The Civil Engineering Contractor February 2019 | Page 10

CONSULTANTS IRP: gas should make some space for CSP Project: Bokpoort Client: Sener Northern Cape The finalisation of South Africa’s Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) will unlock further investment in renewable energy, but the exclusion of new concentrated solar power (CSP) projects from the country’s future energy mix may have serious unintended consequences. This is the opinion of Siyabonga Mbanjwa, regional MD of global engineering and construction group Sener. Sener has designed and constructed the 50MW Bokpoort CSP plant near Groblershoop in the Northern Cape. Bokpoort has more than nine hours’ worth of energy storage capacity, which means it can provide electricity day and night during spring and summer and during daily peak periods in autumn and winter. The plant has been in operation for almost three years. Sener’s 100MW Kathu CSP project, also in the Northern Cape, was synchronised to the grid last month and its 100MW Ilanga CSP project situated near Upington went into commercial operation recently. Both of these plants have five hours’ worth of energy storage, which means they can support the electricity supply during daily peak demand periods. The draft IRP was based on the least-cost scenario, but allowed for certain policy interventions, including the possibility that excluded technologies could replace the gas, wind, and PV allocations if they provide “similar technical characteristics at similar or less cost”. Mbanjwa proposes a policy intervention to provide for at least 1 050 of additional CSP and says government could procure this with an “aggressive but realistic price cap”. While he would not put a number to the proposed cap, he said the cap in the Department of Energy’s bid, round 4.5 in November 2015, was R1.37 per kilowatt hour (kWh), with at least one project coming in at R1.11/kWh. Since then, prices have dropped further — and when bid window 5 is announced after the finalisation of the IRP CSP, prices should be well below the price of Eskom’s new Medupi and Kusile coal-fired power stations. nn Solar energy holds the potential to power South Africa. 8 | CEC February 2019 Location: Sections of the N4 will be under maintenance. N4 road maintenance Project: Road, infrastructure Client: Sanral Location: Gauteng Sanral has invited tenders for the provision of consulting engineering services for the routine road maintenance of national route N4 section 1, N4 section 11 & 12, N1 section 21, R21 section 2, and R104 sections 1 & 2 (Tshwane Freeway RRM). This project is in the province of Gauteng and in the Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and the approximate programme is for design and construction documentation to be completed by July 2019, followed by supervision of 36 months, commencing 1 February 2020. A compulsory tenderer’s clarification meeting with representatives of Sanral took place at Menlo Park, Pretoria, on 10 January 2019, with at least one technical competent person of the tenderer required to attend the clarification meeting. Preferences are offered to tenderers who comply with the criteria stated in the tender data. Only tenderers with a B-BBEE contributor status level of 1,2,3,4 are eligible to tender and must be a joint venture between a Generic Enterprise and EME or QSE. nn www.civilsonline.co.za