct investment (FDI) inows declined by 8% and inows into Africa declined by 3%
108 Number of FDI projects in South Africa fell by 17.7% from 2013 to 2014. Ernst and Young. 2015. Africa attractiveness survey
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The REIPPPP has to date attracted R53.2 billion in foreign investment and nancing across all bid
windows. Foreign equity in the REIPPPP (BW 1 - 4) is R35 billion, equivalent to 56.5% of the total foreign
direct investment (FDI) attracted into South Africa during 2014 (i.e. $8.2 billion)109,110. Foreign equity and
nancing combined (R53.2 billion) was 85.8% of FDI in 2014.
This success is largely ascribed to the well-designed and transparent procurement process and
an investment environment where key risks are mitigated by Government and transactions offer
reasonable levels of protability.
An analysis of the funding sources and shareholding (see Figure 50) demonstrates how diverse the
investor interest is. Financing and investments (equity and debt), originate from a variety of countries
across the globe, with Europe and the USA representing the largest sources of nance. The FDI analysis
identied at least 19 different countries that have participated in providing nancing and/or equity to
IPPs.
1% 67% 2% <1% 1%
14% 3% 5% 1% 6%
USA Africa Saudi Arabia India Unspecied
Lenders Lenders Lenders Equity Equity
R 5 161 481 262.80 R 1 473 138 384.69 R 814 362 101.95 R 757 446 858.89 R 3 373 248 134.67
Equity Equity Equity Total Total
R 2 068 448 816.52 R 133 843 428.78 R 1 814 007 075.72 R 757 446 858.89 R 3 373 248 134.67
Total Total Total
R 7 229 930 079.32 R 1 606 981 813.47 R 2 628 369 177.67
TOTAL Lenders
R 18 169 482 357.81
Equity
R 35 044 132 863.41
Total
R 53 213 615 221.22
109 South Africa Reserve Bank (SARB). 2015. Quarterly Bulletin. March 2015:45. Pretoria. SARB.
110 27 July 2015 exchange rate
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
Bid window Bid window Bid window Bid window Bid window Total
1 2 3 3.5 4
Local Foreign
An important focus of the REIPPPP is to secure sustainable benets for the country and for local
communities in proximity of the development. This is achieved through several mechanisms.
The requirement for shareholding in the IPPs to be retained locally was incorporated into the
procurement conditions, requiring that at least 40% of each project be owned by South Africans with
Level 5 contributor status. South African (local) equity shareholding across bid windows 1 to 4 equates
to 47% (R30 billion) of total equity (R 65.8 billion), which is substantially more than the 40% requirement.
Bid requirements have also secured shareholding by black South Africans across the value chain.
Community trusts have been the main vehicle for structuring of local community shareholding. Over
the life of the IPPs, the benets to the qualifying communities will be substantial. The aggregated impact
(accrued over the 20-year project operational lives) of all bid window investments and earnings, as
projected for local communities associated with the IPPs, amounts to R29.1 billion (net income). If the
net projected income had to be structured as equal payments over time, it would represent annual
net income of R1,46 billion. Under current nancing structures, cash ows to communities will be limited
until debt7 has been fully serviced (Figure 52).
111 Finance for local communities have mostly been secured through Development Finance Institutions
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5
R 4 000 000
R 3 500 000
R 3 000 000
R 2 500 000
R 2 000 000
R 1 500 000
R 1 000 000
R 500 000
R0
Opportunities and/or alternate vehicles are being investigated for subsequent bid windows that will
enable a more even distribution of community trust cash ow and will realise community benets
sooner.
Investment by technology
Wind, Solar PV and CSP have attracted the most signicant share of the investment across all bid
windows (see Figure 53).
R billion
invested 73.4 62.4 53.3 2.3 1.0 0.3
Percentage
share of 38% 32% 28% 1% 1% 0%
investment
With the exception of bid window 3.5 that was dedicated to the procurement of CSP, Wind and
Solar PV have dominated every round. Wind power is contributing a larger share of capacity in each
bid window, corresponding to a larger share of investment. However, as the capacity cost for wind
technology is becoming increasingly competitive, the investment spend per installed unit is delivering
more.
In addition to the nancial investments in the economy and the favourable equity structures that
had been secured, the REIPPPP is targeting broader economic and socio-economic developmental
benets for the country. Through the selected procurement approach, IPPs have been committed
to economic and socio-economic development goals during both the project development phase
and over the contracted 20-year period of plant operation. Bid obligations and minimum thresholds
for preferential procurement, employment equity and socio-economic development contributions
are utilised as mechanisms to capture a share of the value/prosperity from the programme for South
Africans and local communities.
Broad-based economic development has been a particular focus in South Africa during the last
two decades. In support of this goal, the development of black industrialists, youth employment
and gender equity and empowerment are among some of the priority focus areas entrenched in
the procurement requirements. The distribution of benets arising from these obligations is expected
to make a signicant impact in the targeted sectors, when considering the scale of the procured
portfolio. As an example, the total projected value of goods and services to be procured from BBBEE
suppliers amounts to R101 billion, more than 50% of the total REIPPPP investment (R193 billion). By June
2015, R22 billion had reportedly already been spent in this category.
The programme is anticipated to contribute 109,443 employment opportunities for South African
citizens113 (Figure 55) during both the construction and operational phases. The actual employment
reported on the programme to date is 19,033 job years.
112 Values for bid windows 1 and 2 and 15 of 17 projects under bid window 3 refer to contracted capacity at nancial close. Values for the other
bid windows reect capacity values as per bid submissions.
113 In accordance with the denitions of the bid documentation, employment is measured in job years, which is the equivalent of a full time employment
opportunity for one person for one year. This corresponds closely with the Department of Public Works denition of a job, measured in full time
equivalence (FTE)
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120 000 109 443
100 000
80 000
60 368
55 178
60 000
40 000 29 035
16 034
20 000
0
Bid window Bid window Bid window Bid window Bid window
1 2 3 3.5 4
South African citizens, local community members, women, youth and people with disabilities are given
preference for employment, with minimum requirements and targets specied as bid criteria.
As part of the bid obligations, IPPs have committed to contribute to community needs: from housing
and infrastructure to healthcare, education and skills development. Such commitments have further
served to facilitate engagement with local communities, enhancing acceptance by local community
members. Given the scale of the programme portfolio, these contributions will be signicant:
R 19 billion R 6 billion
commitment (BW 1-4) commitment (BW 1-4)
4)
These obligations become effective only when operations commence and revenue is generated as
a percentage of revenue generated. Earmarked economic and socio-economic support will accrue
over the lifespan of the respective plants, but will make comparatively small contributions during
initial operation. Even in these early days communities in the vicinity of IPPs that have commenced
commercial operation, have benetted from developmental initiatives.
Contractually, a large share of the economic and socio-economic contributions have been
conned to the 50km radius around the respective IPP locations. Clustering of IPP projects in specic
geographic areas rural locations that are generally sparsely populated has, in some cases, led to an
overconcentration of development funds to be spent in areas with limited absorption capacity (refer
to Figure 44 on page 82). Consideration is therefore being given by Government to more appropriate
and equitable allocations of revenue-related developmental contributions from IPPs. Alternative
socio-economic development nancing mechanisms are being investigated that would offer more
immediate benets to local communities, while simultaneously and equitably enhancing benets to
the broader South African economy.
114 The duration of the construction periods typically ranges from between two and four years, while the planned operations period of the plants is 20
years. Projected numbers are stated as cumulative over the total periods
115 Job creation is measured in job years (equivalent of a full time employment opportunity for one person for one year)
Project distribution in the country (refer to Figure 45 on page 83) has lead to investment and
developmental contributions being clustered in the Northern Cape, Eastern Cape and Western Cape
provinces:
Gauteng
North West
R 0.3 billion
Limpopo
R 5.8 billion
R 40 million
R 3.6 billion
R 824 million
246
R 284 million
7 405
2 917
Northern Cape
R 126.6 billion
R 11 831 million
KwaZulu-Natal
65 220
R 1.1 billion
R 78 million
336
Free State
Western Cape
R 6.7 billion
R 13.7 billion Eastern Cape
R 325 million
R 1 030 million R 33.7 billion
2 818
10 273 R 74 489 million
18 132
Within the respective provinces, the need for closer collaboration and improved alignment with
provincial Government energy strategies, spatial planning and development plans have been
recognised as optimising the benets of the REIPPPP to the province. Suitable forums are being identied
or, if none is existing, created to facilitate improved interaction and alignment with the developmental
priorities for the province, region and impacted communities.
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9
Localisation strategies
Development of renewable energy and the associated green economy is identied as a priority sector
in the national planning framework. In 2011, a Green Economy Accord was signed by organised labour,
business representatives, community constituents, and Government containing 12 green economy
commitments. One of these commitments relates to the rollout of renewable energy that is envisaged
to be used as a vehicle to promote rural socio-economic development. The Green Economy Accord
set a target to create 50,000 green economy-related jobs by 2020 and achieve an industry-wide
localisation of at least 35% by 2016 (or such higher gure as Government may mandate as a condition
of any subsidy), and increase local content in the years to follow towards the aspirational target of
75%.
