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Gaia to raise $200m for Africa in Luxembourg climate fund

Gaia Fund Managers is raising $200-million for investment in African renewable energy plants and power grids with the assistance of Apex Group. The money will be raised through the Gaia Africa Climate Fund which will be domiciled in Luxembourg to allow US and European investors direct access. Apex Group will act as fund administrator.

Enertrag helps the energyDRIVE team teach Mpumalanga learners about renewable energy

Renewable energy development company Enertrag South Africa is a sponsor and participant of Phase 2 of the wind industry’s experiential renewable energy conversation across local schools in Mpumalanga through the energyDRIVE initiative. The company says it recognises the importance of engaging with stakeholders in the Mpumalanga province, including civil society, the business community and government, to contribute towards an energy mix that is best for South Africa.

Grid rules should favour shovel-ready projects whether public or private – Minister

Electricity and Energy Minister Dr Kgosientsho Ramokgopa indicates that he is in favour of grid-access rules that ensure as much new capacity is added as quickly as possible regardless of whether that new generation is procured through public or private processes. The Minister was responding to a question as to whether upcoming Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPPP) bidding rounds could be threatened if the Energy Regulator refused to allow Eskom to reserve grid capacity for such projects.

IRP2023 comments to be workshopped to ensure ‘credible’ outcome

Electricity and Energy Minister Dr Kgosientsho Ramokgopa has committed not to dismiss the more than 4 000 public comments received in response to the draft Integrated Resource Plan 2023 (IRP2023), the content of which has been heavily criticised. Instead, he has promised to host workshops with stakeholders, especially those 200-odd who had made “substantive” submissions.

Ramokgopa announces electricity tariff review amid affordability ‘crisis’ for poor households

Electricity and Energy Minister Dr Kgosientsho Ramokgopa reports that a review of South Africa’s electricity pricing policy will be launched with the aim of addressing a rising affordability “crisis”, which is undermining electricity access for a growing number of poor consumers. The review would be undertaken in consultation with the South African Local Government Association, Eskom, the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) and other stakeholders, and could have far-reaching implications for the way electricity tariffs are set and how low-income households are subsidised.

Shoprite group rolls out electricity wheeling at a third site

The Shoprite retail group has started wheeling renewable electricity at its home office in Brackenfell, Cape Town, making it the company’s third site to implement this energy solution. Wheeling involves the buying and selling of electricity between private parties, using an existing grid to transport power from where it is generated to an end-user.

South Africa’s 2030 decarbonisation target at risk, climate commission warns

The Presidential Climate Commission (PCC) is cautioning that South Africa may miss its 2030 decarbonisation target in light of a decision to further delay the decommissioning of three aged coal power stations and if new clean sources are not introduced in line with the country’s electricity generation roadmap. The warning is contained in the commission’s inaugural ‘South African State of Climate Action’ report, released on July 25.

Africa offers $193bn renewables opportunity, study shows

Sub-Saharan Africa offers a $193-billion opportunity to invest in renewable energy and transmission by 2031, with returns a multiple of those in Europe and the US, according to a new study. Utility-scale wind, solar, storage and transmission projects across a number of African countries may yield an internal rate of return of 15% to 21%, significantly above the cost of capital and yields on sovereign bonds, the study compiled by Wood Mackenzie showed. Returns in the US and Europe are a little more than 5%.

Standard Bank backs 500-MW-worth of decentralised electricity projects post reforms

Standard Bank reports that it has provided funding to South African decentralised electricity projects with a combined capacity of more than 500 MW over the past two years, following regulatory changes allowing such projects to proceed without a licence. Operation Vulindela, which oversaw the regulatory reforms, reported that the pipeline of private renewables projects currently stood at 22 500 MW and that efforts were being made to remove the grid-related bottlenecks to unlocking further investment.