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The Eskom Megawatt Park headquarters in Johannesburg. Picture: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg
The Eskom Megawatt Park headquarters in Johannesburg. Picture: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg

A plan to establish the world’s largest green energy financing initiative is being threshed out in SA, which needs to reduce its environmental footprint and find innovative ways to fund debt-stricken state power utility Eskom.

The plan being formulated by Meridian Economics, a Cape Town-based think-tank, is under consideration by the government. It envisions the establishment of an $11bn (about R160bn) facility backed by development finance institutions and private funders.

The new entity would lend money to Eskom at slightly below commercial rates on condition it accelerates the closure of polluting coal plants to make way for renewable energy.

This is one of several options under consideration by the department of public enterprises, which has promised to produce a paper on Eskom and finalise recommendations on the future state of the power producer and how it will be funded this week.

The department has not indicated yet whether the deadline will be met.

SA is the world’s 14th-largest producer of greenhouse gases and the government is under pressure to deliver on a commitment it made in 2009 to reduce emissions 42% by 2025.

Under the new plan, the country would add an additional 10GWs of renewable-energy production capacity over a decade, thereby reducing its potential carbon dioxide emissions by 715-million metric tons by 2050.

“This would be the largest and most significant global climate finance transaction to date,” Emily Tyler, a climate economist at Meridian, said in an interview.

“It would propel SA to a cleaner and more resilient energy future.”

Eskom supplies about 95% of SA’s power and has turned to the government for aid to remain solvent after amassing R450bn of debt.

Under the plan, it would secure loans in tranches from the new facility over five years and have to repay them over 20 years.

The money would be used to wean Eskom off bailouts and cover its future financing needs, rather than fund new and already self- sustaining green energy projects.

Implementation of the plan would be contingent on the government following through on a commitment to break up Eskom into generation, transmission and distribution units under a state holding company and reorganising its debt to place it on a more sustainable footing.

The new entity would use most of the difference between the cost of the concessional funding it secures and the price it charges Eskom to finance a so-called transition fund. It would focus on creating jobs and promoting development mainly in  Mpumalanga, where most of Eskom’s plants are located. It would also contribute to state coffers in the form of a carbon payment.

The establishment of the transition fund could help win backing for the plan from labour unions, which oppose coal-plant closures and Eskom’s break-up on the grounds there will be job losses.

The unions played a key role in helping President Cyril Ramaphosa win control of the ANC in late 2017.

Several large development finance institutions, climate funds and philanthropic organisations have expressed initial interest in participating in the initiative, Tyler said, without identifying them.

Discussions on the green funding proposals are at an early stage and it would be premature to comment on them at this stage, said Ismail Momoniat, a deputy director-general at the Treasury, which is assessing the plan.

Meridian is headed by Grove Steyn, a member of a government task team set up to advise on a resource plan for Eskom.

The green energy initiative was included in the team’s report submitted earlier in 2019, but the details have since been refined.

With Staff Writer

Bloomberg

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