South Africa’s plan to add $6.5b of power generation delayed

 

Bloomberg

South Africa’s plan to add an estimated $6.5 billion worth of private power generation has been further delayed as the nation continues to suffer from intermittent power outages.
The signing of power purchase agreements by preferred bidders for the 2,000 megawatt risk mitigation, or emergency power, program was postponed due to “outstanding matters and conditions” with state-owned electricity utility Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd, the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy said in a reply to questions. The bidders whose 11 projects were selected and their lenders need “adequate time to undertake due diligence reviews of the project agreements,” it said.
The most industrialised nation in Africa experienced record power cuts last year as Eskom has said that as much as 6,000 megawatts of additional generation capacity will be needed to secure the system. Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe in February 2019 predicted that a program to source up to half of that amount could be online within two years, though no new projects have been added to the grid.
Eskom didn’t immediately reply to emailed questions.
Additional efforts to fill the gap have continued to face delays. The winners of the emergency power program were picked early last year, but the round has been tied up by a court case lodged by a losing bidder that’s prevented projects from achieving financial close, the deadline for which has been delayed several times.
Projects selected last year in a fifth round, of South Africa’s previously successful auctions, to add 2,600 megawatts of renewable power were originally scheduled to complete financing in March but haven’t done so.
At the time they were announced, chosen projects for emergency power equated to 45 billion rand and the fifth renewable auction drew 25 successful wind and solar bids that would result in 50 billion rand of investment.

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