SA: Solar power for geysers to be compulsory
Thématique :
sud afrique
05/03/2008
Electric geysers will have to incorporate solar heating by 2010 in all new houses valued at over R750 000, or larger than 300 square metres, Parliament heard on Wednesday.
This would also apply to commercial buildings, hostels, resorts and shopping centres, the Department of Minerals and Energy told Parliament's Portfolio Committee on Minerals and Energy.
Additional geyser insulation was also required for such structures, said the department's chief director for electricity, Ompi Aphane.
These regulations would be in place "no later than 2010".
All electric geysers also had to be fitted with a switch enabling Eskom to remotely turn them off.
Department of Public Enterprises director general Portia Molefe said it was looking at replacing about two million electric geysers in the country with solar ones, which would save about 1 300 MW.
Aphane said that Eskom's reserve margin - the difference between peak demand and operating capacity - would decrease to two percent around 2012, from around 5,9 percent at present, if nothing was done to reduce demand.
"If a total blackout occurs it will take about a month to restore. You can imagine the economic consequences of that," he said.
Cogeneration from waste heat produced in factories or furnaces needed to be captured and could add an extra 3 500 MW in capacity.
"A bidding process with Eskom is already under way."
Responding to comments from MPs, Eskom's chief operating officer Brian Dames said South Africa lacked the water to generate hydro-electric power on the same scale as China, where this was being done on the Yangtze River. Dames said only the Inga River in the Democratic Republic of Congo was suitable for this.
Molefe said South Africa could learn lessons from the way Brazil dealt with its power crisis several years ago. Despite reducing demand by 25 percent the country's economy had become more efficient.
Electric geysers will have to incorporate solar heating by 2010 in all new houses valued at over R750 000, or larger than 300 square metres, Parliament heard on Wednesday.
This would also apply to commercial buildings, hostels, resorts and shopping centres, the Department of Minerals and Energy told Parliament's Portfolio Committee on Minerals and Energy.
Additional geyser insulation was also required for such structures, said the department's chief director for electricity, Ompi Aphane.
These regulations would be in place "no later than 2010".
All electric geysers also had to be fitted with a switch enabling Eskom to remotely turn them off.
Department of Public Enterprises director general Portia Molefe said it was looking at replacing about two million electric geysers in the country with solar ones, which would save about 1 300 MW.
Aphane said that Eskom's reserve margin - the difference between peak demand and operating capacity - would decrease to two percent around 2012, from around 5,9 percent at present, if nothing was done to reduce demand.
"If a total blackout occurs it will take about a month to restore. You can imagine the economic consequences of that," he said.
Cogeneration from waste heat produced in factories or furnaces needed to be captured and could add an extra 3 500 MW in capacity.
"A bidding process with Eskom is already under way."
Responding to comments from MPs, Eskom's chief operating officer Brian Dames said South Africa lacked the water to generate hydro-electric power on the same scale as China, where this was being done on the Yangtze River. Dames said only the Inga River in the Democratic Republic of Congo was suitable for this.
Molefe said South Africa could learn lessons from the way Brazil dealt with its power crisis several years ago. Despite reducing demand by 25 percent the country's economy had become more efficient.