Latest News

South Africa grants Eskom coal plants limited emissions exemptions

South Africa grants Eskom coal plants limited emissions exemptions

The environment minister announced on Monday that South African coal-fired electricity stations had received some exemptions from the air quality laws, and regulations aimed at reducing harmful emissions. However, he stressed that these measures were not a "blanket respite".

The government struggles to find a balance between the calls to reduce carbon emissions and to stop them and the need to supply electricity to Africa's largest economy which is stagnant due to power outages.

Eskom, the power utility that generates South Africa's majority of electricity from its fleet of coal-fired plants, applied to exempt 8 of these plants from air quality regulations' minimum emission standards.

The Ministry of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment, which granted the exemptions, said that Eskom would be required to increase monitoring, hire environmental health specialists and offer mobile health clinics, as well as other measures.

Dion George, the Environment Minister, said at a press briefing that "these exemptions aren't a blanket reprieve. They are tailored to every facility with strict conditions."

Six plants, Lethabo Kendal Tutuka Majuba Matimba Medupi, will receive exemptions for a maximum of five years. These will expire on April 1, 2020. The Duvha and Matla Power Stations will remain exempt until the planned decommissioning date in 2034.

Eskom has been working hard to clear the maintenance backlog and end a decade-long period of economic damage caused by power outages.

The company has said in the past that retrofitting their plants with new technologies to reduce harmful emission is too expensive.

A 10-year study published in early this month found that South Africans living in the coal belt of Mpumalanga Province, which is dominated by coal-fired power plants, have a higher mortality rate than those who live elsewhere.

In a report by the South African Medical Research Council (SARMRC) and Britain's Department for International Development, it was found that communities located near coal-fired plants had higher rates of cardiovascular and lung diseases and birth defects. The report recommended that coal-fired power plants be phased out.

George stated, "We want enough power to grow our economy and clean, breathable, air." It is unacceptable that our children suffer from lungs problems and that babies are born with cleft lips. (Reporting and editing by Joe Bavier; Wendell Roelf)

(source: Reuters)