South
African power giant signs 5-billion-dollar contracts
JOHANNESBURG
Petroleumworld.com
11 14 07
South Africa's beleaguered electricity supplier
Eskom on Tuesday signed its biggest-ever combined contract, worth nearly five
billion dollars (3.4 billion euros), in a bid to ease its perennial power shortages.
The contracts with Hitachi of Japan and France's Alstom are for the building
of boilers and turbines at Medupi Power Station, the country's first coal-fired
plant to be built in over 20 years.
"Both contracts in total constitute the biggest contract signed in South
Africa in the past 20 years and the largest that Eskom has signed in its 84-year
history," Eskom managing director for enterprises Brian Dames said.
While Eskom had made "a conscious decision to move away from coal" as
it tries to diversify its energy sources, Dames said coal-fired power was the
best short- to medium-term solution for South Africa.
A combination of an aging power infrastructure and a booming economy has seen
electricity demand far outstrip supply in South Africa and power cuts, including
planned outages known as load-shedding, have become more frequent.
While the country has committed to nuclear technology in the long run to fulfill
its energy requirements, an abundance of coal will continue to make up the power
shortfall in the interim, despite the effects of carbon emmissions.
"Environmental consideration is the primary driver for us to diversify our
energy sources," Dames told AFP after the signing of the agreements, adding
that the company had made a conscious decision to reduce its emissions.
The Medupi Power Station, valued at some 78 billion rand (11 billion US dollars),
will be Eskom's fourth dry-cooled station, and will include a super-critical
plant able to operate at higher temperatures and pressures than previous boilers.
The station will include six units with a total of 4,800 megawatts capacity,
and is scheduled for completion by 2015.
Some 9,000 jobs are expected to be created in the small community of Lephalale
in the northern Limpopo province where the plant is being built.
Story from AFP
13 1536 GMT 11 07
Copyright© 2007
Petroleumworld.
All rights reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|