The REIPPPP has been designed to contribute to the countrys objectives for developing a local green
industry and creating green jobs. By introducing minimum participation requirements for local content
(as a percentage of project value), a percentage of the project spend is retained for local suppliers,
encouraging the growth of the local industry. The minimum thresholds and targets for local content
have been set consistently higher with each successive bid window. This is the only bid obligation
category for which increasingly stringent requirements have applied.
BW 1 BW 2 BW 1 BW 2
Min 25% Min 25% Min 35% Min 35%
Target 45% Target 60 Target 50% Target 60%
BW BW
3, 3.5 & 4 3, 3.5 & 4
Min 40% Min 45%
Target 65% Target 65%
Figure 58: Comparison of local content minimum thresholds and targets across bid windows
For a programme of this magnitude, with the combined procurement spend projected to be R140.8
billion116, the result is a substantial stimulus for local manufacturing and the green economy. Based on
procurement projections, R65 billion is expected to be spent locally for the current portfolio of projects.
While local content requirements present opportunities for economic growth and employment, it
obliges local industry to have the necessary capacity to support the desired scale of development.
To assess industry status and identify priority areas for Government support and facilitation, the dti, in
collaboration with industry partners and donors, commissioned three technology-specic studies to
assess localisation potential, inform the development of localisation goals and roadmaps for Wind117,
Solar PV118 and CSP119 technologies and to identify appropriate Government support programmes that
will enable the process.
116 of which R72.2 billion projected during the construction phase and R68.6 billion during the operational period
117 The wind energy industry localisation roadmap in support of large scale roll-out in South Africa. Developed by the South African Department of Trade
and Industry (the dti); supported by an industry representative project steering committee that included SANEDI, CSIR, the IPP Project Ofce, Eskom,
SAWEA, DST, DoE and GreenCape. Available Online: www.wwf.org.za, 2013
118 Photovoltaic Electricity. The localisation potential of PV and a strategy to support large scale roll-out in South Africa. Developed by the South African
Photovoltaic Industry Association (SAPVIA) in collaboration with South Africas Department of Trade and Industry (the dti) and the World Wildlife Fund
(WWF). Available Online: www.wwf.org.za, 2013
119 Assessment of the localisation, industrialisation and job creation potential of CSP infrastructure projects in South Africa - A 2030 vision for CSP.
Developed by the Southern Africa Solar Thermal and Electrical Association (SASTELA), Department of Trade and Industry (the dti) and the Deutsche
Gesellschaft fr Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)Available Online: www.record.org.za, 2013
All three studies identied signicant potential for localisation. For Solar PV, as an example, the readily
achievable local content share in 2013 ranged between 39% and 59%, increasing to 66% by end of
2015. The study further estimated that development of a local industry in the country could create up
to 389,282 FTE jobs across the value chain between 2013 and 2035. This scale of employment would,
however, be dependent on a high adoption rate in the non-utility scale, commercial-, industrial- and
residential-market segments, which accounted for 53% of the projected employment opportunities.
While each sector identied unique characteristics, opportunities and challenges, a few shared
requirements for enabling a greater localisation share were identied:
Z Stable and sustained growth in the market beyond the scope of the REIPPPP and beyond the
South African borders are critical for sustainable local industries.
Z Greater visibility regarding long-term development commitments, allowing adequate time for
capacity building, are key to market condence and investment.
Z The PV study in particular identied the signicant opportunity for the local industry to support
non-utility scale renewable energy solutions. The urgent resolution of policy direction and the
regulatory environment would dictate the extent to which this market is developed.
Z Reduced administrative requirements and streamlined processes for establishment of local
manufacturing facilities120.
The renement and implementation of the identied strategies, roadmaps and recommendations are
continuing in the respective industries, led by the dti in collaboration with industry partners.
The combined effect of REIPPPP infrastructure investments, local content bid requirements and
technology localisation strategies is evident in the creation of several local manufacturing facilities
across the country. Growing investor interest combined with provincial initiatives to create green
manufacturing centres, suggest a positive shift towards greening the economy.
120 Such facilities already established in the Eastern and Western Cape provinces (refer to Chapter 2)
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PV Module manufacturing Pinetown, KwaZulu-Natal
The company envisages playing a signicant role in furthering the use of renewable energy
throughout Africa. As a result, it has developed PV modules that are suited to local climate
conditions, particularly exposure to elevated temperatures typical of the African continent.
PiAsolar was created as a direct result of the REIPPPP. Recognising a niche market for the
design, manufacture and installation of solar mounting systems, PiA was formed in 2011 as
the rst locally designed, supplied and installed mounting system solution in South Africa.
The world standard xed mounting system was developed in collaboration with Scatec
Solar, a Norwegian-based Developer & engineering, procurement and construction (EPC)
company that successfully participated in the rst bid round of the REIPPPP. The design
was certied and approved by Scatec for use, and the installation successfully delivered
well ahead of time. In 2013 alone, PiA installed more than 600,000 modules, 150MWp of
structures and 200,000 foundations.
Spains Gestamp Renewable Industries (GRI), develops, constructs and operates wind
farms across the world. It is also a manufacturer of wind towers for major Original Equipment
Manufacturers (OEMs) in the wind energy market, with 10 factories worldwide. One of these
tower manufacturing facilities is situated in the Green Technology Industrial Park in Atlantis,
about 40km from Cape Town. The location reects the vibrant South African RE market and
responds to the growing local content requirement specied in the REIPPPP. The factory
ofcially started operation in November 2014.
The facility, which represents an investment of 22 million, can manufacture 150 wind
towers annually and provides employment to more than 200 people. As such it contributes
to key objectives of the REIPPPP programme, which are to establish local manufacturing
facilities, job creation and transfer of skills in South Africa. The support of the dti through a
development incentive grant was instrumental to realise the project.
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in this sector prior to partnering with global players in the development of large-scale
projects. Emvelo has been at the forefront of Southern Africas emerging clean energy
sector and was instrumental in founding the Southern Africa Solar Thermal and Electricity
Association (SASTELA).
Emvelo successfully participated as an IPP in the third REIPPPP bid window. The 100MW
Karoshoek Solar One CSP plant, in which Emvelo is a shareholder, is being developed in
Upington in the Northern Cape province. Karoshoek Solar One is part of the Karoshoek
Solar Valley, a solar Silicon Valley concept conceived by Emvelo for a 1.1GW cluster of
CSP capacity that can be dispatched as required by the power system.
With the insight of their journey and participation in the policy discourse relating to
renewable energy, Mr Ndebele believes that as a country, South Africa has taken
enormous strides towards creating a sustainable framework for RE development. The
current procurement approach successfully caters for competition, leveraging of
international technology price trends, improved cost efciencies, risk delegation and
broader economic interest. In his words: world class.
Mr Ndebele, however, believes this to be the rst step of a much greater vision that
will unlock the true economic potential of this sector; in the same manner that the
European Unions RE framework catalysed the industrialisation of todays leading wind
suppliers. Speaking as a participant in the CSP industry, but of equal relevance to other
RE technologies, Mr Ndebele believes southern Africa has the potential to become a
global leader in the manufacture and supply of CSP technology to the world.
The thermal storage offered by CSP contributes to the value of a RE portfolio, increasingly
presenting a feasible alternative to conventional power sources and notably increasing
the global market potential for RE technologies. Based on Emvelos experience of
Southern African Development Community (SADC) interest in RE development, he
recognises the potential for regional collaboration to unlock the economies of scale
for a lucrative, regional industry. Quoting the Airbus model where components
manufacturing is distributed across several European countries for assembly in France,
he foresees the potential for a similar manufacturing hub that can stimulate the entire
regional economy. This scale of development would, however, be dependent on clear
strategic direction and development commitments to justify the necessary investment
that will lead to meaningful industrialisation.
Most recently, renewable energy in South Africa has become synonymous with large-scale, grid-
connected projects as constructed under the REIPPPP. Renewable energy can, however, also be
deployed on a smaller, stand-alone scale where it can directly benet households, farmers, communities
and businesses.
A considerable portion of South Africas residents/population are classied as energy poor. Using different
approaches to quantify the extent of the energy poverty challenge, it is estimated that between 40 and
49% of households are affected. Data121 further suggests that the situation is deteriorating. In considering
energy poverty, both non-electried and electried households are taken into account.
The South African government has, over an extended period of time and with broad international
support, been involved in a number of initiatives and projects focused on the application of non-
grid renewable energy and renewable energy alternatives in order to improve the quality of life of
all citizens. Included among these initiatives are rural energisation, solar water heating systems and
energy-efcient cooking programmes.
he 1998 White Paper on Energy Policy embedded Government and the DoEs commitment to universal
access to electricity for all South African households. In 2001, a non-grid electrication programme
was introduced as a complementary measure for addressing the electrication backlog in areas that
could not be electried within a period of three or more years. Most of these affected areas are in
sparsely populated, remote rural areas of the country where a combination of low load demand, the
dispersed nature of rural settlements, high xed costs of grid extension and challenging geographical
terrain, make it unlikely that the electricity grid will reach all areas in the medium term.
Non-grid electricity supply through the means of Solar PV systems was identied as the most suitable,
temporary alternative to grid electricity122. This policy position and resulting solar home system (SHS)
programme is built on extensive research and investigations that started at least two decades previously.
