Further to its energy security initiatives to become independent from the national grid, the City of Cape Town has issued a request for information (RFI) asking the market for energy trading solutions, including market operation and underwriting and energy aggregation services.

Interested stakeholders are invited to access the RFI on the city’s tender portal at http://web1.capetown.gov.za/web1/TenderPortal/Tender and to submit responses by April 19.

Renewable-energy solution provider Solar MD has noted a 300% growth in demand for energy storage solutions in South Africa, owing to increasing demand for energy storage products in the residential, commercial and industrial sectors. “While the residential sector has shown steady linear growth, the industrial sector has been experiencing exponential growth, owing to the need to address energy supply challenges and improve energy efficiency,” says Solar MD CEO Kaloyan Dimov.
The lack of transmission infrastructure public funding for grid strengthening and expansion has emerged as a binding constraint on connecting much-needed private generation and on South Africa’s transitioning to a more reliable and cleaner electricity sector. Thus, there are growing calls for not only the separation of the National Transmission Company South Africa from generation-focused Eskom but also private-sector participation in the funding, building and operation of parts of the grid to accelerate the development of the infrastructure needed to end loadshedding and facilitate the energy transition.
The just energy transition (JET) in South Africa provides global power technologies leader Hitachi Energy with opportunities to supply the utility, industry and infrastructure sectors with innovative solutions and services across the energy sector value chain. “Digital and energy platforms are needed for the enormous power system energy transition challenges of increased complexity and additional capacity requirements. These platforms allow for greater grid resilience and help manage the shift to a more complex power generation landscape by matching fluctuations in power supply and demand dynamically,” explains Hitachi Energy MD for sub-Saharan Africa Malvin Naicker.
Recent regulatory changes in the local energy sector – such as the lifting of the licensing threshold for independent power generation – will help boost solar energy equipment supplier GameChange Solar’s involvement in energy projects. “The lifting of the threshold, however, is not a switch that allow for projects to move instantly,” says GameChange Solar Southern Africa regional director Russ Bowden, adding that projects larger than 100 MW are large investments with many stakeholders, as such projects require prudent planning and execution to ensure a sound investment.
Despite the disappointment for the local wind industry over the Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP) Bid Window 6 – which did not approve any new wind generation capacity – wind turbine designer and manufacturer Nordex Energy South Africa regards the country as a key market. The company is committed to South Africa, with “great potential in both public and private procurement”.
With the introduction of the just energy transition, there will be a downsizing in personnel in sectors such as coal, which, in turn, will require a transfer of skills to the renewable-energy sector. The world’s leading organisation for project professionals, Project Management Institute (PMI), believes the energy transition will lead to a demand for project management skills. With the right polices in place, the outcome for both the workers and the economy can be inclusive and fair. 
State-owned entity the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) on March 23 hosted the Belgium’s King Philippe at its Indoor Energy Storage Testbed facility, in Pretoria. South Africa’s Higher Education, Science and Innovation Minister Dr Blade Nzimande was also in attendance at the facility, which equips the CSIR to test the performance and reliability of batteries, as expressed by their storage capacity, life cycle and depth of charge. 
Despite reaching a record $32-trillion in 2022, global trade growth turned negative in the second half of 2022 amid deteriorating economic conditions and rising uncertainties, reports the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (Unctad).

For the first half of this year, global trade is set to stagnate, but could later benefit from a strong performance of trade in environment-friendly products, whose growth held strong throughout 2022, Unctad’s ‘Global Trade Update’ of March 23 shows.

The economic and financial benefits to South African municipalities of buying electricity from independent power producers (IPPs), as well as commercial and residential prosumers has turned overwhelmingly positive and should be pursued with enthusiasm, the chairperson of the South African Independent Power Producer Association argues. In fact, Thomas Garner states that, in the context of ongoing loadshedding, a municipality’s  electricity-related finances could be significantly bolstered if it were to diversify its sources of supply beyond Eskom and, in so doing, reduce revenue-sapping rotational cuts and stimulate rates-generating economic activity.