Friday, October 4, 2013

A coal mine on your stoep
DA Councillor Stef Snyders with his hand on the perimeter
fence that separates Overwacht and Groothoek, where
Umbono Capital owns prospecting rights to mine coal.
In the background isa newly built Security Village

Imagine buying a new house or flat with a pristine view of the Bushveld, only to learn that an opencast coal mine is planned for your neighbouring property. This scenario might soon become reality for residents of Onverwacht and Marapong.

Northern News has learnt this week that Umbono Capital owns prospecting rights on just over 2000 ha of land which borders Onverwacht and the proposed Altoostyd, where government plans to build 5000 houses in the near future.

 Umbono Capital did not want to comment, but confirmed that they have prospecting rights on the Groothoek and Eendracht farms which they acquired from Exxaro.

They are not the only company considering mining activities in the area. Jindal Africa, a part of Indian multinational conglomerate, Jindal Steel and Power Limited (JSPL), is  already at an advanced stage of applying for mining rights on the farm, Peerboom, which borders Marapong on its Eastern side.

Astrid Basson, a DA councillor in Lephalale, told Northern News that Jindal has met with councillors at the Lephalale Municipality on three occasions since November last year.

At these meetings they announced their plans to develop and build an opencast coal mine, employing around 800 people in Lephalale. The last meeting was held on 29 August and it was still unclear exactly where Jindal proposed to build the mine.

Lephalale Mayor, Jack Maeko, ended the meeting because Jindal failed to produce any documentation. Upon further investigation the DA discovered that the mine would be built adjacent to Marapong.

It has subsequently emerged that civil groups in Mozambique are crying foul over the actions of Jindal Steel, accusing them of mining and blasting without first resettling communities who are now living less than 1km from the mine in the northeastern province of Tete. Jindal is in turn blaming the Mozambican government for failing to resettle the more than 500 families who are continually engulfed in coal dust.

The DA is adamant that it will do its best to keep the public informed, especially during the public participation phase.

“We will do everything in our power to prevent these companies from establishing coal mines so close to residential areas. We have to think of the health and safety of the people living in the area.

“Although no environmental impact study has been done, we want to start lodging our objections as early as possible to see if we can prevent Jindal and Umbono from developing coal mines on these properties,” concluded Basson. - Valerie Cilliers (valerie@noordnuus.co.za)

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Third coal power station on cards

