Unnamed South Africa coal projects

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Unnamed South Africa coal projects is an announced power station in Unknown, South Africa. It is also known as South Africa IRP 2010 Update New Coal.

Location

Table 1: Project-level location details

Plant name Location Coordinates (WGS 84)
Unnamed South Africa coal projects Unknown, South Africa -29.02, 24.42 (approximate)

The map below shows the approximate location of the power station.

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Project Details

Table 2: Unit-level details

Unit name Status Fuel(s) Capacity (MW) Technology Start year Retired year
Unit IRP Capacity announced coal - unknown 1500 unknown 2027

Table 3: Unit-level ownership and operator details

Unit name Owner
Unit IRP Capacity to be determined [100.0%]

Background

In 2011 the South Africa Department of Energy (DOE) released an Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) for the 2010-2030 time period.[1]

The plan described a "Revised Balance Scenario" (RBS) for coal that included 4332 MW at Medupi power station, 4338 MW at Kusile power station, and 6250 MW of unnamed "new build options" during the 2010-2030 period.

The 6250 MW of new, unnamed capacity was planned to be implemented as follows:[1]

  • 2014: 500 MW
  • 2015: 500 MW
  • 2019-2025: 250 MW each year
  • 2026: 1000 MW
  • 2027: 250 MW
  • 2028: 1000 MW
  • 2029: 250 MW
  • 2030: 1000 MW


The 500 MW of new coal capacity in 2014 and again in 2015 would be fluidized bed combustion (FBC) plants built, owned, and operated by independent power providers (IPPs). The 250 MW of new capacity in 2019 and 2020 were also conceived as FBC plants, but the plan did not specify who would build these plants.[1]

The 2013 draft update of the plan envisioned 2,450 MW of new coal power by 2030, due to a downgrading of national energy demand and increase in proposed natural gas use. It stated that 1,000 - 1,500 MW of fluidized bed combustion capacity from discarded coal would be a preferable implementation of the proposed Coal-3 power station. The draft update was issued for public comment and anticipated to be submitted to the cabinet by March 2014,[2][3] but never was. Therefore IRP 2010 remains the official document and the draft update has no status.[4]

In December 2014 the government announced that it would launch a private sector-led, independent power producer (IPP) coal plant program by January 2015, which would add 2,500 megawatts of generation capacity to the grid.[5]

2018 IRP

South Africa's 2018 draft Integrated Resource Plan for Electricity (IRP), released in August 2018, contains plans for an additional 1000 MW of new coal-fired power on top of the Medupi and Kusile coal plants, which are under construction. The new plants are the Khanyisa power station and Thabametsi power station, chosen as part of the IPP coal baseload program.[6] All other plans appear to be cancelled.

2019 IRP & 2020 Determination

The government's 2019 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP2019), released in October 2019, included plans for 1,500 MW of coal-based electricity: 750 MW in 2023 and another 750 MW in 2027.[7] However, that 1,500 MW appeared to be in addition to or instead of the 900 MW from the planned Khanyisa power station and Thabametsi power station, which were at risk or "not materialising due to financing and legal challenges".[8]

A November 2021 study released by the University of Cape Town's Energy Systems Research Group describes that this coal plan not only costs US $1.5 billion more than a least-cost alternative, but also will yield 25,000 job losses and stand in direct opposition to the country's climate commitments.[9] Another study from May 2022 reports that between January 2019 and November 2021, 10 African commercial banks provided US $2.807 billion in loans to the coal industry, with five South African banks accounting for 97% of total lending. Though shifts in the IRP have occurred, this author says that there is "no end to coal financing in sight" for the country.[10]

Youth-led litigation filed in 2021

In November 2021, the Centre for Environmental Rights (CER), a South African environmental law organization, filed a landmark constitutional lawsuit in the North Gauteng High Court on behalf of three civil society organizations against the South African government. The suit demands that the government abandon its plans to build new coal-fired power generation. "The Cancel Coal case is, at its heart, a lawsuit tackling climate change that seeks to compel the South African government to do its part to address the climate crisis by reducing coal-related emissions. South Africa (SA) is the world’s seventh largest consumer of coal, using the fuel to account for about 80% of its electricity production. Largely because of its coal consumption, South Africa is ranked 13th in the world in CO2 emissions. In addition, South Africa’s coal economy is a major environmental justice issue because the burdens of mining and burning coal in South Africa are disproportionately borne by the poor and exacerbated by the unjust legacies left behind by Apartheid."[11]

