- South Africa recognises the energy and mineral resources sectors as catalysts to economic growth, said the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy, Gwede Mantashe.
โWe have witnessed how an adverse impact of high costs and unreliable supply of energy have on the productive sectors of the economy,โ added Mantashe while delivering a keynote address at the underway Africa Oil & Power in Cape Town.
In this regard, the minister said the department believes that lowering the cost of energy should be a major area of focus in order to enable the growth of the extractive and manufacturing sectors.
Resource extraction requires vast amounts of energy. Therefore, when electricity costs are high, sustaining investment in resource extraction becomes a challenge.
โWe are about to conclude our Integrated Resource Plan (IRP). The Plan will lay the foundation for investment in power generation in the country. Such an investment should have the impact of lowering the cost of doing business in the country,โ said minister Mantashe.
Diversifying energy mix.
Mantashe said his department recognises the importance of all energy carriers in the energy mix.
He then stated that the IRP makes provision for gas to power projects, adding that there will be an amendment of the Gas Act of 2001, which will be tabled in Cabinet soon.
โWe have already announced that the Coega Special Economic Zone (SEZ) will be the site of the first LNG import terminal. The site will lay the foundation for new gas-to-power plants. It will also be the point of converting existing power plants from diesel to gas. We further intend to use the location as a base for importing feedstock for the GTL refinery in Mossel Bay,โ he said.
Mantashe pointed out that Africa is endowed with fossil fuels “which we cannot abruptly stop using.”
โWe are not consumed by denialism when it comes to challenges of climate change. We subscribe to the approach of a just transition towards cleaner forms of energy,โ the minister said.
On the regional front, he pledged South Africaโs support for the major gas finds in the eastern part of the continent, especially in Mozambique and Tanzania.
He said South African will contribute to the development either through the importation of gas or the importation of electricity generated by gas.
Author: Babalwa Bungane
This article was originally published on ESI Africa and is republished with permission with minor editorial changes.