Funding key to increasing electricity distribution – DoE

7th February 2014

  

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The Department of Energy (DoE) informed the Integrated Electrification Programme (Inep) committee, last year, that the current pace of the electrification programme would hamper its goal of providing universal access to electricity in South Africa, says DoE deputy director-general Dr Wolsey Barnard.

He explains that, if access to electricity is to be increased, it could only be done through an increase in funding or by tackling the problem with techno- logy. Therefore, a new approach to electrification was required, and a new ‘electrification roadmap’ for South Africa had been developed.

In March 2012, the DoE held an Electrification Indaba, in Durban, on March 15 and 16, where all the relevant sector departments and stakeholders were invited to participate. The indaba resulted in a consultative working group process through which the relevant stakeholders were involved in defining a new roadmap, adds Barnard.

After the technology and funding options had been considered, taking into account future growth, and a mix of grid and nongrid connections, it was estimated that all formal households would have universal access by 2025. The “least cost” benchmark for urban areas was R12 000 a household, and R17 000 for rural areas, he says.

There was a critical analysis of major infrastructure needs and costs, taking into consideration the role and acceptance, of the independent power producers (IPPs). Timeframes to electrify outstanding households were linked to generation capacity and the available network capacity. There was also a focus on providing universal access per ward/municipality in the next two to three years.

Between 1994 and 2013/14, just under 5.7-million households had been electrified under Inep, while in the period from 2002 to 2013/14, 68 115 households in the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Limpopo had been supplied with nongrid technology (solar panels and renewable energy).

A total of 181 004 connections had been made during the financial year, which was just ahead of Inep’s target of 180 000. This could be attributed to improved efficiencies, as a result of being more involved in the operational activities of implementers, and good cooperation from State-owned power utility Eskom and municipalities.

Edited by Megan van Wyngaardt
Creamer Media Contributing Editor Online

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