As debate on introducing a carbon tax to reduce carbon emissions starts to hot up, the cabinet has announced that it plans to push ahead with building Coal 3, another coal-fired power station.
But Eskom says any carbon taxes generated will have to be passed on to the consumer.
Minister of Trade and Industry Rob Davies made the announcement this week , following a three-day cabinet lekgotla in which discussions focused on improving the economic outlook. He said the cabinet would act immediately to resolve the energy shortage by pursuing steps towards shale gas exploration, hydro-electric power, and by starting the process of building Coal 3.
Two other major coal stations, Medupi and Kusile are under construction. Davies said no timeline for Coal 3 was available yet, as they were still looking at ways to finance it.
This is despite a commitment by South Africa at the COP17 conference to reduce carbon emissions by 34 percent by 2020, and discussions in Parliament this week on the introduction in 2015 of a carbon tax in a bid to reduce emissions.
The policy paper on the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions indicates a cost of R120 per ton of emissions, but every sector will be exempt from paying for the first 60 percent.
The Treasury has said “the primary objective of implementing carbon taxes is to change future behaviour, rather than to raise revenue”.
“It therefore starts with a relatively low carbon price, and then progressively rises significantly after five to 10 years, and beyond. This approach provides industry and other major emitters sufficient time to innovate and invest in greener technologies for the future.”
Davies said: “If you look at our integrated resource plan, we never said we’re not going to use coal. The coal-fired power stations we’re considering are much more environmentally friendly than what we currently have.”
Eskom is the biggest producer of carbon emissions in South Africa, producing 228 million tons last year.
“Due to the existing generating mix and constrained electricity supply, there is little room for the electricity sector to respond to an explicit carbon price in the short term,” Eskom told Weekend Argus.
“Using Eskom’s 2012 annual CO2 emissions as a benchmark, the quantum of the proposed tax amounts to approximately R10.9 billion in the first full financial year of implementation. Under the cost-recovery rules of the electricity pricing policy, it is considered that the cost of a carbon tax would be recovered through the electricity tariff,” Eskom said.
Electricity prices have already tripled over the past five years, and earlier this year Eskom was given the go-ahead to increase prices by 8 percent annually for the next five years.
This week Business Unity South Africa told Parliament its calculations showed that the tax could result in an additional 8 percent increase in the price of electricity.
Despite this, Eskom said it supports the government bid to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and will continue to speak to the government.
“Eskom supports an approach to equalise carbon prices across all sectors. A carbon tax is one such instrument. A carbon tax could work together with a suite of instruments if it is designed correctly, implemented in a practical manner – taking into account the macro-economic impacts. and if there is certainty that the revenue would be used to support the lower carbon growth path,” Eskom said.
Gavin Kelly, technical operations manager of the Road Freight Association, said the association had outlined three major issues in its submission to the Treasury. The first was that revenue from the taxes would go into the general fiscus and not be ring-fenced for greening or environmental issues.
The second was that there were a host of factors that contributed to a vehicle’s emissions – including the type of fuel used.
“When you use so-called dirty fuels, the level of toxicity is higher. In South Africa, that is not something we have control over, and we can’t change the fact that we use relatively dirty fuel here,” he said.
The third issue was that the cost of transport would go up if companies were forced to pay the tax, or look to more expensive alternatives such as bio-fuels and newer engine technologies.
“The operator won’t sit with that cost. One of these new cleaner engines can cost up to R100 000 more, and the operator can’t carry or absorb that cost,” he said, adding that consumers would end up footing the bill of higher transport costs.
Other submissions on the carbon tax proposal have also highlighted its potential impact on competitiveness and job creation in already tight market conditions.
The SA Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Neren Rau said in a statement earlier this month: “The impact of such a tax will be significant on the South African economy, and may have severe effects on international competitiveness and job creation. SACCI is supportive of measures to reduce carbon emissions in principle, so long as those measures remain tax neutral.”
In its submission to the Treasury, WWF South Africa welcomed the introduction of a carbon tax, saying that without it “the country will become increasingly reliant on fossil fuels, with adverse consequences for economic, social and human development plans”.
However, energy economist for the organisation, Manisha Gulati, said: “In its current form and in the current market and policy environment of the country, the tax may have limited effects on intended outcomes, may not be sufficient to incentivise the much-needed behavioural and technological shifts toward a low-carbon future, and could lead to unintended consequences of an unfair cost burden to the consumer.”
Weekend Argus

Third new coal power station ‘to help remove energy constraints’

REPORTING BACK: Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies addresses a post-Cabinet media briefing in Cape Town on Thursday. Picture: TREVOR SAMSON

THE Cabinet has approved the building of a third coal-fired power station by Eskom, freeing the parastatal to take its infrastructure investment programme beyond the two coal-fired power stations being built.
Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies said at a post-Cabinet briefing on Thursday there was no time-line, schedules or costs approved for the project yet. He said the building of the new power station would probably start once Eskom’s Medupi and Kusile projects are complete in 2018, adding a combined 9,600MW to the national grid.
Eskom has been struggling to meet electricity demand since rolling blackouts hit South Africa in 2008, costing the economy billions of rand in lost production and economic growth.
Mr Davies said the power station was part of the government’s overall strategy to remove energy constraints. "We had to take a clear decision of the building of the third coal-fired power station after Medupi and Kusile," he said.
A decision on the size and funding for the new power station still has to be made by the government, the company’s sole shareholder.
But Accenture senior partner Ken Robinson said to meet the integrated resources plan vision to generate 55,000MW of electricity, the government and Eskom should be planning to commission the equivalent of one Medupi power station every two years. He said the announcement could be too little as some of the other coal power stations may be decommissioned.
State-owned Eskom has for the past two years, through CEO Brian Dames, been saying repeatedly that it needs to be allowed to start planning for the construction of new power stations now if the nation is to avoid further power shortages after the build process ends.
The company needs to replace its ageing generating fleet, as its existing power stations are on average 30 years old.
Immediately after completing the Medupi and Kusile power stations in 2018, Eskom will start decommissioning, or destroyi

