News / National
SA faces pressure from Europe and America to ditch coal
09 Sep 2023 at 07:35hrs | Views
"We doing this for ourselves because it is absolutely the right way to go" said Vukile Davidson, National Treasury's chief director of financial markets and stability. "But we are also going to increasingly have to deal with external pressure."
South Africa must accelerate its transition to renewable energy to avoid export penalties being threatened by key trading partners, a government official said on Wednesday.
"We doing this for ourselves because it is absolutely the right way to go" said Vukile Davidson, National Treasury's chief director of financial markets and stability. "But we are also going to increasingly have to deal with external pressure."
The European Union plans a levy on certain carbon-intensive imports, though South Africa has argued the so-called carbon border adjustment mechanism may break World Trade Organisation rules.
South Africa, which gets 80% of its electricity from coal, is trying to increase its supply of renewable energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and its reliance on Eskom.
The country is suffering from its worst power outages on record because the state-owned utility's poorly-maintained and aging power stations can't meet demand.
The South African central bank has predicted that power cuts, known locally as load shedding, will shave 2 percentage points off the nation's economic growth this year.
Part of preparing for the country's energy transition is legislation to provide regulatory certainty necessary to draw capital from the private sector.
"People need to know what they're investing in and the carbon intensity of what those investments are and long-term sustainability of those investments," Davidson said during a virtual National Treasury conference. "There is a particular case for long-term savers through pension funds and the like."
South Africa must accelerate its transition to renewable energy to avoid export penalties being threatened by key trading partners, a government official said on Wednesday.
"We doing this for ourselves because it is absolutely the right way to go" said Vukile Davidson, National Treasury's chief director of financial markets and stability. "But we are also going to increasingly have to deal with external pressure."
The European Union plans a levy on certain carbon-intensive imports, though South Africa has argued the so-called carbon border adjustment mechanism may break World Trade Organisation rules.
South Africa, which gets 80% of its electricity from coal, is trying to increase its supply of renewable energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and its reliance on Eskom.
The country is suffering from its worst power outages on record because the state-owned utility's poorly-maintained and aging power stations can't meet demand.
The South African central bank has predicted that power cuts, known locally as load shedding, will shave 2 percentage points off the nation's economic growth this year.
Part of preparing for the country's energy transition is legislation to provide regulatory certainty necessary to draw capital from the private sector.
"People need to know what they're investing in and the carbon intensity of what those investments are and long-term sustainability of those investments," Davidson said during a virtual National Treasury conference. "There is a particular case for long-term savers through pension funds and the like."
Source - Bloomberg