As CER wrote, "The case was launched after government failed to respond to a letter of demand sent to Minister Mantashe on 17 September 2021 by CER on behalf of ACA groundWork and VEM, which demanded that government abandon its plans to build new coal-fired power as outlined in the Minister’s September 2020 determination for 1500 MW of new coal and the 2019 IRP. The organisational applicants have gone out of their way to afford the Minister ample opportunity to engage on the unlawful inclusion of the 1500 MW new coal allocation. Due to the Minister’s unresponsiveness, they have been left with no alternative but to institute these court proceedings in the public interest and in order to vindicate constitutional rights."[12]

In November 2022, after the Minister refused to make certain documents available – including the modelling and cost assumptions that informed the plans for 1,500 MW of new coal, as well as the details of the coal power technologies considered – the applicants approached the court. In December 2022, the court ordered the Minister to release the documents by February 28, 2023.[13][14]

In September 2023, noting the Mineral Resources and Energy Minister's failure to release the court ordered documents, the applicants represented by CER filed a supplementary founding affidavit that added the Minister of Electricity as a respondent to the case, given his "newly acquired powers in determining new generation capacity."[15][16]

2023 IRP

According to reporting from August and September 2023, the Minister of Electricity had announced that the government planned to release an updated Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) for 2030 by the end of September 2023.[17][18] The Minister of Minerals and Energy later said that the updated IRP would now be submitted to the Cabinet by the end of October 2023.[19]

In December 2023, Cabinet approved an updated draft IRP, which was released for public comment the following month.[20][21][22]

Possible scenarios in the 2023 draft IRP included delayed shutdowns of coal plants and up to 6,000 MW of alleged "clean coal" technologies.[22] A representative from Eskom reportedly said that a cost analysis with details on delayed coal plant closures was "still being finalised."[23] Energy, business, and community groups had criticized the draft IRP for its lack of detail and ambition for renewables. The public comment period was scheduled to close on February 23, 2024.[23][24]

According to reporting from February 2024, South Africa's Presidential Climate Commission (PCC), a government advisory body, warned that the draft 2023 IRP did not adequately address the country's energy crisis. The PCC reportedly added that the IRP's "lack of attention to air quality and climate change puts it in conflict with the law and international agreements."[25]

In March 2024, Meridian Economics, a South African economic consultancy, argued in its submitted comments that the draft IRP was seriously deficient in its assessment of alternative power development pathways and ignored the impacts of air pollution. Meridian said the IRP assumed Eskom's current retirement schedule as fixed and did not assess a net-zero pathway in any scenario. Meridian also argued that the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy set "seemingly arbitrary" limits on annual solar capacity additions.[26] The South African Independent Power Producer Association (SAIPPA) similarly criticized the draft 2023 IRP for its capacity constraints on solar and wind power, and the plan's projection that loadshedding would continue until at least 2027. Public comments on the draft IRP closed on March 23, 2024.[27]

In April 2024, the executive director of South Africa's Presidential Climate Commission said the draft IRP required "substantial revisions to meet the country's economic, environmental and social objectives."[28]

Just Energy Transition Investment Plan

The Political Declaration on the Just Energy Transition in South Africa issued at COP26 in November 2021 and the Joint Statement on South Africa's Just Energy Transition Investment Plan issued at COP27 in November 2022 described South Africa’s "intention to decommission and repurpose or repower coal-fired power stations" and "invest in new low-emission generation capacity such as renewables." They highlighted the efforts underway "to lead a just transition that protects vulnerable workers and communities, especially coal miners, women and youth, affected by the move away from coal."

