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Shift from high- to low-carbon must be systematic and just – Mantashe

Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe

Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe

Photo by Creamer Media's Donna Slater

24th July 2020

By: Terence Creamer

Creamer Media Editor

     

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South Africa’s Mineral Resources and Energy Minister, Gwede Mantashe, used the platform created by the International Energy Agency (IEA) Clean Energy Transitions Summit on July 9 to stress that South Africa’s shift from a high-carbon to a low-carbon path needed to be both systematic and just.

Speaking during the virtual event, which was opened by United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres (see also page 25), attended by Energy Ministers from 40 countries and viewed by thousands online, Mantashe insisted that South Africa’s Integrated Resource Plan 2019 (IRP 2019) would guide the diversification of the country’s electricity mix, which is currently dominated by coal.

The IRP 2019 envisages the energy contribution of coal falling, partly through the decommissioning of old stations, from over 75% currently to about 59% by 2030, and the contribution of renewable energy rising from 7% to about 24% over the same period.

This renewables contribution would arise primarily from the integration of more than 14 000 MW of new wind and some 6 000 MW of new solar photovoltaic (PV) generation by 2030. In addition, it is anticipated that the bulk of the allocation for distributed generation would arise in the form of solar PV.

South Africa was also aiming to integrate 5 000 MW of storage and import 2 500 MW of new hydro from the Inga scheme, in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Mantashe suggested during the summit, however, that the hydro allocation might be displaced by small modular nuclear reactors should the hydro scheme fail to be implemented on time.

In addition, the plan caters for 1 500 MW of new coal and 3 000 MW of gas-to-power.

The Minister insisted that South Africa’s priority was to deliver affordable and universal access to electricity, while honouring the commitments it had made under the Paris Agreement to reduce its carbon emissions.

The South African government would, thus, resist “pressure” to narrow its policy focus to emissions alone, particularly given that Africa as a whole “contributes between 2% and 3% of global carbon emissions”.

The Minister described South Africa’s key challenge as being the ability to develop “connected capacity that can be used to give access to everybody – that is our biggest preoccupation”.

“[To do so], we are subscribing to the concept of a just transition, and a just transition cannot mean jumping like a pendulum from one end to the other. It will mean systematic transitioning from one era to the next,” Mantashe explained.

“We think we are positioning ourselves to manage that carefully, despite the pressures, because, sometimes, when you are a weaker economy, you get pushed to do things that are almost like self-destruction.

“We are resisting that, we will do what we can do, so that we give electricity to our people at an affordable price and transition from high emissions to low emissions over a period.”

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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