ng, some of the old infrastructure that has already reached the end of its design life.
That will further reduce installed generating capacity, pushing the reserve margin back to below the required 15% of total capacity, meaning security of electricity supply will continue to be problematic.
"We must work with stakeholders to commence the financing and the procurement arrangements for Coal 3. We must also work to unblock the various decisions necessary for co-generation projects," Mr Davies said on Thursday.
Also announced by Mr Davies was that the government was finalising the process of authorising shale gas exploration in a responsible and environmentally friendly manner.
Last year, the government lifted the moratorium on shale gas exploration, but has not yet licensed any energy company to start exploration. Royal Dutch Shell is still awaiting a response to its application to explore for shale gas in the Karoo.
Accenture’s Mr Robinson said including renewables, hydro-power, nuclear and shale gas would help broaden the energy mix and lessen the risk of depending only on one technology. However, he said that most of those plans would take at least 20 years to start generating sufficient energy.

Cabinet gives Eskom go-ahead to build new coal-fired power station

THE Cabinet has approved the building of a third coal-fired power station by Eskom, although no timeline, schedules or costs have yet been approved, Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies said on Thursday.
Speaking during a post-Cabinet media briefing, Mr Davies said construction of the power station, dubbed Coal 3, was likely to start once Eskom’s two current coal-fired projects, Medupi and Kusile, were complete.
The national power utility is spending about R240bn on those two power stations — the lion’s share of a R300bn budget to expand its generation capacity over the next 10 years. Both stations are now delayed by three years from the initial April 2011 commissioning date.
He said this was part of the government’s overall strategy to ease energy constraints on the economy.
"We must work with stakeholders to commence the financing and the procurement arrangements for Coal 3," Mr Davies said. "We must also work to unblock the various decisions necessary for co-generation projects."
The minister also announced that the government was finalising the authorisation of shale-gas exploration in a responsible and environmentally friendly manner.
"The fortunes of the US have turned around on the basis of reindustrialisation based on energy self-sufficiency driven by the use of shale gas," he said.
"What we are saying here is that we need to take a clear decision to authorise the exploration of shale gas.
"We (the government) haven’t done the physical exploration.... We are committed to the use of the resource in an environmentally responsible way, but we need to take a decision on the exploration."
A third energy announcement was that the government would encourage projects to enhance regional hydro-power capacity and enter into carefully considered contracts to import energy from the region.
Mr Davies cited an Industrial Development Corporation study on how to import energy from the Grand Inga proposed hydro-electric project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and gas and oil from neighbouring countries.
He said the government also wanted to speed up the introduction of biofuels.
"Biofuels have the potential to unblock tens of thousands of jobs and add half a percentage (point) to gross domestic product," he said.
"There are some outstanding issues around the mandatory blending regulations and the incentive, and we are setting ourselves timetables to solve this."

© BDlive 2013

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

@Sold celebrates Valentines Day in Style…



It is the one day in the year where we all can show love towards our loved ones as well as our fellow man.
Everyone deserves kindness and love and this was a day celebrated to just do that…

There was plenty treats to go around and even Ria from Mogol Post came to join us in this joyous celebration.

We would like to thank all our clients who came to share in the fun and hope that everyone enjoyed a wonderfully blessed Valentines Day 2013.

Love
@Sold Team (Arona, Zelmari & Martie)
Photo Coutersey of Mogol Post