As groups have pointed out, to meet climate goals, urgent action must start now, including "dramatically scaling up and accelerating our renewable energy build, creating binding, effective and enforceable emissions reduction mechanisms, disclosing detailed and publicly accessible GHG emissions reduction management tools, cancelling all new coal projects, [and] avoiding massive new gas infrastructure projects that modelling has shown we do not need in the future."[29]

In November 2023, the South African government approved the US$8.8 billion Just Energy Transition Investment Plan (JET IP).[30] The published JET implementation plan indicated that JET funding would target "[t]he front-loading of repurposing and repowering investments by the private sector, and alternative livelihoods for workers, communities, and SMMEs [small, medium and micro enterprises] at the retiring coal power plants, with decommissioning schedules that do not disrupt electricity supply."[31]

Articles and Resources

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Integrated Resource Plan for Electricity 2010-2030," first release, South Africa Department of Energy, 6 May 2011
  2. "INTEGRATED RESOURCE PLAN FOR ELECTRICITY (IRP) 2010-2030: UPDATE REPORT 2013," South Africa Department of Energy, 21 NOVEMBER 2013
  3. "Integrated resource plan for electricity 2010-2030: Update report," Summary by EE Publishers, February 2014
  4. Personal conversation with groundWork, January 2016
  5. "South Africa tenders for coal-fired power plants," Reuters, Dec 12, 2014
  6. "Life After Coal, Greenpeace Africa slam inclusion of new coal in electricity plan," CER, 28 August 2018
  7. "More coal in IRP2019 "dangerous, expensive, and unnecessary," IOL, Oct 18, 2019
  8. Integrated Resource Plan (IRP2019), South Africa Dept of Energy, October 2019
  9. "Assessment of new coal generation capacity targets in South Africa’s 2019 Integrated Resource Plan for Electricity", ESRG, November 1, 2021
  10. "New research shows no end to coal financing in sight", Cape Business News, May 12, 2022
  11. "South Africa’s Youth Take on Coal and the Climate Crisis," Earthjustice, December 9, 2021
  12. "Youth-led #CancelCoal climate case launched against government’s plans for new coal-fired power," CER, November 17, 2021
  13. "Early victory in #CancelCoal case," CER, December 13, 2022
  14. "African Climate Alliance (ACA) et al Judgment,", Pretoria High Court, December 9, 2022
  15. "South African Youth-led Climate Case Gains Momentum as Minister of Electricity Is Joined," Centre for Environmental Rights, September 13, 2023
  16. "Climate activists add Electricity Minister Ramokgopa to list of respondents in environmental impact case," Daily Maverick, September 14, 2023
  17. "Gwede Mantashe expected to share Integrated Resource Plan that will direct government on how to address energy crisis," IOL, August 19, 2023
  18. "Govt hoping to release electricity master plan by end of September, says Ramokgopa," News24, September 2, 2023
  19. "South Africa: IRP Will Be Submitted To Cabinet Before October Ending—Mantashe," Energy News Africa, October 13, 2023
  20. "IRP update approved by Cabinet includes new coal decommissioning schedule," Engineering News, December 10, 2023
  21. "Mantashe’s draft electricity plan finally approved by cabinet," Mail & Guardian, December 11, 2023
  22. 22.0 22.1 "Integrated Resource Plan 2023," South Africa Department of Mineral Resources and Energy, January 4, 2024
  23. 23.0 23.1 "‘A shoddy piece of work’ — experts decry South Africa’s new blueprint for energy," Daily Maverick, January 10, 2024
  24. "Mantashe’s power station plan an admission of failure," My Broadband, January 8, 2024
  25. "South African State Climate Body Slams National Energy Plan," BNN Bloomberg, February 19, 2024
  26. "Review of the IRP 2023: Comments for Submission to the Director General of the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy," Meridian Economics, March 18, 2024
  27. "Independent power producer body rejects an IRP that ‘plans to fail’," Engineering News, March 20, 2024
  28. "CRISPIAN OLVER: Why the IRP won’t keep the lights on," Business Day, April 8, 2024
  29. "South Africa must lead at COP27, and accelerate the Just Transition at home," CER, November 5, 2022
  30. "SA's shift from coal won't worsen debt burden and puts justice first, says Creecy," News24, November 24, 2023
  31. "Just Energy Transition Implementation Plan 2023–2027," The Presidency Republic of South Africa, November 2023

Additional data

To access additional data, including an interactive map of coal-fired power stations, a downloadable dataset, and summary data, please visit the Global Coal Plant Tracker on the Global Energy Monitor website.