Botswana’s energy regulator has granted a generation licence for a 100MW solar project to local firm Shumba Energy, a company executive said on Monday, making it the first independent power producer to set up a large-scale solar plant in the country.
Botswana does not currently have large-scale solar power generation and its 600MW national energy demand is met by state-owned coal-fired plants and imports, primarily from South Africa and Mozambique.
Locally listed Shumba Energy plans to implement the project in two phases, with construction of the first phase of 50MW likely to start in the next six months.
“With all the permits now in place, we are working on concluding the funding, with capital expenditure estimated at about US$80-million (R1.1-billion) for the whole project,” MD Mashale Phumaphi said.
Botswana has 212 billion tonnes of coal reserves and the fossil fuel is expected to continue to dominate power generation in the country in the near future, analysts have said. But investors have often raised concerns about the heavy dependence of African countries on coal-based power plants, which release millions of tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere.
Renewables
The diamond-rich country, whose economy has contracted by close to 8% from a growth rate of up to 4% before the pandemic, plans to increase the share of renewables in its energy mix to 18% by 2030.
Botswana has some of the highest levels of direct normal (solar) irradiation — a measure of the amount of sunlight — at over 3 000kWh/m² per annum, according to Solargis.com, a global agency on solar data.
Phumaphi said the solar project had not signed any power off-take agreements but will operate as a merchant power producer feeding into the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP).
State-owned Botswana Power Corporation is currently the sole electricity producer in Botswana. — Reported by Brian Benza, (c) 2021 Reuters