Agri Kultuur July / Julie 2016 | Page 24

Wendy Engel Worldwide Fund for Nature, South Africa Nicole Wagner Western Cape Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Economics Services S outh Africa’s (SA) globally recognised export focused Fruit and Wine industry relies heavily on electricity in farming and processing activities. Hence this industry has been significantly impacted by year on year electricity cost increases ranging from 7% to 31% from 2008 to 2013 and beyond. Recognising these challenges, an innovative sustainable agriculture partnership between an NGO called the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) SA and private commercial bank Nedbank; aimed at designing incentives to enable behaviour change towards wider scale adoption of sustainable agriculture practices promotes and supports wider adoption of renewable energy in this industry. This Partnership together with support from Western Cape Department of Agriculture provided an entry point for sources of data collection in a study to determine current solar (photo voltaic) PV market uptake in SA agriculture, identify key factors that inform decision to install solar PV in Fruit and Wine sector and to better under- stand role of finance to improve adoption of solar PV. Study results show current incentives fall into categories of cash grants, tax incentives, preferential debt tenors and interest rates offered by commercial banks and development finance institutions as well as free technical advisory services. Survey responses indicated that debt financing from banks and the use of own equity were the main sources of financing for installing solar PV. It was also noted that reducing energy costs was the main driver for solar PV installation (46%). Further survey responses suggested a lack of knowledge or information on benefits of solar PV, payback periods, awareness of free energy audits, tax incentives and available . The study highlighted the need for an improved information exchange protocol within different banking divisions to provide clarity and communicate clearly on solar PV financing solutions in terms of loan due diligence requirements, debt tenors and interest rate to prospective agriculture clients. The study further suggested potential for leveraging non-technical solutions such as energy audits, portal to access key information and exchange with other clients for e.g. chat room or email list serve, information or exhibition days with technology providers, technical advisory service and extension services to improve uptake. An improved understanding of the determinants of demand is critical to developing incentives to enable wider scale adoption of renewable energy to reduce production cost, enable farmers to lower their carbon footprint which has increasingly become a market access requirement for export markets and support development of shift to diversified energy mix and green economy. For more information, contact: Wendy Engel [email protected] Nicole Wagner [email protected] (Paper available upon request)