The programme makes use of standalone SHS, where the size of the installed Solar PV systems range
from 50 to 100W peak. The upgrade to larger systems of about 100W peak was introduced from 2012,
targeting both existing and new installations. The service offering is currently limited to lighting and
media access (it provides power for charging mobile phone batteries, radio and a monochrome or
a 12V colour television). The non-grid service is offered on a fee-for-service basis, requiring customers
to contribute a once-off connection fee (not exceeding R89) towards the installation followed by a
small monthly payment thereafter. The monthly service fee covers lifetime running costs, including
the operation, maintenance, replacement of batteries, fee collection, customer service, support and
management of the system. Government subsidises about 80% of the capital costs of the systems and
100% for those households that are classied as indigent using the free basic services grant.
The programme had to closely align with Eskom and municipal distribution development planning
to delineate the areas that would receive SHS. As a measure with interim or temporary status,
the programme faced many challenges, which included the coordination with network planners,
alignment with distribution grid development plans and acceptance by the receiving households.
121 DoE. 2012 and 2013. Household survey of energy related behaviour and perception in SA
122 Implemented as a temporary supply solution to provide rural communities access to limited electricity until grid connections become achievable
Limpopo
North West
2002 - 72.5% access
2002 - 82.0% access 2013 - 90.3% access Mpumalanga
2013 - 88.3% access
2002 - 75.9% access
2013 - 89.3% access
Northern Cape
2002 - 81.8% access Gauteng
2013 - 89.7% access 2002 - 87.1% access
2013 - 83.6% access
KwaZulu Natal
80 85 % 86 90 % 91 95 %
The Minister of Finances 2015 budget speech reemphasised the national position that building inclusive
economic growth and development is dependent on providing electricity to rural municipalities.
123 Representing approximately 10% of the non-electried housing stock in the country
124 Stats SA. 2014. General Household Survey dataset, 2002 -2013
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Coordination of the FBE contribution has presented challenges, notably where indigent registries
are outdated, preventing the municipal payments from being processed. Ideally, the registers are
supposed to be updated annually.
The implementation of the non-grid programme is structured into concessions within predened
geographic locations, with a predetermined number of SHS allocated. A single service provider, or
concessionaire, is appointed to a designated area within which it has the exclusive right to supply SHS
services. Concessionaires that have successfully tendered for rendering these services, are appointed
on a short-term contract that is evaluated in terms of performance and impact every two years,
before provisional renewal. They are furthermore responsible to provide maintenance on the installed
systems in terms of a 20-year contract. In line with this obligation, customers pay R90 per month for
maintenance of the system. The DoE monitors the implementation to ensure the services are rendered
in accordance with contractual obligations.
Since inception, the programme has been implemented in three provinces, namely Limpopo, KwaZulu-
Natal and Eastern Cape. There is also a German (KfW), donor-funded non-grid project implemented
in the Eastern Cape. From 2002 to date, approximately 96,000 households were supplied with non-
With this support, the non-grid electrication programme will be redesigned to improve the quality
of the service offering and strengthen institutional capacity, including the establishment of an off-
grid electrication authority. The purpose of this proposed off-grid management authority is to ensure
that the off-grid electrication programme is reinvigorated to ensure meaningful contribution to
universal access as well as promoting off-grid energy access more generally. As such, the proposed
enhancements to the programme include mini-grid/hybrid packages and biogas systems. The entity
will, therefore, be focused on assisting with the transition from renewable energy concepts, ideas and
pilots into meaningful programme roll-out that improves access to modern energy services128.
125 Previously, devices such as mobile phones and television batteries required traveling to an electried area where devices could be charged, often
at a cost to the user
126 Replacing parafn lamps and candles as the main sources of lighting
127 PwC. July 2013. Socio-economic Impact Assessment of Rural Electrication
128 DoE. 2014. Off-grid management foundation document
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The roll-out of solar water heating (SWH) systems
Solar water heating (SWH) in South Africa makes sense on many levels: the country has one of the
best solar proles in the world. There are also other factors at play: Eskom needs to alleviate electricity
demand on the morning and evening peak periods; avoiding CO2 emissions from coal- generated
electricity through renewable energy technologies could help Government achieve its climate
protection targets. The rising cost of electricity makes investment in a solar water heater attractive;
and, more recently, the industry offers opportunities for job creation and local industrialisation. From a
consumer perspective, electric water heating accounts for 40-60% of an average homes electricity
bill, and SWH can save 70% or more of the energy and costs to heat water. In cases where households
are not connected to the electricity grid, the provision of a SWH system can provide hot water from a
free energy source and avoid costly expenditure and negative health impacts associated with typical
alternative fuels such as wood, parafn and coal. In recognition, the 2003 RE White Paper identied
SHW as a key contributor towards the 10,000GWh RE target set for 2013.
The South African government prioritised SWH both as a means to reduce electricity demand on the
electricity system (thereby also saving energy), and to extend access to energy services for homes
without adequate services. Inadequate services may be relevant to non-electried and energy poor
households. While the feasible scope for SWH applications within the commercial and industrial sectors
is signicant, Governments focus has been primarily on the residential market.
Initial groundwork came from the 2005 CEF 500 project, implemented by CEF, a state-owned enterprise
(SOE) with support from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) grant funding program.
In addition to supporting a pilot rollout of SWHs, the project served as a catalyst for the development
of the rst industry standards for SWHs and the establishment of a local testing facility at the SABS. South
African standards and testing had to specially provide for the harshness of local conditions.
The CEF continued investigating suitable options to promote SWH in municipal areas and launched the
Switch to Solar project in 2008. It was designed to address identied market barriers, which included
prohibitive initial system costs, low levels of awareness about SWH performance and durability and
delays in installation associated with the greater complexity of SWH sizing and location. The initiative
therefore offered a database of reputable SWH manufacturers and installers, post-installation
inspections by certied plumbers and, most importantly, nancing. The programme covered the full
initial cost of supply and installation, processed any incentive claims on behalf of the homeowner and
then allowed the consumer to repay the balance over a six-year period. Switch to Solar replaced 258
SWHs in Ekurhuleni and Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipalities, which were both partners to
the programme.
In 2008, the national utility, Eskom, introduced a national SWH incentive programme under a broader
demand-side management programme. This incentive programme was made possible by the
newly introduced industry structures (including industry standards and testing facilities) that created
condence in the performance and quality of the products being supported.
The national drive for SWH was given impetus with the announcement by the former Minister of Energy,
Ms Dipuo Peters, in May 2009129 that the DoE will install one million SWHs within ve years. Building on this
short-term target, the National Development Plan has consequently set a long-term target of 5 million
SWH installations by 2030. These ambitious targets necessitated the development of a coordinated
national SWH strategy.
Through the Renewable Energy Market Transformation (REMT) Programme, the DoE commissioned
the development of a National SWH Framework. The main aim of the framework was to identify and
develop solutions for the largest obstacles to large-scale adoption of SWHs in the country. The 2009
study identied high costs, supply chain constraints and limited local supply capacity130 as the main
market barriers preventing economies of scale.
800 000
700 000
Number of households
600 000
500 000
400 000
300 000
200 000
100 000
0
250
550
650
750
850
950
1 050
1 150
1 300
1 500
1 800
2 250
6 500
7 500
8 500
9 500
2 750
3 500
4 500
5 500
10 500
11 500
13 000
15 500
18 000
22 500
27 500
35 000
50 000
Monthly income (Rands) Newly built homes Geyser replacement / insurance
market
Non-eletried households Z 03 million per
Electried without a geyser annum Z Market 0.3 million per annum
Figure 60: Residential sector segmentation for the National SWH Framework, 2009
Market segmentation informed three clear implementation strategies. The rst, targeting the estimated
ve million high income households to encourage fuel switching from electric to solar technology,
would be focused on realising energy savings. The insurance industry was identied as a potential
vehicle to facilitate a geyser131 replacement programme for this market segment as they were already
processing 300,000 insurance claim replacements132 per year.
The second would focus on electried and non-electried households without an electric geyser. The
objective would be to provide modern energy services to some of the six million homes that was
identied in this segment. Preference was given to a mass rollout approach installing SWHs at no cost
to the consumer. Although the focus was not on energy savings, the availability of hot water was
expected to reduce the use of electric powered kettles and stoves to boil large amounts of water. This
would help save the household costs or enable available energy to be used for alternate applications.
The last strategy was to focus on newly built homes, ensuring informed decision-making when selecting
water heating options at the time of construction. The requirement for efcient water heating in new
developments has since been incorporated into national building standards133 and also municipal
bylaws.
In 2012, Government consolidated existing efforts into a National SWH Programme with an allocation
of R4.7 billion in the 2012/13 budget. At the time Eskom was appointed implementing agent for the
SWH rollout to both the high- and low-income market segments. Under this arrangement, the existing
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incentive programme continued as before and a mass rollout programme was introduced for the free
installation of SWH systems to under-privileged communities.
As of February 2015, a total of 407,463 SWHs had been installed (Figure 61). The vast majority of
installations were done in Gauteng (35%), followed by KwaZulu-Natal (17%).
