South Africa faces blackouts following silo collapse
                            
                                
                                
                                        
                                            
                                        
                                
                                    
                                        Published by Jonathan Rowland,
                                        Editor
                                        
                                    
                                World Coal,
                                
                            
                        
Blackouts in South Africa will continue though this week, Reuters has reported, following a coal silo collapsed at the Majuba power plant. The incident forced Eskom, the state-owned utility, to cut generation capacity in an already overstretched grid.
The collapse cut off supply to all six generation units at the 4110 MW plant. Debris could take up to two weeks to clear, Eskom said; in the meantime, the company plans to supply four of the units by trucking coal to mobile feeders.
The plant is currently generating 600 MW using coal bunkered in units 2 and 6 – about half of these unit’s capacity. This could be raised to 2400 MW through the week as the plant brings these and two other units back up to capacity using the trucked coal.
“Eskom has zero reserve margin and hence any incident now threatens power supply,” Anton Eberhard, a National Planning Commission member and professor at the University of Cape Town’s Graduate School of Business, told Bloomberg. “It’s not easy to turn this situation around. This crisis points to the need to consider structural changes to the power market and greater opportunities for private players.”
Written by Jonathan Rowland.
Read the article online at: https://www.worldcoal.com/power/03112014/world-coal-south-africa-faces-blackouts-following-silo-collapse-coal1527/
You might also like
US DOE announces loan for Indiana coal-powered fertilizer facility
US Secretary of Energy Chris Wright has announced the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Loan Programs Office (LPO) recently closed a loan to support independent, American-made, coal-powered fertilizer production.
                                