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Renewables statistics point to slow response to South Africa’s power constraints

3rd July 2020

By: Terence Creamer

Creamer Media Editor

     

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ew statistics released by the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) Energy Centre show that South Africa added only 100 MW of additional utility-scale renewable-energy capacity in 2019, despite supply-side constraints and an intensive period of load-shedding.

In fact, the report describes 2019 as one of the worst on record for load-shedding, with 1 359 GWh of rotational cuts implemented and Eskom having taken the unprecedented step of declaring Stage 6 load-shedding, or 6 000 MW of simultaneous cuts, on December 9.

Compiled by Joanne Calitz and Dr Jarrad Wright, the report is based on data provided directly by Eskom.

The CSIR Energy Centre has used the opportunity to also embed a brief crowdfunding survey into the publication. Wright tells Engineering News & Mining Weekly that the survey seeks to assess whether stakeholders see crowdfunding as a feasible mechanism for funding bite-size, yet burning, energy research.

“As is the case with typical well-known crowdfunding platforms, one tries to establish a minimum funding need, but, if one does meet that minimum, the research question will not be answered via that platform.”

Regardless of the survey results, the CSIR Energy Centre would continue producing yearly statistics for utility-scale solar photovoltaic (PV), wind and concentrated solar power (CSP) in South Africa but would like to generalise this periodically to include further analysis of other energy carriers and technologies.

The 2019 report highlights that all the new renewables capacity added last year arose in the form of CSP, which increased South Africa’s total operating CSP capacity to 500 MW.

With no other renewables capacity added, total operating renewables capacity increased modestly to about 4 100 MW, with wind and utility-scale solar PV capacity remaining static at 2 080 MW and 1 474 MW respectively.

The overall renewable-energy contribution to the energy mix was 11.5 TWh, or 5%, with coal’s contribution remaining dominant at 84%, notwithstanding a slump in the performance of Eskom’s coal fleet during the year.

Nuclear contributed some 6% of total energy and diesel-fuelled open-cycle gas turbines about 1%, while small hydro and imports provided the balance of the energy.

The maximum instantaneous contribution from wind, solar PV and CSP was nearly 14% of system demand on the afternoon of December 14, 2019, which is nevertheless modest relative to renewables penetration rates in many other territories.

Wind and solar PV production performance remained consistent, compared with previous years, with a capacity factor above 25% for solar PV and above 35% for wind.

Monthly contributions from wind, solar PV and CSP ranged between 784 GWh and 1 161 GWh, with a seasonal peak in the summer months.

The CSIR report also shows that, while the profile of solar PV consistently supports high daytime demand hours, the wind fleet consistently supports into the late afternoon and early evening, particularly in the summer months.

Wind, solar PV and CSP also reduced high-demand hours, or hours when demand is more than 30 GW (system peak of 34.1GW), from 734 hours to 291 hours last year, whilst peak demand, or the one hour of the year when the system peak occurs, was reduced by about 1.0 GW.

The system load for the year was 231 TWh, with a peak demand of 34.1 GW, representing a decline from the 234 TWh system load of 2018 and peak demand of 35.2 GW. Demand in 2020 is likely to fall by 5.9%, or 13 TWh, as a result of the Covid-19 lockdown.

Relative to total system demand, the residual demand after wind, solar PV and CSP are excluded helped shift residual base-demand needs from 24.6 GW to 23.4 GW and midmerit needs from 5.1 GW to 4.8 GW. Peaking demand requirements increased from 4.4 GW to 4.8 GW.

Wright explains that this data is, thus, pointing to a lower need for base- and midmerit capacity and an increased need for peaking, and increasingly flexible, capacity.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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