500 000
NATIONAL AVERAGE
LIMPOPO
NORTH WEST
MPUMALANGA
NORTHERN CAPE
FREE STATE
EASTERN CAPE
WESTERN CAPE
KWAZULU-NATAL
GAUTENG
TOTAL
450 000
407 463
400 000
350 000
300 000
250 000
200 000
100 000
68 026
56 011 59 267
45 274
50 000 32 481
11 983 15 805 17 014
5 380
0
In spite of the coordinated effort and the introduction of the mass rollout, implementation progress
had been slower than anticipated, preventing the target of one million SWHs by 2015 being met.
Implementation had been hampered by expected and unexpected challenges. A signicant
challenge had been the cost. To meet the target would require an estimated total cost of R12.9
billion134. An amount of this magnitude could not be sustainably funded by the scus135. Funding,
however, was not the main hurdle. Poor quality installations, use of cheap imports and access to
good quality, reticulated water supply in many of the provinces presented greater challenges to
accelerated implementation.
134 Assuming 70% of the targeted installations in high-income households with a contribution of R15,000 per unit and 30% in low-income households at a
total installed cost of R8,000 per unit
135 DoE Deputy Director General, Ompi Aphane. Report on the National Solar Water Heating Conference: Building Consensus on accelerating the
rollout of Solar Water Heaters in South Africa hosted by the Department of Energy and the Renewable Energy Market Transformation (REMT) Unit,
Johannesburg on 5 November 2009
Z Participation in the programme will require compliance with the SWH industry designation
requirements136 in terms of the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act, which calls for a
minimum local content threshold of 70%;
Z Manufacturing contracts will be adjudicated in terms of local content and awarded according
to guidelines based on the highest local content achieved in the shortest possible time; and
Z Manufacturing contracts are to be separated from installation.
Z In line with the REMT recommendation, cooperation with the insurance industry will be pursued
to replace failed electric water heaters with solar water heaters.
Z In addition, bulk procurement from manufacturers will also be adopted.
Z The SABS has been designated to carry out local content verication on behalf of government.
SWH offers a suitable, renewable energy alternative for water heating in South Africa. Government
will continue its support of this technology as a more efcient energy alternative and for delivering
expanded and affordable services to all households. The future emphasis will be on establishing quality,
local manufacturing capacity and unlocking a broader economic and socio-economic development
potential.
SouthSouthNorth Projects Africa (SSNA), a section 21 organisation based in Cape Town, set
up a project called Kuyasa in collaboration with the City of Cape Town and with funding
from the former Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism. Kuyasa, the rst registered
CDM Gold Standard project in the world, included the installation of solar water heaters,
ceilings and low energy lighting in 2,309137 RDP houses in Khayelitsha. This project aimed
to improve thermal efciency of houses, decrease emissions, and lower monthly fuel bills
to create a better living environment, improve indoor air quality and therefore minimising
health problems.
The project opted for a locally manufactured solar water heater that is suitable for South
African conditions, such as chlorination and high heating temperatures. Combined cost
savings through the energy-efcient interventions amounted up to R300 per month per
household. Other benets included direct income generation, improved living conditions,
skills transfer and a signicant lowering of the areas carbon emissions.
136 The designation policy instrument is one of a suite of policy levers designed to maximise support for domestic manufacturing, implemented by the dti
137 Global Infrastructure Basel. July 2012. Case study. http://www.gib-foundation.org/projects/kuyasa-low-income-energy-efciency-housing-project/
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The Kuyasa project was launched in 2009 and concluded in 2010. The CDM monitoring
and verication results from November 2010 reported annual reductions of 7.40 million kWh
(34%) in energy consumed and 6,437 tons (33%) in CO2 emissions for the 2,309 households.
The project created 87 job opportunities locally at Kuyasa, offering in-service training in
carpentry, plumbing and electrical skills. Results revealed that almost half of Kuyasa residents
that received training on this project now have fulltime jobs and/or business opportunities
outside the community.
The Cosmo City Climate Proong Project was ofcially launched on 9 June 2010 by the
City of Johannesburgs Environmental Management Department in partnership with
Johannesburg City Parks. The Climate Proong project involves the rollout of low-pressure
Solar Water Heater (SWH) units, as well as the installation of insulated Isoboard ceilings and
distribution of Compact uorescent lamps (CFL) to 700 low-income households in Cosmo
City. Cosmo City is a mixed-income housing project created to provide accommodation
for informal settlers from the area.
The project was funded by the Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA) under
the auspices of the embassy as part of a R15 million climate change mini-programme
for Johannesburg. The main objective of the project was to promote renewable energy,
energy efciency and greening in low-income houses and contribute towards building a
liveable human settlement that promotes energy conservation, alleviates energy poverty
and demonstrates the performance and efciency of renewable energy and energy
efciency technologies. This project is an extension of the rst phase of installation consisting
of 170 SWH in 2007 and contributes to the DoEs target of implementing one million SWH
units in the country.
Results reported for the period August 2009 to October 2011, reected annual carbon
emission reductions of 1,258 tons of CO2 and annual cost savings, at that juncture, of
R1,154.94 per household. One hundred and eighteen job opportunities were also created
during the implementation.
138 Onatu, G. O. Ogra, A. and Okafor, J. 2012. Energy efciency improvement strategy in mixed income housing development: A case study of Cosmo
City Johannesburg
139 C40 Cities case study. November 2011. City of Joburg launches its Climate proong of urban communities project
Mr Anton-Louis Olivier is currently the Managing Director of NuPlanet (Pty) Ltd, developers
and operators of the Bethlehem Hydro IPP (see case study on page 64). Mr Olivier joined
the then Department of Minerals and Energy Affairs (DMEA) as a Junior Energy Specialist
in the Energy for Development Directorate in 1993 after graduating as a mechanical
engineer. The position was intended as a stepping stone, but the energy sector and
this transition period from apartheid-era energy policy, presented an expected, yet
enjoyable challenge. A few highlights from this period:
The Energy for Development group consisted of Dr Izak Kotze, Mr Tony Golding and Mrs
Marlett Balmer. Navigating the bureaucratic system of that time required critical survival
tips for which newcomers, like himself, relied heavily on the guidance of their colleagues.
These included addressing all staff members more senior as Meneer and Mevrou (Sir and
Madam) and regular drinks after work as a coping strategy reminiscent of Government
jobs the world over.
A notable event during that period was the introduction of the Reconstruction and
Development Programme (RDP) as policy framework in Government. Under this new
programme, approximately 20,000 schools and 5,000 clinics were identied as being not
electried. Most of these were not within reach of the electricity grid and would need
to be electried using Solar PV. The PV industry in South Africa in 1993 was miniscule
and a very small focus of the DMEA at the time. As Mr Olivier had the dubious honour
in the DMEA to deal with PV, this project landed on his desk. Soon he was attending
RDP meetings at the Union Buildings as DMEA representative and making calls on a
programme that even then had a price tag in the region of R1.5 billion. Needless to
say, the moment DMEA management realised there was this much at stake and a junior
ofcial with only six months experience was running with it, I was bumped back to doing
eld surveys of biogas plants. He further recalls his biggest disappointment as being
unsuccessful in introducing the concept of energy efciency and passive design into the
huge RDP low-cost housing programme.
For RE and energy development work, DMEA collaborated with academic institutions.
Prof Anton Eberhards group at EDRC at the University of Cape Town were the main
partners for policy development. The development and publication of the countys rst
Wind Atlas, a project lead by Mr Olivier, was based on work done by Prof Roseanne Diab
at the University of Natal.
For Mr Olivier his adventure with RE continued after he left the DMEA; he continues to
develop and operate hydro power plants.
Mrs Balmer, one of the aforementioned helpful colleagues, is currently senior energy
advisor for the South African German Energy Programme (SAGEN). She started her
career with the then National Energy Council (NEC) in the Energy for Development
department. She recalls it as having been a brilliant time with everybody working in
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RE considered weird and wonderful, looking like hippies and wanting to save the world.
She soon learned to distinguish delegates at energy conferences by their footwear, with
anyone in Jesus leather sandals from the RE sector while properly shoed people were
from the petroleum or coal sectors. The lunatic fringe ruled!
In 1993, the NEC was absorbed by the DMEA. Being part of the dismantling of apartheid
structures and the development of brave new energy policies for the new South Africa
presented an exciting time. She identies the people with the biggest impact on her
career to have been Dr Izak Kotze, Reinhold Viljoen as well as Prof Eberhard. They served
as inspiration and mentors and seminal thinkers in the RE and energy development
arena.
Mrs Balmer remembers the White Paper formulation process, and especially the
stakeholder consultation process they engaged in, as a particular highlight of this
period. She recalls the privilege to work with several noteworthy individuals in the sector
such as Dr Wendy Annecke, Sarah Ward, Wrenelle Stander, Dr Rod Crompton and the
researchers at EDRC such as Dr Douglas Banks, Anthony Williams and Bill Cowan. Many
of the most inuential individuals in the energy sector today were part of the signicant
work that helped shape the energy landscape in South Africa. The fact that the White
Paper is still the ofcial policy document of the energy sector is testimony to the quality
of their work.
Two further projects stand out as highlights. The early promotion of energy efciency in
low-income housing as well as the investigation into the use of solar cookers and potential
local manufacturing of the technology. After seeing projects through the challenges
that confronted RE as the step-child in the energy sector, Mrs Balmer is delighted by
the breakthrough presented by the REIPPPP programme.
