Eskom COO sees another 18 months of South Africa outages

South Africa faces another 18 months of regular power cuts and won’t be able to end them until sufficient generating capacity is added to the electricity grid to meet demand, Eskom Chief Operating Officer Jan Oberholzer said.

“We need another year or year-and-a-half to get out of this,” Oberholzer said at the Agri SA conference near Johannesburg on Thursday. “We are going to go through a tough time over the next year and a half.”

Work that Eskom has done to alleviate the country’s energy crisis will help ensure the situation won’t be as dire as it might have been.

Still, it may be necessary for the utility to take a “bold step” and implement so-called Stage 2 load-shedding – in which 2 000 megawatts are cut from the national grid – for a lengthy period to enable Eskom to carry out necessary maintenance, he said.

“People can then plan accordingly,” Oberholzer said.

Read: Eskom CEO André de Ruyter on why he believes there is light at the end of the tunnel

Eskom to reduce outages by end of week (Oct 12, 4:02 p.m.)
Eskom will halve the amount of power it removes from the national grid to 1 000 megawatts from 16:00 on October 14.

Before that, the utility will continue to cut 2 000 megawatts from 16:00 until midnight on Wednesday and Thursday, according to a statement on Twitter.

“To the extent possible, Eskom will endeavor to limit loadshedding to night-time to have minimal impact on the economy and population,” it said, using a local term for rolling blackouts.

Eskom to sign contracts with five power producers on October 14 (Oct. 11, 2:46 p.m.)
Eskom will sign the first contracts to lease land to five independent power producers on Friday so that they can develop renewable energy projects, the utility said.

The company in June announced it had selected 18 companies to lease sites at its power plants. The bids for about 4,000 hectares (9,884 acres) are ultimately for projects expected to realize 1,800 megawatts of renewable energy capacity.

Power cuts and the blame game around Eskom (Oct. 7, 11:21 a.m.)
Citizens are angry over the nation’s record power cuts and politicians are seeking to deflect blame for a crisis that’s been a quarter century in the making.

Stung by criticism, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa raced home from Queen Elizabeth’s funeral in the UK, canceling plans to travel on to United Nations’ meetings. An announcement followed that the board of state power utility Eskom had been replaced and an ambitious efficiency target for its predominantly coal-fired plants was set. Action had been taken.

Yet, in the government’s pronouncements on the crisis, some inconvenient facts have been omitted.

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Source: moneyweb.co.za