Plant Equipment and Hire August 2017 | Page 11

Bell Equipment has signed an agreement with global excavator specialist, Kobelco Construction Machinery, for the exclusive distribution and support of the Kobelco range of excavators in the southern African region. According to Bell Equipment group marketing director, Stephen Jones, the company is looking forward to developing a long-term relationship with Kobelco that aims to provide both companies with the stability needed to realise their growth potential in the excavator market. Bell will be complementing its extensive product range by developing the full range of Kobelco excavators, from the small 1t mini excavators through to the largest 85t units. This will offer customers options for the smallest applications, as well as competitively priced and perfectly matched loading tools for Bell articulated dump trucks in the construction, quarrying, and mining industries. WearCheck IT manager Eddie Perumal holding some of the devices onto which the brand new WearCheck app has been downloaded. Durban-based WearCheck recently launched a new interactive customer app, which allows WearCheck customers to access a host of critical information on machinery condition, including reports and sample lists. This data is immediately available even while patrolling the factory floor or inspecting mining machinery on site. The app’s design mirrors the look and feel of WearCheck’s website, ensuring intuitive and logical navigation. “All data is secure and the login process uses the same username/password credentials as our WearCheck Online website,” says IT manager Eddie Perumal. “Customers registered on the website can start using the app immediately.” Customers can also submit sample data, ask diagnosticians about specific samples, and enter feedback on sample results, component conditions or maintenance events. An optional feature allows the app to track unread web/app reports, and send notifications about items on this list as reminders. Bell Equipment will be the exclusive southern African distributor of Kobelco excavators. Volvo CE building tomorrow through wind power of advances in technology and international government support, wind power has experienced strong growth in the global market. Located on the Eastern Cape coastline of South Africa and roughly 70km south-west of the ‘Windy City’, better known as Port Elizabeth, construction of the Kouga Wind Farm started in 2013. The project began adding to the national grid in March 2015, when the first of the giant turbines came online. With an ambitious national target of producing 18 800MW from renewable sources by 2030, the Kouga Wind Farm was set up as part of the Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP) in response to South Africa’s long-term energy need. Prior to assembling the turbines, weeks of structural and enabling works took place to ensure firm foundations and easy access. Currently home to 32 turbines, the wind farm generates approximately 300 million kilowatt-hours (300GWh) of clean electrical energy per year — reducing greenhouse gases by up to 270 000 tons. The Kouga Wind Farm is special not just for its contribution to the renewable sector, but also because of the impact it has had within the local community. Impressively, the community surrounding the wind farm also owns 26% of it — thanks to the guidelines set by the REIPPPP. As a result, so far profits from the wind farm have been used to supply schools with computers, build sports facilities, and develop clinics. In addition, during the construction phase of the venture, project managers employed local labourers to help them develop their skills. “We chose to come to Kouga because we wanted to highlight a project that demonstrates how our industry is making the world a better place,” said Mats Bredborg, global director of brand management at Volvo CE. “It really shows how the transition to renewable energy can boost business and at the same time empower the local community to a ‘greener’, brighter, and more sustainable tomorrow. We are grateful to the management of Kouga for allowing us to film at the site, and the local community for being so welcoming and helping us bring Volvo CE’s latest brand campaign story to life.” The potential of wind power, which is predicted to double by 2021, is the focus of the third episode of Volvo Construction Equipment’s brand campaign ‘Building Tomorrow’. The campaign, which launched late last year, has seen Volvo CE machines helping to rebuild Sweden’s iconic Ice Hotel and working to construct the new sustainable city of Lusail in the arid desert north of Doha, Qatar. This latest episode focuses on the rapid growth in renewable power generation projects that are coming on the grid all around the world. Despite abundant natural resources, coal alone will not provide the energy needed to power South Africa in the long term. In response, a new governmental programme has been introduced, harnessing the country’s ideal weather conditions while integrating socio-economic development. Kouga Wind Farm, on the Eastern Cape coastline, is considered one of the blueprints for the programme. Wind energy is an unlimited source of clean energy, and for the first time ever, in 2016, renewables became the largest power source in the world — surpassing coal. Additionally, thanks to a mixture The Kouga Wind Farm in the Eastern Cape aims to produce 18 800MW of energy by 2030. AUGUST 2017 9