Energy Crisis Committee working to prevent Stage 5 and 6 load shedding during winter

Blog

HomeHome / Blog / Energy Crisis Committee working to prevent Stage 5 and 6 load shedding during winter

Apr 06, 2023

Energy Crisis Committee working to prevent Stage 5 and 6 load shedding during winter

Curated power industry news from thousands of top sources. News By: Kristin

Curated power industry news from thousands of top sources.

News

By: Kristin Engel

Cape Town - Electricity Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa updated the public on the progress of the Energy Action Plan by the National Energy Crisis Committee of Ministers (Necom) to end the intensity and frequency of load shedding.

Ramokgopa said a range of measures was being implemented to avoid Stage 5 and 6 during winter.

The measures include Eskom generation working to reduce unplanned breakdowns to 15 000MW and to return 10 additional units to service at Camden, Duvha, Arnot, Tutuka, Kriel, Hendrina and Grootvlei power stations by May 31.

"Engineering teams are exploring solutions to increase the load factor of Open Cycle Gas Turbines (OCGTs) over the winter months by increasing the supply of diesel to Ankerlig and Gourikwa," he added.

Necom will also run an aggressive demand side-management campaign aimed at reducing demand on the grid – Ramakgopa said it was possible to reduce demand by 1 000MW and reduce load shedding by one whole stage through simple measures:

"Set inverters and batteries to charge from the grid during the night, to avoid increasing demand at peak times in the morning and evening; switch off electric geysers at peak times to save energy and reduce your electricity bill; switch off pool pumps and other unnecessary, energy-intensive equipment; and switch off lights, appliances and device chargers while you are not using them," he said.

Ramakgopa said that the risk of a national blackout remained low given the various control measures in place, including load shedding. He said a national blackout would be caused by an unforeseen sequence of events, such as a natural disaster, triggering a simultaneous loss of supply across the country.

In sharing its recommendations with the public for the country's electricity system last week, the Presidential Climate Commission concluded there was no room for new coal and nuclear power in South Africa's energy mix, and that the least-cost approach to the country's energy crisis included a massive influx of renewables.

The report states: "All models reviewed showed that a least-cost energy model would be made up of investment in variable renewable energy (wind and solar), storage (batteries and pumped hydro) and peaking support. None of the models build new coal or nuclear or have gas at high utilisations."

The PCC expects a policy adjusted Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to promote approximately 50-60GW of variable renewable energy by 2030, supported by co-located storage, and between 3-5GW of peaking support (such as gas running at low utilisations to support balancing and peaking).

PCC commissioner and head of policy at Cosatu, Lebogang Mulaisi, said: "While the recommendations are intended to inform the IRP, due for release in the next quarter, it also makes recommendations about the future and lends support to the many initiatives government has in place to resolve load shedding. Those already embodied in the president's Electricity Action Plan."

[email protected]

Cape Argus

No discussions yet. Start a discussion below.

The Energy Central Power Industry Network® is based on one core idea - power industry professionals helping each other and advancing the industry by sharing and learning from each other.

If you have an experience or insight to share or have learned something from a conference or seminar, your peers and colleagues on Energy Central want to hear about it. It's also easy to share a link to an article you've liked or an industry resource that you think would be helpful.

Start a Post » Learn more about posting on Energy Central »

Your access to Member Features is limited.

Subscribe today to the Daily Power Industry Newsletter for the most up-to-date and relevant utility industry news.

Manager, Power Marketing & Compliance Great River Energy Maple Grove, Minnesota

IT Client Support Technician Powder River Energy Corporation Gillette, Wyoming

Regulatory Specialist Powder River Energy Corporation Gillette or Sundance, Wyoming

Director of Emergency Preparedness and Critical Infrastructure Protection Long Island Power Authority Uniondale, New York

VP - Power Supply United Cooperative Services Cleburne, Texas

System Integration Engineer/Specialist SUBNET Solutions Inc. United States

Data Analytics Program Director Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative, Inc. Hughesville, Maryland

Director of Clean Energy Long Island Power Authority Uniondale, New York

Manager of Rates Long Island Power Authority Uniondale, New York

Vice President of Member Services Powder River Energy Corporation Sundance, Wyoming

News By: Start a Post » Learn more about posting on Energy Central » Daily Power Industry Newsletter Manager, Power Marketing & Compliance IT Client Support Technician Regulatory Specialist Director of Emergency Preparedness and Critical Infrastructure Protection VP - Power Supply System Integration Engineer/Specialist Data Analytics Program Director Director of Clean Energy Manager of Rates Vice President of Member Services