The Electricity Regulation Act140, read in combination with the South African Grid Code and NERSA
Licencing requirements, provides for generators to have the same non-discriminatory rights of access
to the power network as electricity consumers. The national transmission network is centrally owned
and managed by Eskom, the national power utility, which is mandated to support grid access for
all interested generators. Transmission network planning and development is an Eskom Transmission
licence condition. The process and criteria for planning is specied by the South Africa Grid Code,
which is a NERSA technical standard. Planning for the network consists of a:
Z Strategic grid plan (SGP), which takes a long-term view (in excess of 10 years) and is updated
approximately every three years.
Z Transmission development plan (TDP) that focuses on the next 10 years and is updated annually.
This informs the basis of the capital funding requirements for the Eskom Transmission Division.
The increasing complexity and changing needs of the diversied power system triggered by the IRP,
dictate a drastically new approach to network planning. Private market participation in the energy
sector with the introduction of IPPs has triggered changes to the Electricity Supply Industry in terms of:
Z The spatial locations of the generators are determined by the IPPs and are only known to Eskom
upon application for a grid connection to participate in the bidding programme.
Z Distributed IPP plants have a two- to three-year construction period, whereas long transmission
line projects have a six- to eight-year project life cycle. These differences in timeline need to be
proactively managed so that grid is available timeously in alignment with the completion times
for new power plants.
Z The future generation projects are determined by a competitive bidding process, which is
assessed on an individual project basis. Economies of scale are therefore difcult to obtain and
to integrate with network plans.
Z The prime development locations for renewable energy, corresponding with high renewable
energy resource potential, available land and low population densities, coincide with those areas
where limited spare network capacity had been created due to the historical cost minimisation
approach stated above.
Z REIPPPP bid windows 1 to 4 have utilised much of the available grid capacity in areas of RE
IPP interest such as the Northern Cape, Eastern Cape and Western Cape provinces. Network
upgrades will be required if RE development is to continue in certain areas, as driven by the need
to procure cost-efcient electricity generation.
Z Individual RE IPP generators are typically signicantly smaller than the incremental grid capacity
expansion. The cost and project life cycle duration of grid expansion can be prohibitive for an
individual RE IPP project. If the shared grid (grid that supplies more than one customer) is planned
strategically to accommodate the cumulative RE IPP capacity, then the relative cost and project
duration will signicantly reduce and, in so doing, help lower electricity tariffs.
These planning challenges associated with the partial privatisation of new generation are, however,
not unique to South Africa nor are they overly complex. They do, however, necessitate a transition
to a new planning paradigm. Shared grid upgrades need to be proactively planned and developed
to accommodate cumulative IPP requirements, with an equitable recovery of costs once these plans
are implemented.
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9
Grid Connection Capacity Assessment
The Generation Connection Capacity Assessment (GCCA) provides direction with regards to the
available grid capacity to connect IPP generation. It also provides an understanding of the timelines
and additional capacity that may be created via proposed future grid upgrade projects.
Generation developers need to have an understanding of the existing and future grid capacities
in different geographic areas so that grid dependencies can be assessed and managed when
establishing optimal sites for new power plant.
In order to communicate and give direction to the market as regards the short- to medium-term
available transmission capacity for connecting new generation plant, Eskom Transmission published
the Generation Connection Capacity Assessment for the 2016 Transmission Network (GCCA-2016),
which has been recently updated (July 2015) to provide a 2022 view (GCCA-2022).
The assessments have indicated a predominantly constrained transmission network, particularly in the
Northern Cape, Eastern Cape and Western Cape provinces, where most of the successful REIPP projects
are located. Consideration of the REIPPPP bid window 4 submissions suggested that the available grid
capacity will be further reduced. A lack of grid reinforcement may curtail the procurement of the most
cost effective generation due to the impact of increased transmission grid constraints.
In support of Strategic Infrastructure Project 8 (SIP 8; Green Energy in support of the South African
Economy) and to facilitate infrastructure development in the country, the Department of Environmental
Affairs (DEA) introduced a Wind and Solar PV Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA). The primary
objective of the SEA is to streamline regulatory processes for new RE power plants in line with the
REIPPPP and without compromising the environment.
Based on the SEA, eight Renewable Energy Development Zones (REDZ) (Figure 62) were identied.
These areas were selected through integrated spatial analyses and wide stakeholder consultation, and
as geographical areas in which development is considered most appropriate from a national strategic
perspective. Factors taken into consideration include energy resource potentials, infrastructure
availability, stakeholder and local authority support, environmental suitability and socio-economic
need.
Although the REDZ identied priority areas for development, they do not preclude development of
renewable energy projects in the numerous suitable areas with exceptional wind and/or solar resource
that exist outside the REDZs.
The location of the REDZ further serves to inform the grid connection planning, identifying and
conrming the areas where grid capacity will be required to support the targeted development zones
(Figure 62). The REDZ will be formally gazetted.
Figure 62: Spatial comparison of grid capacity with the identied REDZ
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Transmission Development Planning (TDP) amid uncertainty as to the
Generation Spatial Locations
The IRP provides the national plan for generation capacity at an aggregated country level but
does not incorporate geographically-specic, spatial information that can be utilised in transmission
grid planning. Consequently, proactive scenario-based network planning is required to inform the
development of grid capacity in advance and in alignment with anticipated spatial generation
locations for the country. For this purpose, a TDP Generation-based Scenario Forecast was drafted by
the DoEs IPP Ofce in cooperation with key stakeholders (including Eskom).
This forecast will be used to provide a more robust set of assumptions to the currently uncertain
location of generation plants in relation to the grid. The ultimate objective is for the TDP to identify the
alternative network expansions per scenario to enable the smooth deployment of envisaged capacity
under the IRP 2010. These network expansions have associated development costs and lead times,
necessitating urgent investment in order for these grid projects to be able to provide an adequate
response subsequent to an implementation decision.
This TDP Generation-based Scenario Forecast has been informed by several key considerations:
The Generation-based Scenario Forecast will integrate with the Transmission Development Plan and
Distributor sub-transmission Network Development Plans in order to support a sustainable integration of
IPPs. To this end, a short- to medium-term shared grid planning approach has been developed, which
takes a staged prioritisation methodology as follows:
1
Short-term projects (three to four years lead time) to provide
Stage
capacity in the areas where connection applications are
clustered, factoring in the Eskom grid access applications and EIA
applications.
2
Medium-term projects (maximum lead time of eight years) to further
Stage increase capacity in the areas where expressions of interest are
clustered, factoring in the REDZ and the additional engagements
with stakeholders via renewable energy industry associations.
Sub-transmission planning
The sub-transmission planning approach is to utilise the concept of collector and satellite stations
(illustrated in Figure 63 below) to optimise the network and environmental impacts in connecting
relatively small spatially distributed generation plants to the Transmission grid.
MTS
Existing or new
Main Transmission
Station (MTS)
Collector
Space for
station
future bays
Satellite
Location chosen
station at centroid of IPP
interest
Figure 63: Basic graphical representation of the IPP Cluster concept for sub-transmission grid
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Further analysis is underway to develop an implementation plan whereby the project phasing,
dependencies, development costs and execution costs can be optimised in support of the present
and anticipated Ministerial determinations for generation procurement. This necessitates integration
of the IPP grid integration requirements in the Transmission Development Plan (TDP) and the distributor
Network Development Plans (NDPs141), as well as inclusion of such considerations in the design of the
IPP procurement programmes and associated treatment of the grid.
Looking ahead
The spatially distributed REIPPPP development and the introduction of the non-renewable IPPs increase
the complexity of the grid planning environment. In this context, future grid connection planning will
be developed around a number of feasible and reasonable generation scenarios to accommodate
the spatial location uncertainty associated with the implementation of the IRP 2010 generation plan.
With the ever-increasing concentration of solar PV and wind in localised areas there is a potential risk
to the grid that will need to be assessed in future. A loss of generation impact scenario may need to be
performed to determine how a sudden loss of that generation capacity will impact on the grid stability
and mitigation thereof if required.
This process has been initiated with a generation spatial forecast scenario as input to the 2015 TDP
update. In addition, Transmission and Distribution planning will depend on greater collaboration,
incorporating extensive consultation to develop an informed understanding of the future generation
footprint in terms of size, spatial location and fuel sources, and the grid required to support such. It is
proposed by the DoE IPP Ofce that future consultation should be introduced into the development
of the assumptions informing the planning of the grid, including Government departments, Eskom
departments, renewable energy associations, developers, universities and other parties.
The expectation is for an increasingly more robust and effective planning of network expansion to
support optimal infrastructure development delivery in the country.
Renewable energy research and development, skills development and training support the
implementation of renewable energy projects in South Africa and create the enabling environment
to foster growth in the sector as well as in the broader economy. With South Africas recent foray into
renewable energy deployment, local institutions are stepping up to the challenge to supply not only
innovative technologies, but also the trained and skilled workforce required to exploit technological
advances to the benet of the country.
South Africa has a rich legacy in energy research that supported the countrys national objectives
from an early stage. At least ve distinct but overlapping periods can be identied of organised R&D
in South Africas modern history143.
