Nedbank Group Ltd. has increased its green finance pipeline to more than 10 billion rand ($548 million) as more South African businesses invest in private power generation after the government lifted restrictions to help resolve the country’s energy crisis.
(Bloomberg) — Nedbank Group Ltd. has increased its green finance pipeline to more than 10 billion rand ($548 million) as more South African businesses invest in private power generation after the government lifted restrictions to help resolve the country’s energy crisis.
“There are very strong pipelines currently in our business and across the country for private sector generation – that is a very large growth sector in an otherwise challenging growth environment,” Nedbank Chief Executive Officer Mike Brown said in an interview with Bloomberg TV in Johannesburg. “It is going to take probably two to three years before that connects to the grid and fixes the problem.”
President Cyril Ramaphosa scrapped a 100 megawatt limit on embedded generation in July, allowing companies and households to produce electricity without a license to meet their own needs and sell to the grid.
The state also doubled renewable-energy procurement to 5,200 megawatts under a so-called bid window six to help accelerate the country’s transition from a dependence on coal for more than 80% of its power, toward greener energy sources.
South Africa has been grappling with intermittent power cuts since 2008 as the state-owned electricity provider Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd.’s aging and poorly maintained coal-fed plants can’t meet demand.
The electricity rationing, known locally as loadshedding, may cost the economy as much as much as 899 million rand per day, according to the South African Reserve Bank. The central bank cut its 2023 economic growth forecast to 0.3% as Eskom implements more intense and frequent blackouts.
South Africa still has enormous potential, despite the “material challenges in the short-to-medium term,” according to Brown.
“It’s a country that has some of the top 10 mineral deposits in those minerals that are so necessary for growth around the world,” Brown said. “We’re a gateway to Africa. So, while we certainly do have short term challenges, I’m extremely bullish about the long-term potential of our country.”
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