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Africa’s richest city needs R221bn to fix infrastructure

Johannesburg, billed as Africa’s richest city because of its concentration of businesses and millionaires, needs R221-billion to catch up on maintenance and overdue upgrades across its collapsing road, power and water networks. The city council discussed the shortfall late last month and detailed it in documents seen by Bloomberg. It comes at a time when regular power outages — the result of distribution-network breakdowns — hit large swathes of Johannesburg. Officials leave potholes unattended for months and parts of the city had no water for as long as 11 days in March.

Growthpoint rolls out renewable energy wheeling scheme at ten properties

JSE-listed real estate investment trust Growthpoint Properties has announced a new energy benefit scheme called e-CO2, which it will roll out at ten of its properties in Sandton.

This marks a next step in the company’s rollout of its renewable energy transition and will involve providing green energy at its office buildings through wheeling, reducing carbon footprints and generating renewable energy certificates (RECs) for tenants using the latest blockchain technology.

Eskom releases names of transformer suppliers amid rising localisation pressures

Eskom has released the names to Engineering News of the five transformer companies appointed to a panel of suppliers that will compete for upcoming contracts for a total of 101 large-scale transformers to be installed as part of the National Transmission Company South Africa’s (NTCSA’s) Transmission Development Plan (TDP). Ahead of the NTCSA’s operationalisation on July 1, Eskom announced in late June that the suppliers had been selected following an open tender issued in March 2023, but did not immediately identify the companies, saying only that they were “local with an international footprint”.

NTCSA to make own application to Nersa in bid to secure dedicated revenue to maintain and …

National Transmission Company South Africa (NTCSA) interim CEO Segomoco Scheppers has confirmed that the newly operationalised entity is making an allowable revenue application to the regulator that is distinct from that of Eskom as it seeks to secure the finances it requires for its operations and to implement its ambitious roll-out of new grid infrastructure. Speaking at an event co-hosted by the Powerline and Substation Association and the South African independent Power Producer Association, Scheppers argued that the newly separated entity had to be placed on a sound financial footing by securing the revenue required to run, maintain and expand the network.

Grid infrastructure holds potential for South Africa if properly leveraged – expert

Power and energy expert Vally Padayachee has emphasised the untapped potential and critical importance of optimising the country’s grid system, especially now as it transforms into a high-value smart grid that incorporates smart technologies and serves as a “backup” for renewable-energy power. Padayachee, a former senior executive at City Power, in Johannesburg, and a former executive manager at Eskom, highlights, in an opinion article sent to Engineering News, the need for critical thinking, strategic investment, modernisation and a shift in thinking to address the challenges facing the South African energy landscape.

Africa could see 3.3m new jobs across 12 green sectors by 2030 – report

An estimated 3.3-million new, direct jobs could be created across 12 green subsectors in Africa by 2030, a report published by staffing specialist company Shortlist and development agency FSD Africa, with analysis from consulting firm Boston Consulting Group (BCG) has found. The ‘Forecasting Green Jobs in Africa’ report shows that the majority of these new jobs will be created in the renewable-energy sector, particularly in the solar industry.

South Africa still owns highly enriched uranium, report says

South Africa still has a stockpile of highly enriched uranium, Netwerk24 reported, citing Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources Gwede Mantashe. The nation declared its holdings of the nuclear material, which can be used to build weapons, to the International Atomic Energy Agency as part of a comprehensive precautionary agreement, the website reported, citing Mantashe. The level of enrichment of the uranium was classified information, it said.

Steel giant sees first demand ‘green shoots’ in years as GNU prioritises infrastructure and …

Steel producer ArcelorMittal South Africa (AMSA), which has been bemoaning weak domestic demand conditions for several years, reports that it is witnessing signs of “green shoots” in manufacturing and has also expressed cautious optimism over a potential for a recovery in energy-, construction- and automotive-related demand. While reporting a 2% fall in volumes to 1.2-million tons in the first half of the year, as well as a material 10% slump in production to 1.2-million tons, largely owing to blast-furnace chilled hearth conditions at Vanderbijlpark in April and May, CEO Kobus Verster pointed to improving demand dynamics.