142 Grifth, R.; Redding, S. and Van Reenen, J. 2001. Mapping the two faces of R&D: Productivity growth in a panel of OECD industries. The Institute of
Fiscal Studies. IFS working papers no W00/02
143 Academy of Science of South Africa. 2014. The State of Energy Research in South Africa. ASSAF:Pretoria
For energy R&D to serve South Africa, it should support important policy and sstrategic
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not be rolled out quickly and cost effectively. Mr Cowan was involved in several studies
and programmes, including optimised remote area power supplies, industry standards
and support, and subsequent integrated energy provision for low income rural and
peri-urban communities. This substantial portfolio of work has contributed some of the
earliest investigations into the appropriate employment of renewable energy solutions
in the country as well as the southern African region. Below are some of his valuable
recollections from this pioneering period:
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The EDRC was established in 1989, initially within the Energy Research Institute (ERI) at the
University of Cape Town. It was rst named CRAET (Centre for Research in Appropriate
Energy Technologies). This reected a major line of thought in the 1980s: that new
implementations of appropriate technology should be employed to foster socio-
economic development, particularly in rural areas of developing countries.
With funding from the National Energy Council, which lasted until 1992, EDRC continued
to carry out research and helped build expertise in renewable energy elds judged
important for rural development in South and southern Africa. This carried on from
pioneering work led by Prof Anton Eberhard, who had joined the ERI in 1983, and a
remarkable team of researchers and postgraduate students over several years.
The EDRC worked in collaboration with Eskom, the Independent Development Trust,
industry organisations, the South African Bureau of Standards (and other international
standards and research organisations) in these early years, where a primary focus was
on ways to improve Remote Area Power Supply, i.e. electricity for communities not
reached by the national grid.
10%
Renewable energy research
90%
Nuclear energy research
Figure 65: Comparing research funding allocations for renewable energy and nuclear energy (based on data
from ASSAF, 2014)
In the public sector, the main entity responsible for research in South Africa is the Department of Science
and Technology (DST), which oversees the management of the countrys science system. DST promotes
South African science and innovation by developing science, technology and innovation policies,
and funding R&D at public research institutes. It also partners with other government departments, in
particular those having oversight responsibilities over science performing agencies such as the DoE
and South African National Energy Development Institute (SANEDI). In the 2012/13 DST budget, R39
million was allocated to support R&D in the renewable energy sector.
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Funding for research carried out at higher education institutions is provided by DST through the National
Research Foundation (NRF). The NRF promotes and supports research with funding, human resource
development and the provision of National Research Facilities in all elds of natural and social sciences,
humanities and technology. The following important renewable energy related R&D Centres/Institutes
have been established at Higher Education Institutions (HEIs)143.
DST programme in
renewable energy Z Stellenbosch University: Centre for Renewable and Sus-
or energy-related tainable Energy Studies (CRSES).
research
Chairs for energy Z University of Cape Town: Energy Research Centre (ERC)
and energy- - Energy policy, climate change, modelling.
related research Z University of Pretoria: Energy Hub in Energy Efciency.
and innovation Z Council for Scientic and Industrial Research (CSIR):
Battery research unit in the Material Sciences Division.
established
Z Cape Peninsula University of Technology: South African
by HEIs Renewable Energy Technology Centre (SARETEC).
Figure 66: Renewable energy-related research chairs and institutions (based on information from ASSAF, 2014)
Linked to DST, an important additional stakeholder is the Technology Innovation Agency (TIA). The
TIA was established in terms of the TIA Act, 2008 (Act No 26 of 2008) with the objective to support
the development and commercialisation of competitive technology-based services and products. In
terms of energy, TIAs Energy Business Unit aims to pursue investments that are aligned with Government
plans to promote renewable and sustainable energy technologies. During 2012/13, TIA supported the
development of 55 products, processes and services of which 10% fell within the energy sector. The
TIAs research expenditure on renewable energy totalled R20.7 million in 2013, with an additional R5.5
million allocated to bioenergy (microalgae-to-energy, biodiesel and waste-to-energy).
In a concerted effort to support energy research and development, Government established the
South African National Energy Research Institute (SANERI) in 2007. The SANERI was launched as a
wholly owned subsidiary of the Central Energy Fund (Pty) Ltd (CEF) and resided under two government
departments, Minerals and Energy145, and Science and Technology. On 1 April 2011, SANERI was ofcially
operationalised as the South African National Energy Development Institute (SANEDI), established by
the National Energy Act, 2008 (No 34)146. Its mandate is to serve as a catalyst for sustainable energy
innovation, transformation and technology diffusion in support of South Africas sustainable development.
Transfer payments from the DoE to SANEDI were initiated in 2011/12, with an initial allocation of R20.1
million increasing to R56.1 million in 2012/13. The Working for Energy programme received a direct
allocation from National Treasury of R134.3 million147 in 2013/14, while research into carbon capture and
145 Established in 2008 as two new departments dedicated to Energy and Minerals and Resource
146 Department of Energy (DoE). 2008. National Energy Act, No 34, 2008. DoE: Pretoria
147 Academy of Science of South Africa. 2014. The State of Energy Research in South Africa. ASSAF:Pretoria
RECORD Mission
To be recognised as the foremost institution for renewable energy research
coordination and collaboration in SA.
RECORD Vision
To facilitate renewable energy research coordination, collaboration and
dissemination of national and international renewable energy knowledge
contributing towards a sustainable low carbon energy future.
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Eskom supports renewable energy research through its Research and Innovation Centre, although the
bulk of its research funding is allocated to coal combustion and electricity-related research topics.
Despite the main focus of Eskoms research being on electricity-related elds, Eskom still emerged as
one of the biggest funders in the renewable energy R&D space with an estimated R55 million allocated
between 2000 and 2014. Eskoms eld of activity in the renewable energy research area includes
Solar PV systems, ocean energy, solar thermal energy, wind energy and biomass. Eskoms ongoing
support to renewable energy R&D, even in times of excess supply capacity, contributed positively to
the organisations success in building wind and solar projects.
FFrom research to reality and beyond Ayanda Nakedi, Eskom Senior General
MManager, Renewable Energy Unit
Ms. Ayanda Nakedi holds the position of Senior General Manager of Eskoms Renewable
Energy Unit, responsible for the development of a portfolio of RE projects for the
organisation. Prior to this she served, among others, as General Manager responsible
for strategy, technology and assurance within the Generation Division and as Chief
Executive Ofcer of Eskoms Development Foundation. She has a long and distinguished
career with the Eskom Group. In 2013 she was awarded the prestigious Boss of the YearTM
leadership award by an independent organisation dedicated to seeking out the leaders
of the South African workplace. She is inspired by new adventures and innovation,
qualities that are perfectly suited to heading up the RE Unit in Eskom.
Eskom has a history of RE research and innovation that includes the rst wind turbine and
CSP dish installations as demonstration projects in the country. In April 2011, in response
to the clear direction given by the IRP 2010, Eskom established the Renewables Business
Unit. This signied the formal transition of RE from a research focus into a fully edged
operational unit in the organisation. It further reinforced Eskoms commitment to move
towards a cleaner energy future.
Ms Nakedi was tasked with establishing, resourcing, integrating and leading the new
unit; an exciting and daunting undertaking.
The 100MW Sere Wind Farm was delivered on time and on budget (rst turbine installed in
December 2013; rst power onto the grid in October 2014 and nal handover by the EPC
contractor on 31 March 2015) and on par with the average construction lead times of
the current REIPPPP portfolio. Even with the successful completion of Sere and a 100MW
CSP project recently initiated, RE constitutes only a small drop in Eskoms total energy
portfolio (~45GW). Even so, Ms Nakedi believes it is only the start of great things to come
because Eskom has recognised RE as a key component of its future energy portfolio and
business.
The Central Energy Fund (CEF) is a state-owned company involved in the search for appropriate energy
solutions to meet the energy needs of South Africa, the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) and the sub-Saharan African region, including Oil, Gas, Electrical power, Solar energy, low-
smoke Fuels, Biomass, Wind and Renewable Energy sources. The Clean Energy Division (CED) of CEF
invests in renewable energy projects that fall into the demonstration or niche market areas on the
research value chain. Examples of investments include an R82 million investment in the Cape Cleaner
Energy Solutions (Pty) Ltd (CCE) 8.8MW biomass electricity project, a R1.4 million investment into the
Methcap waste-to-energy project at PetroSA and an initial investment in the Darling wind farm. CED
invested R37.6 million to acquire a 29% shareholding in ENER-G Systems Joburg, an 18MW landll
gas-to-electricity project at ve landll sites within the City of Johannesburg, which was successful in
round three of the REIPPPP. CED also coordinates activities related to the proposed 5GW solar park
development148 in the Northern Cape, for which the feasibility study has been completed.
148 A Solar Park is a concentrated zone of solar development that includes thousands of megawatts (MW) of generation capacity. One or more pieces
of land in close proximity are designated and pre-permitted as a Solar Park. It also has the potential of decreasing the cost of solar power signicantly
due to economies of scale and use of locally manufactured components
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A remarkable journey in clean energy research and development
- Dr Thembakazi Mali, SANEDI, Clean Energy
Dr. Thembakazi Mali holds a PhD in Chemistry and a Graduate Diploma in Environmental
Engineering from the University of the Witwatersrand. Her career spans more than a
decade in the chemical and petrochemical elds before it shifted into the renewable
energy (RE) sector. Presently, she is the Senior Manager: Renewable Energy Programme,
at the South African National Energy Development Institute (SANEDI).
