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Green Energy Plan May Save South Africa $6.6 Billion, Study Says

Green Energy Plan May Save South Africa $6.6 Billion, Study Says

South Africa could save 100 billion rand ($6.6 billion) by accelerating the closing of coal-fired power plants in return for cheap loans to fund a transition to cleaner forms of electricity, a proposal developed by Meridian Economics shows.

Africa’s most industrialized nation needs to cut emissions to meet its Paris Agreement commitments to counter climate change. State power utility Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., which produces more than 90% of the nation’s power, mainly from coal, has little scope to fund green energy projects because it’s buried in debt and the government’s own finances are overstretched. 

Meridian, a Cape Town-based think tank, estimates South Africa needs to build as much as 6,000 megawatts of renewable projects annually to meet its emissions targets. That would require an investment of about 450 billion rand over the next decade, while another 200 billion rand would have to be spent on transmission lines and distribution grids. 

Meridian’s so-called Just Transition Transaction, which has been in the works for several years, envisions the government securing a concessional, debt-financing package to help fund the shift away from coal. The money could be raised in the capital markets and from development finance institutions and be guaranteed by developed nations, it said in a report released on Tuesday.

Cheap Loans

The proposal envisions a financing facility being set up and overseen by a multilateral climate-finance institution, such as the Climate Investment Funds, and it providing South Africa with $16 billion in loans over five years at an annual interest rate of 5.5%. The rate could be cut to 1.5% if the government sticks to its commitments to cut its emissions of carbon, based on an offset price of $7 a ton -- a concession that could deliver savings of 100 billion rand over 25 years calculated on a net-present-value basis, it said. 

Meridian is headed by Grove Steyn, who sits on President Cyril Ramaphosa’s Economic Advisory Council. Its proposal has been discussed with South Africa’s government and potential backers.

“We are at a relatively early stage; people are still getting their heads around the options,” Steyn told reporters in an online briefing. “Where this is going to end, we can’t say. People seem to take these ideas very seriously.’

South African Deputy Finance Minister David Masondo has floated a separate plan that would see creditors forgive some of the nation’s sovereign debt in exchange from it committing to more ambitious climate goals. Eskom has proposed its own $10 billion transition plan, which would see it raise loans from development finance institutions to fund green energy projects, while accelerating the closure of coal-fired plants. 

Masondo’s proposal is short on detail of what would happen should the government get debt relief and then renege on its commitments, while Eskom’s plan, while laudable, doesn’t tackle some key financial considerations and is too narrowly focused, according to Meridian. Other carbon-mitigation proposals could be implemented in tandem with its own, it said.

A visiting delegation that includes officials from the U.K. and U.S. is currently holding talks with South African officials about its plans to arrest climate change ahead of United Nations talks, known as COP26, in Glasgow in November. South Africa is the world’s 12th-biggest producer of greenhouse gases. 

The options being considered for South Africa are at the top of the international community’s agenda and progress need to be made in implementing them, failing which available funding could go to other developing nations, such as Indonesia or India, Steyn said. 

Meridian’s proposals include the establishment of a fund to help tens of thousands of workers at the redundant power plants and in the coal-mining industry retrain and find alternative employment. 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.