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Largest Solar Power Plant in Africa Flips the Switch

Leon Kaye | Thursday November 13th, 2014 | 24 Comments
Solar, Jasper, South Africa, Solar Reserve, Kensani Group, Intikon Energy, Google, Leon Kaye, clean energy, renewables

The Jasper solar power plant in northern South Africa is now the continent’s largest.

With seven of the world’s fastest growing economies located in Africa, it should not be a surprise that the continent’s energy demands will only surge in the coming decade. Hence plenty of opportunities exist for clean energy companies as investors worldwide realize Africa, with all of its risks, is a booming market. To that end, California-based Solar Reserve, together with numerous partners, has completed and launched the Jasper PV Project in South Africa.

Built in South Africa’s Northern Cape Province, the Jasper solar power plant is now the largest of its kind on the African continent. The consortium that led the development of the Jasper facility included the Kensani Group, Intikon Energy, Rand Merchant Bank and Google. Incidentally, the Jasper plant is Google’s first clean energy investment within Africa.

Located near the diamond mining center of Kimberley, the 96 megawatt plant and its 325,000 photovoltaic modules will provide enough energy for approximately 80,000 homes. The Jasper plant is also important as a step toward South Africa’s renewable energy goals. The country of 53 million basks under bountiful sun and withstands plenty of wind, but renewables still have not come close to being fully exploited. South Africans also endure blackouts on a regular basis, and energy shortages have long been the bane of conducting business in Africa’s second largest economy.

To that end, Solar Reserve claims the project serves as an example of how to boost employment in South Africa, where unemployment has long hovered around 25 percent. According a company press release, the Jasper plant provided 1 million man-hours of construction work and 800 on-site construction jobs. Construction of the plant was also largely a local endeavor, and about 60 percent of the materials used were procured from black businesses as mandated under South Africa’s black empowerment law. Under the power purchase agreement Jasper has with the national electricity company, Eskom, the project will set aside a percentage of revenues for local economic and job development projects in the Northern Cape region.

Conceived in 2011, the Jasper power plant started construction in October 2013, and with last month’s completion, finished two months ahead of schedule. South Africa still suffers from economic inequality, high crime and a complex regulatory environment, but successful projects like that of Jasper show that South Africa, and the rest of the continent continuing on north, offers plenty of business opportunities in sectors that immediately may not come to mind.

Image credit: Solar Reserve

After a year in the Middle East and Latin America, Leon Kaye is based in California again. Follow him on Instagram and Twitter. Other thoughts of his are on his site, greengopost.com.


▼▼▼      24 Comments     ▼▼▼

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  • cmoreride

    Everyone knows solar has no future
    You folks need to watch Fox News more and get the truth of things.

    • hark

      Nothing better to do today than troll for the fossil fuel industry? Your comment is utterly ridiculous.

      • Geoffrey Godbey

        It will be gone in twenty years

    • TheBigDG

      I assume you are joking..so thumbs up !

      • Benjamin Lathan

        Yeah, that HAS to be sarcasm…

    • Mebevinny

      Really hope you are joking.

    • rs9

      cmoreride – I agree. NO future at all. I have solar panels, live in Arizona where temps get to 120 during the summer. Before Solar Panels my AC bill wa around $300 per month from May to September. With Solar Panels only $65 per month. During the winter I pay $16.95 but it skyrockets to $70 when the Xmas lights are up. My wife drives a pluggble car – its recharged with Solar Power.

      Yup…no future at all.

  • Thomas1988

    Solar Power: the solution for people who need to turn their lights on when its sunny outside.

    • Mebevinny

      You are an idiot. I have solar PV…it cuts my electric bill in half. In a couple of years, I’ll add 10 panels and eliminate the bill altogether.
      In 20 years, anybody who owns their roof will be paying the electric company for nighttime usage only, and their meters will run backwards all day to pay for it as their roofs provide electricity for businesses.
      Add electric cars to the equation…oil companies are DOOMED.

      • Reddler

        Do you generate 120/240? Is your PV system stabilized by the grid?

    • spec9

      Engineering . . . a topic too complex for people that can’t understand source diversity, geographic diversity, demand-response, storage, demand curves, etc.

    • Thomas1988

      Haha, it was just a joke. I am a chemical engineer in the oil and gas industry. It’s just a little bit of fun we like to have with our small, but nonetheless, competitors. Solar has its place, just as wind and hydro do, it’ll just require significant increases in technology to offset fossil fuel energy.

      • Geoffrey Godbey

        It will happen–sooner than you think.

    • keep trying

      This entire field makes only 96 megawatts. Our refineries make over 100 megawatts from waste by recovering energy in flue gas that would otherwise just be vented to the atmosphere… all in a turbine that takes up a space about 10′ x 20′. And this is peanuts compared to the energy production of the entire refinery. Solar panels at this point are nothing more than a tree hugger’s wet dream.

      • renewableguy

        Fossil fuels are taking us out of the Holocene and into the Anthropocene. Its not pretty staying on fossil fuels.

  • Paul Maher

    There’s an awful lot of new energy production and storage technology afoot. NASA loves LENR, Lockheed loves Dense Plasma Focus and Compact Reactors. Contrary to cmoreide there are many new advances in PV, and a host of other new and exciting things to hybridize with it. Optical Rectification, Thermionics and a host of new storage technologies come to mind. I tend to believe that the ultimate answer will lie in one of the many manifestations of LENR and learning to deal with the Weak Force.
    Please visit the Journal of Condensed Matter Nuclear Science. and coldfusionnow.org for much of the latest news regarding these fascinating new technologies.

    • spec9

      Until LENR can show something that actually works consistently, they should really just shut up. They look like fools.

  • renewableguy

    China will be bringing on 800 to 1000 gigawatts by 2030. This 95 mega watt solar field is just a baby and the beginning of what is coming down the pipe.

    • keep trying

      Just curious, after you kill the oil industry and get rid of most of our CO2 emissions, what are you going to do about the other 99% of greenhouse gases known as water vapor? You going to start fighting the oceans and rivers and lakes that release all that harmful junk into our atmosphere? haha… Libtards crack me up.

      • renewableguy

        Interesting. Try going back to climate 101.
        Just out of curiosity, co2 isn’t political. It just does what our studies show it does. Your political leanings don’t matter one iota. Do you have some angle on something here?

        • keep trying

          CO2 is 100% political. Water vapor is by magnitudes the largest greenhouse gas in our atmosphere. Let’s look at it this way: about 10,000 years ago our planet began coming out of an ice age. As much as you hate the oil industry, they didn’t exist at that time. The earth did that on its own because it goes through cycles. There is nothing we can do as humans on this planet to affect where it goes next.

        • renewableguy

          You talk as though you really know climate science, and yet what you have just told me is highly flawed.
          Water vapor is tied to temperature and co2 is the foundation for the water vapor in the atmosphere. Water vapor is just a pos. feedback to co2 levels in the atmosphere.
          Co2 is the thermostat of the earth.

        • keep trying

          And let’s also not forget that one solar flare like the one that missed us by a week in 2012, a meteor strike, or massive volcanic eruption will do more damage to our ecosystem than 1000 years of burning fossil fuels and a dozen nuclear wars. Step out of your bubble, release all your tensions and just enjoy your life. The oil industry has taken my family and me around the earth and back and it is an amazing place; one that we have absolutely no control over.

      • Geoffrey Godbey

        You are actually not curious. You simply lack imagination.