Her rst formal opportunity to work on clean energy came with an investigation into
biofuels. This work coincided with an opportunity to be in Parliament when the then
Deputy Minister of Science and Technology spoke about the establishment of a National
Energy Research Institute. This sparked an instant interest and certainty that she would be
part of this initiative. Indeed, with the establishment of the South African National Energy
Research Institute (SANERI), Dr Mali joined SANERI immediatly after it was established to
manage the Clean Energy Solutions portfolio. These presented the rst formal steps in a
newly formed organisation that held the excitement of all start-ups full of promise, but
tinged with fear of the unknown.
SANERI was predominantly established to build capacity in the broader energy R&D
environment, as most companies at the time were focused on their own, in-house R&D.
At the start, the priority was to identify the R&D gaps and, of course, to address the
skills shortage in order to revitalise and grow the energy sector. The huge interest in this
work at the time strongly suggested that renewables had the potential to grow in the
country. South Africa had existing pockets of excellence where good research was
being done, but the R&D focus needed to shift towards assisting in solving some societal
challenges. It was about the same period when the Biofuels Industrial Strategy (BIS)
was being formulated, with some of its drivers being job creation and local economic
development. This was followed by a number of Biomass, Solar (mostly PV) and Wind R&D
projects. As the renewable energy research and development portfolio broadened, so
did the number of postgraduates working with the various universities in association with
SANERI, which was incorporated into the South African National Development Institute
(SANEDI) in 2010.
In South Africa, the energy development focus has been weighted towards large grid-
tied projects. While this is important, of equal signicance are distributed, decentralised
projects as solutions to some of the energy challenges faced by the country. The
development of models and systems that can deliver those solutions are still much
needed. Some of the research has been done and now await the innovation that will
tailor it to suit our countrys needs.
Dr Mali highlights two areas of research and development she believes South Africa
should be involved in: energy storage and marine energy. Both areas have been locally
explored in the past, though due to inadequate funding momentum was lost and
research discontinued, with some of the slack being taken up by international research
institutions.
The promise of marine energy is enormous; given our extensive shoreline, it would
be a shame if we do not attempt to harness all that energy. Energy storage remains
prohibitively expensive, but R&D could help lower the costs. Decentralised systems could
become affordable even in the far-ung areas of our country, where there is no hope of
She also believes the development of a coherent energy R&D strategy will direct the
overall focus, prioritise areas that will grow the economy and give South Africa the
competitive edge. Delivering on these goals will rely greatly on adequately funded
energy R&D and suitable institutions to commercialise technologies and get them to
market.
Job creation and skills development for the renewable energy sector
Job creation remains one of the most important priorities of the South African government to address
high unemployment rates, poverty and inequality. The green economy and more specically, the
renewable energy sector has been identied as a sphere that could generate signicant jobs.
Estimates for job creation through the renewable energy sector vary from 36,400 new direct jobs149
to 78,000150 and up to 462,000,151 depending on the time frame and level of renewable energy and
energy-efcient technology penetration. The renewable energy sector is already important to the
South African economy, as illustrated below:
Figure 67: Local jobs created by renewable energy projects from Bid Windows 1 3152
However, according to the International Labour Ofce (ILO)153, South Africa is short of approximately
12,600 industrial and mechanical engineers and technologists; 5,000 electricians; and 7,000 specialist
managers (including environmental, arts and culture, ofce and quality managers) as well as
professionals in the training and development, and human resources sectors. Many of these skills
are particularly pertinent to the renewable energy and associated industries. In order to realise the
potential of the sector, sufcient skilled workers are required to service the growing industry and skills
development has to be addressed by the relevant public and private sector role players in South
Africa.
149 AGAMA Energy. 2003. Employment potential of renewable energy in South Africa
150 Rutovitz, J. 2010. South African energy sector jobs to 2030. Prepared for Greenpeace Africa by the Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of
Technology, Sydney, Australia
151 Maia, J et al. 2011. Green jobs: An estimate of the direct employment potential of a greening South African economy. IDC
152 Electricity Governance Initiative of South Africa. 2014. Renewable Energy Independent Power Producers Programme. 2014 Review
153 International Labour Organisation. 2010. kills for Green Jobs in South Africa. Unedited background country study. ILO: Geneva
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South African framework for skills development
To understand the skills development framework in South Africa, it is important to grasp the different
building blocks of the system, the role players and the underlying principles informing the framework.
Some important principles are that training and skills development should be demand-driven,
standardised and quality assured. South Africans are encouraged to view education and training as a
life-long journey and delivery as a partnership between Government, learners and business.
The South African national skills development framework is integral to a suite of complementary
labour, equity and skills development policy and regulations that is considered to be one of the most
sophisticated in the world in terms of design10. This suite drives ambitious strategies and targets and
includes the Employment Equity Act (Act No. 55 of 1998 and amended 2014), the Labour Relations Act
(Act No. 66 of 1995 as amended 2014) and the National Skills Development Strategy III (2011).
The National Training Board (established in 1994) investigated a number of factors inuencing the
South African training landscape, such as low levels of education, unemployment, the supply and
demand of labour, and technological acceleration. In order to address identied problems, a National
Qualications Framework (NQF) was developed and implemented in 1995. The aim of the NQF is to
specify learning in terms of outputs that are recognised both nationally and internationally. The NQF is
the set of principles and guidelines by which records of learner achievement are registered to enable
national recognition of acquired skills and knowledge, thereby ensuring an integrated system that
encourages life-long learning. The NQF outlines 10 levels for education in South Africa and these are
determined and overseen by three Quality Councils:
Council for
The Quality Council for Higher Education
Trades and Occupations (Universities and Technikons,
(QCTO) now absorbed into the
Universities of Technology)
The NQF is overseen by the South African Qualications Authority (SAQA). SAQAs function is to set up
processes, structures, standards and qualication criteria for the NQF. The qualications criteria are
developed, approved, registered and published. This process ensures that education and training is of
a high standard.
During 2003, the Department of Labour concluded that skills development would only be meaningful
if labour market needs were accurately dened, there was alignment between National Growth
Strategies and the Skills Development Strategies required to support it, and if a common language to
dene occupations was in existence. In 2000, the Organising Framework for Occupations (OFO) was
established. The OFO is a skills-based, coded occupational classication system that organises jobs
into occupations, and these in turn into occupational groups. The OFO distinguishes between the kind
of work performed (a job) and the skills required to perform the job. Two dimensions of skill are used
to organise occupations into groups, namely the skill level and the skill specialisation. Lastly, the OFO
The development of a new occupational qualication follows a specic process and a number of
role players are involved. Explained in a simplied manner, the process would develop as follows
industry recognises a need, the OFO is checked to determine if a relevant occupation exists and, if
not, the Sector Education and Training Authority (SETA) is approached to assist in the development
of a new qualication for the new occupation. The process requires a Development Quality Partner
(DQP) to manage the development process and the DQP is often the relevant SETA. An occupational
prole is developed, then a qualication to train for the new occupation is developed. Qualications
have three components (theoretical, practical and workplace experience) and include internal and
external assessment specications. An Assessment Quality Partner (AQP) is responsible for external
summative assessment and the recommendation of the certication of the qualication to the QCTO.
The AQP is often an industry body or could also be the relevant SETA. After the qualication has been
registered by the QCTO and issued with a SAQA Qualication ID number, training service providers can
apply to become registered training centres to deliver the qualication. They would need appropriate
learning
earning materials, qualied trainers and the correct equipment. The process is visually depicted below:
SETAs
QCTO
M Collect Labour
Market needs
M Based on need, appoints: Request development of
linked to
DQP occupational qualications
occupation
(Development)
|
OFO
ational Curriculum
Occup
tions
Qualica
= &
Qualication
Assessment Labour
Specications Market
SAQA +
AQP
NLRD
(Assessment)
Provider System
Figure 68: Role-players within the demand led occupational learning system
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In recognition of this growing eld of study, universities in South Africa are introducing programmes at
tertiary level focused on renewable energy research and innovation. Where possible, such programmes
are implemented in close collaboration with industry partners to facilitate integration of cutting edge
developments with private sector interests. Innovation programmes include:
Z The research programme at NWU includes cutting edge technology innovation and
developments in the renewable energy sector. Among the extensive range of research
initiatives only a few are highlighted:
Z It hosts the Hydrogen South Africa (HySA) Infrastructure Centre of Competence that is
developing applications and solutions for hydrogen production, storage and use in an
African context.
Z The NWU Solar Team has developed an internationally competitive Challenger/
Olympia class solar car that competed successfully in the 2012 and 2014 South African
Sasol Solar Challenges, won the Federation International dAutomobile (FIA) award
for research groups in alternative energies and will compete in the 2015 World Solar
Challenge in October this year.
Z NWU has initiated research on providing clean energy solutions in rural areas.
Z The Chair was awarded on 1 July 2007 as a start-up SANERI Research Chair in Biofuels.
Z Established as an internationally recognised research group with two fully equipped
research laboratories as well as a state-of-the-art analysis laboratory.
Z Consists of a unique combination of biochemists, microbiologists, chemists and
chemical engineers.
Z Research within the group is focused on the development of technology for affordable
biofuels and biochemical production.
