South African power utility Eskom’s Chief Executive Andre de Ruyter said Friday that they expect a final decision on a new 476 million U.S. dollar World Bank loan to repurpose its Komati coal-fired power plant into a renewable station before November’s COP27 climate summit.
The money will be used for three packages, which include decommissioning certain parts of the 1,000 megawatts (MW) Komati power plant that is currently only using one unit to despatch 125 MW of power when needed, as Eskom battles its worst period of power cuts since it started more than a decade ago.
The World Bank loan is separate from the 8.5 billion U.S. dollar financial package to help South Africa, one of the world’s biggest polluters, move away from its reliance on coal-fired power plants that supply the bulk of its electricity needs.
“The second one (package) is for the repurposing, which includes 100 megawatts of solar, 150 MW of battery storage, and 40 to 70 MW of wind all around Komati. The benefit, of course, is we can use existing transmission infrastructure,” De Ruyter told journalists on the sidelines of an oil and gas conference.
The final package is about addressing the “just component” and helping ensure that the impact for employees and contractors in the coal value chain was minimized, he said.
Situated in Mpumalanga halfway between Middelburg and Bethel, Komati was first fired up in 1961 and was mothballed for almost two decades before a decision was taken in 2004 to reinstate the station to help alleviate power outages.
“We were in Washington last week, really productive and positive meetings,” De Ruyter said, adding that he expected a final decision on the loan before the end of November.
(With input from Reuters)