Eskom group executive for strategy and sustainability Nontokoza Hadebe says the decision to establish a ‘GreenCo’ renewables business as a standalone subsidiary separated from Eskom Generation is to help facilitate partnerships, as well as to potentially tap the growing market appetite for green electricity. Speaking at Resources for Africa’s Coal & Energy Transition Day, Hadebe reiterated the State-owned utility’s aspiration to build 20 GW of renewable energy by 2035, 5 GW of which would arise from just energy transition-linked “repowering” initiatives at existing coal power station sites that are scheduled for decommissioning by 2030.
The Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), which is an agency of the intergovernmental Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, has published the third edition of its “NEA Small Modular Reactor (SMR) Dashboard”. This shows that there has been notable progress in the development and deployment of SMRs around the world. “The overarching developments reflected in the “NEA SMR Dashboard” are clear: the strategic drivers for SMR deployment – rising electricity demand, including from data centres and expanding digital services, energy security imperatives and the national goals set by many countries to reduce carbon emissions – are intensifying,” reported NEA director-general William D Magwood IV. “SMRs are now a core part of the energy strategies in an increasing number of countries in all parts of the world.”
Six solar PV projects, with a combined capacity of 1 290 MW, have been named as preferred bidders following the seventh bid window (BW7) of South Africa’s Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP). All the projects are located in the Free State province and achieved competitive bid prices of between R499.99/MWh and R514.06/MWh.