Z This is being done in partnership with the Agriculture Research Council, Department of
Agriculture, other university departments and industry.
Z The group has established a Taught Masters programme and introduced a community
renewable energy awareness programme to contribute to the renewable energy skills
need.
Z The centres main research areas in renewable energy spans a wide spectrum,
including solar thermal energy, wind energy, ocean energy photovoltaic systems and
bioenergy including biofuels.
Z Appointed Specialisation Centre for Renewable Energy Technology for the Eskom
Power Plant Engineering Institute with a focus on concentrated solar power (CSP) and
wind energy.
Z Hosts the Scatec Solar Chair in Photovoltaic (PV) Systems, supported by the Norwegian
solar technology provider, Scatec Solar.
Z Hosts a Senior Chair of Energy Research in Biofuels and Other Alternative Clean Fuels.
Z The centre facilitates two coursework masters programmes with a focus on renewable
and sustainable energy.
Z Commercial activities span a number of new technologies and business opportunities
developed with strong support from the Technology Innovation Agency (TIA).
Comprehensive frameworks and foundations have been established in South Africa to support
renewable energy deployment, both in terms of research and development and skills development.
The development of training courses and material and the focus of research are effectively demand
driven. How well these structures serve the growing green sector will greatly depend on how well the
existing frameworks can be utilised. Industry players and associations have an opportunity to leverage
and inuence the structures to support their needs.
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The national South African Renewable Energy Technology Centre
(SARETEC) at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT)
In 2013, Government and the private sector decided to support skills development for
the renewable energy sector through the establishment of the South African Renewable
Energy Technology Centre (SARETEC) at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology. The
purpose of the centre is to train technicians to service the growing number of renewable
energy projects in the country. Funding of R105 million was secured from the Department of
Higher Education and Training (DHET) via the National Skills Fund. The bulk of the funding has
been utilised in the construction of a state-of-the-art centre with a turbine hall, auditorium,
laboratories, workshops, lecture theatres and ofces.
Construction was completed in March 2015 and the centre will be fully operational by July
2015. Through a public-private partnership with Nordex, a 2.5MW wind turbine (worth $5
million) was donated to the centre and delivered on 23 June 2014.
The Manufacturing, Engineering and Related Services Sector Education and Training
Authority (MERSETA) announced the support of a pilot implementation project during 2015
through which the newly developed wind energy technician qualication will be offered at
SARETEC.
During a fuel stop on Isla del Sol while ying to the United States in 1993, Professor Van
Niekerk and his wife noticed an unaccompanied (i.e. unprotected) Mr Nelson Mandela
stretching his legs. Recognising it as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, the Van Niekerks
introduced themselves. In the short conversation that followed, they were told by
Madiba not to leave the country, but to stay and work in South Africa. And so it was.
Born in Bloemfontein, qualied as a mechanical engineer at the University of Pretoria
and completing his PhD in active noise control at Berkeley University in California, Prof
Van Niekerk is now the director for the Centre for Renewable and Sustainable Energy
Studies (CRSES) at Stellenbosch University.
While acknowledging that he was in the right place at the right time, in equal measure
Prof Van Niekerk has had to put in a tremendous effort to develop and make a success
of the CRSES. Responding to a 2005 joint request for a proposal from the DoE and the
Department of Science and Technology for a national hub for RE, he personally wrote
and delivered it by hand to meet the deadline after internal bureaucracy almost
resulted in no submission. One of the rst orders of business of the newly formed South
African National Energy Research Institute (now SANEDI) on 3 August 2006 was to sign a
funding agreement to create CRSES. Leveraging from more than 30 years of experience
in alternate energy technologies across the various faculties, allowed CRSES to hit the
ground running.
The fast moving and dynamic nature of RE is not limited to technology, and CRSES has
had to adapt to changing circumstances to remain both relevant and solvent. Currently
it receives some funding from DST (20%), Eskoms Power Plant Engineering Institute for RE
(20%) and the balance is raised from other sources, such as international agencies and
the private sector. For example, Soitec Solar sponsors a chair at CRSES and the centre is
working hard to secure long-term funding from other RE companies, many of whom have
employed and are benetting from CRSES graduates.The Centre has eight academic
positions in 2015 under the programme and works closely with fellow universities, such as
Fort Hare and Venda, to transfer skills and share knowledge in line with the philosophy of
cooperation rather than competition.
Some of the centres major achievements to date include being one of the founding
members, with GIZ and GreenCape, of the South African Renewable Energy Technology
Centre (SARETEC) and developing, with the assistance of GIZ, detailed solar maps. Its
objectives for the immediate future are to start a national solar research centre and a
national energy modelling centre.
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Looking forward
Research and development of technologies and applications with the accompanying development
of suitable skills will become increasingly important in the rapidly evolving energy landscape. Going
forward, it is expected that research efforts will be focused on achieving increased penetration of
renewable energy in South Africa. Small-scale, off-grid renewable energy systems, especially for
rural areas, has been identied as a priority area as this is one sector where South Africa needs to
make signicant progress. Research into areas that will give South Africa a competitive advantage
in the production and commercialisation of renewable energy technologies is also required to assist
the country to become a market leader in the supply of renewable energy technologies. As grid-
connected renewable energy projects increase, solutions for energy storage will also become more
important. In addition, research and development into storage solutions will become increasingly
signicant.
Substantial investment will be needed to enable the required levels of R&D to support national
objectives and research targets for the energy sector.
During the last decade South Africa has achieved a momentous shift in the way it thinks about and
produces electricity. Historically, the coal-dominated energy sector provided for inexpensive electricity,
supporting an energy-intensive economy. Price escalations, severe electricity supply constraints and
environmental considerations have necessitated a radical transformation. Renewable energy is a
critical part of this transition towards a more diversied, cleaner energy system.
With the introduction of the ground-breaking REIPPPP in 2011, South Africa emerged as a major hub for
RE in the world. This programme delivered a rapid ramp-up in the development of RE resources, growing
the share of RE from being negligible to 4% within four years. This rate of growth is set to continue, both
as the procured portfolio becomes fully operational and newly announced procurement rounds are
rolled out.
In addition, the RE portfolio is being realised at cost-effective prices while accomplishing broad benets
to the economy and people of South Africa. The development approach in the sector is continually
rened to unlock inclusive economic growth and development and wealth creation within the
Prior to 1994 elections a the biggest
few young SA women- breakthrough at a
national level has been
engineers in the energy
sector started participating commitments and
encouraging the the ongoing success of
in the Energy Forums processes that have been
develop-ment of the countrys agship
discussions. established which paved
renewable energy renewables procurement
it became necessary the way for the growth of
technologies which program and the growing
to form a pressure group the broader sector.
are more affordable, interest of international
to change attitudes and accessible to our poor, OSMAN ASMAL developers and funders
formulate gender-sensitive safe, and which contribute City of Cape Town
is a strong sign that
policies within the new towards sustainable South Africa is blazing
government. development. a trail across the global
RITA MFENYANA DEPUTY MINISTER renewables sector.
SUSAN SHABANGU the Ernst & Young
Minister of Energy 1996 - 2004 Renewable Energy
Attractiveness Index
(RECAI) report,
a new area of research
February 2014
- then called appropriate
energy technology
effectively looking at
small-scale and renewable
energy technologies that
could promote social
development and reduce
Achieved change as
poverty.
PROF ANTON EBERHARD installed by June 2015
0% 4%
Renewables Renewables
5% 5%
Low energy mix demonstrated
Hydro Hydro
by IRP 2010 electricity mix
95% 91%
Non-Renewables Non-Renewables
In reviewing the progress made, it is also recognised that there are remaining areas requiring additional
support to catalyse development and/or unlock the full spectrum of potential benets. Initiatives such
as Biofuels, Biogas, solar home systems (SHS) and distributed RE generation will be important focus
points in the continuing journey.
At this point, it is good to look back at where the country came from and how far it has come. With this
perspective, South Africa can celebrate the signicance of the RE contribution to the power system
as well as the economy, society and environment. We have truly created a sound foundation for a
promising future.
The South African Renewable the mainstreaming of
Energy Independent Power embedded generation and
Producer Programme is world SWHs/efcient water heating for
South Africa has been quietly all sectors is imminent, from low
class. Who would have thought,
creating one of the worlds most income energy services through
even a few years ago, that
progressive alternative energy to commercial solutions.
wind energy would now be
plans. Solar, biomass and wind
the cheapest source of grid- ANDREW JANISCH
energy systems are popping up
connected energy. City of Cape Town
all over the country and feeding
PROF ANTON EBERHARD clean energy into the strained
electrical grid.
Engineering News
It is set to completely transform
these deep rural communities in
terms of healthcare, education,
job creation and a raft of other
interventions. All this while putting
green electricity on the grid at
affordable prices.
JOHAN VAN DEN BERG
director of the South African 2030 target of IRP
Wind Energy Association
12% 21%
Renewables Renewables
4% 5%
Achieved change as procured
Hydro Hydro
by June 2015
84% 74%
Non-Renewables Non-Renewables
Chapter
Chapte
Cha p r9
pte | 145
4
45
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| 149
List of Interviews
Person interviewed Interviewed by Date of interview
Dr Rod Crompton Mari-Louise van der Walt and Theo Covary 1-Jul-15
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GRE YLING
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152 ER| P PHE
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