The world cannot decarbonise without Africa’s production of green hydrogen, hydrogen fuel cell company Hypowa CEO and trade association African Hydrogen Partnership SG and cofounder Siegfried Huegemann has said. “It is just not possible,” he said during the second yearly Hydrogen Economy Discussion conference, in Johannesburg, on September 6.
Stage 2 load-shedding will be rolled out from 16:00 until 22:00 on Tuesday night and will continue daily from 05:00 until 22:00 until Saturday, Eskom said in a statement on Tuesday.  The power utility has been hit by breakdowns as well as delays returning units to service. Units at Arnot, Duvha, Kendal, Medupi and Tutuka have all broken down, and there have been delays in repairs at Hendrina. On Saturday, a unit at Koeberg tripped and it has not yet been returned to service. 
The Transnet National Ports Authority (TNPA) board has approved plans that open the way for various expansions at the Durban and Richards Bay ports, including a new berth for handling liquified natural gas (LNG) at the Port of Richards Bay. TNPA, which has been established as an independent subsidiary of Transnet, says the expansions form part of the R100-billion KwaZulu-Natal Logistics Hub Programme.
The European Investment Bank (EIB), which is the long-term financing agency of the European Union, will triple its worldwide climate adaptation funding by 2025, and Africa will be one of the regions that will benefit. This was announced on Monday at the Africa Adaptation Summit, held in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. The summit was organised by the Global Centre on Adaptation (GCA) and was attended by leading figures in governments, businesses and the United Nations.  “Climate change could wipe out 15% of Africa’s gross domestic product by 2030, which would mean an additional 100-million people in extreme poverty by the end of the decade,” said EIB president Werner Hoyer in his speech at the summit. “A scenario that is particularly unfair towards a continent that has contributed only marginally to climate change.” 
The government of Malawi, development finance institution the International Finance Corporation (IFC), renewable energy solutions company Scatec and integrated energy company EDF have signed a binding commercial agreement to co-develop the 350 MW Mpatamanga hydropower project on the Shire river.  The agreement was signed under Malawi’s Public-Private Partnership framework and concludes the selection process undertaken by the government of Malawi to competitively select a private sector partner to finance, build and operate the Mpatamanga hydropower plant.